Fic: Tell Me About This Lightning (dS, F/V/K)

Author’s Note: Disregards the canonical end of the series (CoTW) because my recipient mentioned she hasn’t seen it, although Vecchio calling Kowalski “Stanley” is taken from that episode (it seems like something he would latch onto regardless). Obviously Vecchio is back, but I leave it deliberately vague when and how that happened. Title is from the song, “Kiss You ‘Til You Weep” by Paul Gross. It seemed appropriate. 😉 Thanks to Medie for being my beta, cheerleader, and moral support as always!

Written for: MissHammer for rarepairfest.


It happened the moment Kowalski’s fist connected with his face. Pain blossomed behind Ray’s eyes, but also behind his knuckles as if they were the ones that had made contact with bone. Kowalski reeled back, clutching his palm to his own cheek. The two of them stared at each other wide-eyed for a moment before Kowalski voiced what they were both thinking: “What the hell??”

Just like that, the fist-fight was over as soon as it began.

He and Kowalski made a point of avoiding even the most accidental touch for the rest of their respective shifts, but it was too late. When Ray’s hip collided with his desk in a moment of distraction, Kowalski doubled over and started cursing him out. When Dief stuck his wet nose in Kowalski’s ear, Ray yelped.

Ray sent up vain prayers all day to every saint he could remember that nobody would notice. If anyone up there was listening, however, they were in on the gigantic cosmic joke at his–their–expense. Huey started walking around with this smug smirk on his face and made kissy noises every time he saw them. Fraser’s expression fluctuated between confused and worried, and that was even worse.

It was Welsh’s fault, Ray decided. If he’d done the sensible thing and shipped Kowalski off to wherever he came from as soon as Ray came back from undercover, none of this would be happening. But no, he’d had to decide it would be good for them both to be reminded what it was like having a partner who wasn’t a Mountie. Trouble was, at least on Ray’s side, there was more than professional jealousy going on there. And Fraser didn’t help matters any by sending those quietly pining looks in Kowalski’s direction whenever he thought nobody was looking.

It wasn’t like it was rational. Fraser was a grown-up (despite the occasional evidence to the contrary). He could pine after whomever he wanted. And Ray cared enough about him to want him to be happy, no matter what. It didn’t stop him from hating that it was Kowalski getting those looks and not him.

Not that he blamed Fraser. It’s not like Kowalski was bad looking. That wiry build was just muscular enough to make every inch of him, ass included, look hard as a rock, and his face had an almost irresistible belligerent quality to it even when he wasn’t actually upset. Kowalski wasn’t some sort of Greek statue brought to life like Fraser, but he was pretty okay. Under other circumstances, Ray might’ve considered himself lucky that the universe said he got to tap that. But these weren’t other circumstances.

Somebody upstairs had a sick sense of humor.

They managed to avoid each other successfully for the rest of the day, anyway. By the time Ray pulled into the driveway at home, he’d almost gotten used to the weirdness of feeling his feet hit the gas or the ground in two different rhythms. Which meant maybe this was doable after all. All he and Kowalski had to do was just keep on ignoring each other and nobody ever had to know that they were giving God or the universe or whoever the metaphorical finger.

Until Ray woke up the next morning to the feeling of someone’s hand on his dick. Okay, it wasn’t like morning wood was anything new to him, and God knew he’d taken care of it this way more than a few times himself. But he’d never thought…Jesus…and apparently Kowalski hadn’t either. That or he was the world’s most obnoxious troll.

Ray made a strangled noise and just lay there in bed, paralyzed, as phantom fingers stroked him over and over. He was afraid to move, afraid to touch anything lest it suddenly make Kowalski realize what he was doing. (Worse–a small, annoying part of his mind suggested–it might make him stop.) Despite his best efforts, though, it was impossible to stay still for long. When Kowalski’s pace picked up, Ray found himself bucking helplessly into that invisible touch. He came probably harder than he ever had in his life, and with a shout that would’ve woken the whole house if he’d still been living at home.

Jesus, who’d have thought he’d ever be grateful for the low noise tolerance he’d developed in Vegas?

He lay there still, spent and dazed, for several more minutes, not even able to drag himself out of bed long enough to clean up the mess. When Ray finally did drag himself out of bed, he stripped off the sticky pajamas and sheets and left them in a pile in the corner of the room. Then he padded naked into the bathroom and turned the shower on ice cold. He stood there, shivering, for several more minutes before finally stumbling out.

Toweling off, shaving, and getting dressed were accomplished by rote. His brain still felt too overloaded to function in anything resembling a rational way. In fact, he was halfway out the door, heading to work, when his first clear thought hit him.

Kowalski was at work.

Seized by sudden panic, Ray flew back inside, slamming and locking the door behind him. He hyperventilated all the way to the phone, then only just managed to control his voice long enough to inform the desk sergeant that he didn’t feel well and would be taking a sick day without it cracking, and would she please inform Lieutenant Welsh? When he hung up the phone, his hand was still shaking, and his heart was pounding like he’d just chased Fraser clear across Chicago.

Ray groaned and dropped his head in his hands. Now what was he supposed to do? Hole up here for the rest of his life so he never had to look Kowalski in the eye and acknowledge what had just happened between them?

“Fuck you, Stanley,” Ray said aloud, emphatically, to the empty apartment. Kowalski couldn’t hear him, of course. The connection didn’t work that way. Just as well. For all he knew, Kowalski might’ve taken it as an invitation.

He took several deep breaths to clear his head. Okay. Okay. Surely he had some unsolved cases he could work from here, at least for today. Then he could figure out the rest tomorrow. Rubbing his palms vigorously on his coat to get the sweat off, Ray stood up and marched over to the fancy new computer he’d bought with some of his hazard pay from Vegas. He couldn’t access all the station’s resources from here, but he should be able to do something, at least.


Ray was neck deep in a robbery homicide several hours later when there was a knock at the door. For a split second, he was terrified to answer it. Then he realized he hadn’t felt wood under his knuckles a second ago, so it couldn’t be Kowalski. Letting out a breath of relief, he rose and crossed to the door.

Fraser was standing in the hallway with an enormous soup tureen in his hands and Dief sniffing around his heels. Ray blinked twice. “What are you doing here?”

“Lieutenant Welsh said you called in sick.”

“So you made me soup?” Steam was rising from the pot and the smell made Ray’s mouth water.

Fraser shuffled sheepishly. “Ah, no. That is…well. Apparently when Francesca called home to inform your mother that you were unwell, she insisted on preparing this for you. Since I had mentioned a desire to drop by to see how you were doing—“

“You got pressed into delivery duty, got it.” Ray eyed the soup dubiously. “Since when does Ma make chicken soup? We’re Italian, not Jewish.”

“I don’t believe it is chicken,” Fraser said with a little tilt of the head, as if he were trying to peer beneath the lid. “She said something about meatballs?” Okay, so technically Ray could already tell that from the familiar aroma, he just hadn’t been able to resist ribbing him a little. Fraser gave him a look then that was mildly pleading and asked plaintively, “May I come in?”

At his feet, Dief gave a whine of agreement, and he wasn’t the one carrying God-only-knew-how-many pounds of boiling hot soup.

Suddenly remembering his manners, Ray flushed and stepped out of the doorway. “Yeah, yeah, of course. The kitchen’s through there—“ he waved vaguely behind him with one hand. “You can put the soup in there.”

Fraser and Dief trotted by him and into the kitchen. He set the soup on the counter as directed, then immediately began opening cupboards and pulling out bowls and spoons. He served up two helpings of the soup and held one of them out to Ray. “I must say, Ray, you’re looking remarkably hale for a man who was, by his own admission, too sick to come in to work today.”

Ray glared at him. “Don’t you start with me, Benny.” He stalked away and plopped almost aggressively into a seat at the counter. “I think I know a little bit more about the state of my health than you do.”

“Of course, Ray.” Fraser answered in that agreeable voice that meant he was doing anything but agreeing. He followed Ray to the counter and pulled up a stool beside him. “However, I also spoke to Detective Kowalski, and he reported feeling no ill effects.” It was spoken casually, as if Fraser hadn’t dropped a major bomb in the center of Ray’s kitchen.

He knew. He’d figured it out. Of course he had. This was Fraser; the only time he missed something right in front of his nose like that was when it was someone throwing themselves at him.

Ray ducked his head, avoiding Fraser’s eyes, and mumbled into his bowl, “Yeah, well, Kowalski’s an asshole.”

“That’s not a very charitable way to speak about your soulmate,” Fraser answered dryly.

Appetite suddenly gone, Ray threw the spoon back in the bowl with a little too much force. “He’s not…it’s not…” Ray grimaced. “It’s not like that, me and him.” Never mind that it had been exactly like that this morning and that was what had made him crawl back into his shell like an especially paranoid turtle.

“No, I don’t imagine it would be yet,” Fraser answered equably. “You’ve only just found out, and you’ve only known each other for a few weeks.”

Dief whined and, on impulse, Ray bent down to place his bowl of soup on the floor. Even if that wasn’t what the wolf had been asking for, he seemed willing to accept it. Fraser was another matter. “No, you don’t understand. What I mean is, it’s never gonna be like that. I don’t care what anybody says.”

“Why not?”

Because I’ve seen the way you look at him, you big red dork. Because I’m not gonna take that away from you. And if I were, I’d take you away from him, not the other way around. “You’ve seen us together. We’re chalk and cheese, Stanley and me. That would be the worst idea ever.”

Fraser looked at him as though he were looking at a particularly recalcitrant pupil. How he’d mastered that trick without being a nun, Ray had no idea. “Ray, think about it. To have that kind of connection with someone—to have someone who literally feels what you feel—it’s an incredible privilege.”

“Yeah?” he shot back sharply. “And how’d that work out for you?”

Fraser visibly flinched and Ray immediately felt like the worst sort of shitheel. Of all the things, he had to bring up Victoria at a time like this. “Jesus, Benny, I’m sorry. That was a pretty rotten thing to say.”

“Yes, it was,” Fraser answered quietly, but there was no anger in his eyes like there would’ve been two years ago. “Look, Ray, you and I both know quite well that merely having a soulmate is no guarantee of a happy ending. The real world just doesn’t work that way. But in this case…I genuinely believe you and Ray Kowalski could be happy together.”

Ray shook his head, his voice just as quiet. “You don’t get it, Benny. For the longest time, I figured if Irene wasn’t my soulmate, then I didn’t want one. I didn’t think anybody could ever be as important to me as she was. And then you came along.”

Fraser’s eyes widened in surprise. “Ray–”

“And I knew it wasn’t gonna be you, okay?” Ray cut him off before he could say something that would make them both feel even worse. He couldn’t sit still for this, either, so he hopped up and started pacing the dining room. “I knew it long before you ever told me about Victoria, because by the time I figured out I wanted it to be you, I’d touched you dozens of times and nothing ever happened. But I still wanted it to be you. Even more than I’d ever wanted it to be Irene. So now I’m just supposed to, what? Give it all up and throw myself at the guy who took you away from me? Who tookeverything away from me?”

“Ray, I had no idea you felt that way.”

Ray shrugged, pointedly not meeting the blue-eyed gaze that he could feel on his back. By this point, he’d circled all the way around to the other side of the counter. One hand landed restlessly beside his abandoned spoon. “Yeah, well, what would’ve been the point?”

He felt another hand come to rest over his own, but it took a moment to realize this was actually happening and not some carryover from Kowalski. Ray looked up in surprise and Fraser gave him a small smile and a sympathetic squeeze. There was regret there, regret that Ray maybe could’ve done something with if Fraser wasn’t so determined to set him up with his soon-to-be-ex. A shiver passed through him that Ray wasn’t sure was his own or not.

“You know…there are two schools of thought regarding the purpose of soulmates. For perhaps obvious reasons, I’ve always gravitated towards the idea that the connection is meant not to indicate with whom you’re meant to spend your life, but rather the person for whom it is most necessary that you feel empathy. That most such relationships ultimately do end in at least some sort of romantic feeling is no more than a natural byproduct of experiencing such an intense…intimacy.”

Intimacy. Oh yeah, what happened this morning had been pretty intimate, all right. “What are you saying, Benny?”

“Ray Kowalski is a good man, Ray. Everything he did…he did to protect you and the people you love. Surely that deserves your empathy, if nothing else?”

“And what about you?” Ray retorted. “Don’t you deserve something too?”

Fraser gave him that pinched smile again. “I am happy merely to have the both of you as part of my life. I don’t need any more than that.”

Jesus, was Fraser just physically incapable of prioritizing the things he wanted over someone else? It was everything that drove Ray nuts about working with him…and also everything he loved about him. What fucking right did the universe have to say, ‘Sorry, you can’t have him. You have to take away the guy he wants instead’?

Ray didn’t mean to kiss him. Bad enough Kowalski had almost certainly felt that earlier touch, this was a hundred times worse. But this was Fraser, and worse, it was Fraser practically admitting that he wanted them both but he was going to stand aside and let them have each other even if it killed him. Ray needed to show him—what? That he wasn’t that noble? Something, anyway.

He expected any moment to feel like he’d just put his fist through drywall, or whatever else it was Kowalski usually did when he was upset. And he knew he’d deserve it. What Ray did not expect was to realize belatedly that the dick twitching in his pants was not actually his. Or rather, not justhis. What the fuck, Kowalski?

Ray pulled back. There was an answer in that somewhere, but he was a bit too disoriented at the moment to figure out what it was.

Fraser flushed and began babbling. “I must apologize, Ray, that was most inappropriate of me–”

“Fraser, shut up.” Fraser shut up. Ray grinned at him. Confused as hell though he was, Ray couldn’t quite stop the slow well of happiness building up in him that Fraser’d kissed him back. “First off, you do not get to take credit for something that was my choice, okay? So stop that right now.”

“Yes, Ray.” Fraser looked properly contrite, and damned if that wasn’t a good look on him. Of course, everything was a good look on him. The man was too beautiful to be real, as evidenced by the scores of women who draped themselves in his path like palm fronds on Palm Sunday.

“Second, if it makes you happy…I’ll give Kowalski a chance.” It made his heart squeeze to say it, but then he’d never been able to deny Benny anything.

Fraser beamed like the sun rising. “I knew you would understand.”

“Yeah, I understand.” Ray grabbed the back of his neck, forcing Fraser to meet his eyes. “That’s why I want you to know, whatever happens…however things work out or don’t, you’re important too. We’re not just gonna ride off into the sunset without you, Benny.”


Even Ray wasn’t quite sure what he meant by that. It was still formulating in his head long after Fraser’d finished his cold soup and disappeared into the night with Dief. Ray let it percolate while he heated up another bowl for himself in the microwave at suppertime.

The soup made him think about what Ma would think of this whole messed up business. He knew what she would say if he asked, of course. Ma was traditional. You married your soulmate because the touch thing was God’s way of telling you this was who you were supposed to be with. That was why she’d married Pop. Why she’d stayed with him, in spite of everything.

Maybe the reason he’d been sour on the idea of soulmates long before he ever heard of Victoria Metcalfe was because he’d never quite forgiven God for that.

But Fraser’s idea about it being all about empathy? That he could maybe do. Maybe the whole soulmate thing wasn’t even aimed at Ma. Maybe someone up there had hoped that if sometimes when Pop hit somebody, he felt it too, then he’d stop doing it. Only Pop didn’t work that way. He found a way to make it Ma’s fault, just like he found ways to make everything someone else’s fault.

Ray had promised himself years ago that he was never gonna be that guy. If learning to empathize with Kowalski was what it took not to be that guy, that’s what he’d do. He’d promised Fraser he’d try, anyway, so he’d try. Breaking a promise to Fraser wasn’t a smart thing to do. He had this look he got when he was disappointed in you. Ray had no defenses against that look.

Didn’t mean he wasn’t going to figure out few ways to make Kowalski squirm along the way, though. Fair was fair, after all.

Ray was almost cheerful when he walked into the 2-7 the next morning. No, no almost about it. Ray was definitely cheerful. If that made Kowalski give him the side-eye, all the better.

“Hey, Vecchio. Wasn’t sure I’d see you today.”

Ray grinned, too high to be brought low that easily. “What can I say? I needed a day to recover from that wake-up call you gave me. Taking things a little fast, aren’t you, Stanley?” He slapped him heartily on the back and conveniently gave himself a nice non-metaphorical pat on the back at the same time.

Kowalski flushed from the roots of his equally red hair all the way down. For a minute, Ray thought he was gonna start stammering out some sort of apology, but he recovered quickly. Faster than Ray expected, truthfully. “Oh yeah? You enjoy that, Vecchio?” he asked with something resembling a leer.

“Yeah, it wasn’t half bad. Still, you might think about warning me first next time?” He almost said ‘asking me,’ but figured that wasn’t fair. A guy shouldn’t need permission to take care of his own business when it wasn’t his fault the universe decided to make it someone else’s business too.

Kowalski’s eyes narrowed. “And how exactly am I supposed to do that?”

Ray shrugged. He glanced around to make sure no one was watching then wrapped his hand around his finger and made a rude gesture. One that could be not only seen, but also felt.

Kowalski cracked a grin of his own and reached down to touch the affected finger on his own hand. “Yeah, I guess that would work. But only if you promise the same.”

Ray saluted casually with three fingers. “On my honor as a Girl Scout.”

Welsh chose that moment to stick his head out of his office and bellow, “Vecchio! Kowalski! In my office, now!”

They looked at each other. “Well, duty calls,” Ray sighed. “I know the present situation is not exactly ideal for either one of us…but d’you think we can make this work? For Fraser’s sake.”

Kowalski grimaced. Ray wondered if he was remembering the kiss from yesterday, but didn’t dare ask. That was a conversation for later. Much later. “Yeah. For Fraser’s sake.”

Welsh looked up suspiciously as they closed the door behind them. “Where’s the Mountie?”

“I believe he’s giving us space, Sir,” Ray quipped.

“Space for what?” Welsh demanded before thinking better of it and raising a hand to prevent an answer. “Never mind. I don’t want to know.”

Kowalski snorted. “If Vecchio’s right, no, you really don’t.” He shoved his hands in his back pockets and Ray only barely managed not to squeak in protest at the sudden sensation of rock hard Kowalski ass under his hands. Especially since he was pretty sure the bastard was doing it on purpose. “So why’d you call us in here? What’d Vecchio do this time?”

“Me?” Ray yelped. “Why can’t it be something you did?”

Welsh looked from one to the other with a raised eyebrow before letting out a bone-deep sigh. “Gentlemen, if you’re finished throwing each other under the bus–”

They both snapped to attention. Well, as much at attention as either of them ever got. Military discipline they had none of. “Sorry, Sir.” “Sorry, Lieutenant.”

“I called you in here because we got a tip on the Straczynski case. Do you think you boys can handle that, or should I make Huey and Dewey the lead on this one?”

Once again they spoke simultaneously: “We can handle it, Sir.” “Yeah, we got it, no problem.”

Welsh got a look in his eye that spoke of wistful dreams of Tylenol. “Good.” He tossed the file across the desk at them. “Now get out of here before I decide the Mountie is the lesser evil and call him myself.”


They took the GTO. It wasn’t the Riv, but Ray hadn’t yet found a replacement for the one that Fraser and Kowalski set on fire and drove into Lake Michigan. He’d come close–there’d been an ad for one in the papers just a few weeks ago. It was the perfect color and everything, but it was a ‘72, not a ‘71. And okay, so Pontiacs weren’t his thing, but it was a darn sight better than toodling around in that wreck he’d temporarily acquired from the motor pool. And hey, at least Kowalski knew how to drive.

There was also something weirdly soothing about being in the passenger seat and yet still feeling the wheel under his hands. So much so that Ray completely forgot to do his usual back seat driving.

It all went straight to hell, of course. Ray had a vain hope that it wouldn’t, what with Fraser mysteriously absent, but apparently the Mountie mojo was contagious. Which was how they wound up ducking behind different trash cans on opposite sides of the same alley while a would-be evil mastermind ranted at them about TNT and his five year plan for galactic domination in between bursts of automatic gunfire. Ray never did quite get clear on how the former was supposed to accomplish the latter–in his experience, high explosives lacked the finesse really required for a coup d’etat–but he was a little more concerned with not acquiring any bullet holes in his body or his expensive suit. Or in Kowalski’s body, for that matter. He remembered all too vividly what had happened to Fraser when he’d shot Victoria, and had no desire to experience it personally.

Of course, it would help considerably towards the goal of neither of them dying if Kowalski could actually see. He’d already missed his way through half his clip, and at the rate he was going, he was gonna waste the other half in a minute. But try as Ray might, he couldn’t get Kowalski’s damned attention to point that out. At least, not without also attracting the attention of the guy trying to put holes in them.

Ray rubbed a frustrated hand over his face. Across the alley, Kowalski tried to swat it away. Ray blinked. Jesus, he’d been an idiot. This stupid connection might actually be good for something after all. Grimacing, he gave himself the smack to the back of the head that he wanted to give Kowalski.

It worked. Kowalski glared up at him with a what-the-hell-Vecchio expression, and what followed was a rapid and confusing exchange of gestures that almost certainly weren’t in any sign language dictionary, and a few that were universal. By the time Kowalski finally took the hint and pulled his glasses out, the guy they were chasing had already disappeared out the other end of the alley.

“Damn it, Vecchio, what’d you let him get away for?” Kowalski growled as they met again in the middle.

“Says the guy who can’t hit the broad side of a barn without his glasses,” Ray retorted as they hurried to the end of the alley in pursuit.

“Exactly!” Kowalski shot back. “What’s your excuse?”

This time Ray did slap him upside the back of the head and didn’t even care if it meant giving himself a headache too.

Things might’ve escalated if a scream hadn’t suddenly come from somewhere to their left. A scream which was more than likely caused by a guy running down the sidewalk with an automatic. Before they could both take off running Ray grabbed Kowalski’s arm. “I’ll go after him. You get the car and try to cut us off on 13th, got it?”

Kowalski nodded. “Got it.”

The plan almost didn’t work. It might not’ve if not for the fact that Vecchio quickly figured out that when the perp changed course, all he had to do was tug on the appropriate wrist to get Kowalski to turn left or right to course correct. That worked so well, in fact, that by the time they hauled the guy into the 2-7 less than an hour later, they were both in such a good mood that they were bantering like old friends.

Fraser was waiting at Ray’s desk when they walked into the squad room. He stood out as always: a bright splash of color against the muted almost-hospital green, with Dief a blur of white at his feet. When he saw them, he immediately rose, a slow smile like a sunrise breaking over his face. “Ray, Ray. I must apologize for my tardiness. I was unavoidably detained at the Consulate.”

“No problem, Benny,” Ray answered at the same moment Kowalski came out with, “It’s cool, Frase.” Damn it, that was getting annoying. Ray was pretty sure this whole talking together thing wasn’t supposed to be part of the deal.

Fraser’s eyes widened almost imperceptibly in surprise. It might’ve been just Ray’s imagination, but for a second he almost thought Fraser’s smile tightened a little at the same time. “You both seem to be in remarkably good spirits,” he observed in a carefully measured tone. “Should I assume the day has been a success thus far?”

“You bet it’s been a success,” Kowalski grinned in triumph. He gave Fraser a hearty slap on the back. “We got Straczynski.” Even that moment of remote contact with red serge tingled under Ray’s fingertips, sending ribbons of warmth inward from his extremities. Jesus. It took a concerted effort not to let his thoughts follow that reaction to its logical conclusion; that if he reacted like that to Kowalski just patting Fraser on the back, what the hell would a more intimate touch be like translated through the link?

Fraser’s voice snapped him out of his reverie, even though it wasn’t directed at him. Or at least not just at him. “Ray, that’s wonderful!”

Ray couldn’t help but glance at Kowalski to see if he’d noticed the whole serge-reaction thing. If he did, he didn’t show it, just kept grinning like a maniac as he started describing the shoot-out and subsequent chase. His enthusiasm was contagious. “Yeah, turns out we don’t make a half bad team after all,” Ray found himself chipping in almost proudly.

“I could have told you that,” Fraser admonished. His smile flared brighter for a brief second before slowly trickling away. “Actually, as it just happens, I believe I did.” Not many people could manage to sound smug and disappointed at the same time. Fraser did.

Ray’s chest constricted a little. Jesus, Benny. Even after I practically pointed it out, you really didn’t think about what pushing us together would mean for you, did you? “Yeah, you did.”

Kowalski obviously heard the same thing in Fraser’s voice that Ray had, because he went from hyper to subdued between breaths. “Yeah, so, uh, anyway…you shoulda been there,” he finished lamely.

“I wish I had,” Fraser added almost wistfully. “It sounds like quite the adventure.”

“Trust me, Benny, we didn’t have nearly as much fun without you,” Ray answered wryly. Of course, by ‘fun’ he meant life-threatening chaos, but Fraser didn’t need to know that. Kowalski gave him a sharp, skeptical look, but relaxed when Fraser’s smile came back.

“I’m sure that’s not true, but I do appreciate the thought.”

Dief let out a snort and laid down at Fraser’s feet, dropping his head on his paws. Even after four years, Ray didn’t speak wolf, but he could tell that Diefenbaker was in one of his particularly blunt moods because Fraser turned as red as his uniform.


Somehow they made it through the rest of the day. Somehow because afterwards Ray could never say how. Fraser, in typical Fraser fashion, fixated on the fact that they’d been able to communicate through the link. He immediately started concocting an elaborate plan to take advantage of that fact. Ray didn’t have the heart to tell him he and Kowalski had already discussed the possibility on the drive back to the 2-7, and apparently neither did Kowalski.

Turned out that wasn’t the only thing they had in common.

Well, okay, so frankly they had a little too much in common for Ray’s taste–either of their tastes, probably–most of the time, but still, he wasn’t surprised when Kowalski pulled him aside after a couple of hours of listening to Fraser basically trying to set them up.

“I can’t do it,” he blurted out.

Ray didn’t even need to ask what he meant. “Yeah, me neither.”

“I mean, I know you said we should try to make it work for Fraser, but that’s just messed up. I don’t care what Fraser says he wants, I’m not doing that to him. I mean, you know he’s always been–” Kowalski stopped suddenly, his ears finally seeming to catch up with his mouth. “Wait, what?”

“I promised I’d try,” Ray answered simply. “I tried.” Only for a few hours, granted, but sometimes that was all it took. “Look, I got nothing against you, Stanley–” It didn’t even surprise him that he meant it, which said a lot about how far they’d come since two days ago. “–and I get that this touch thing is something we’re gonna have to learn to live with, but if you think I can watch Fraser break his own heart trying to make us happy any more than you can, you’re an idiot.”

Kowalski stuck his hands in his pockets. His front ones this time, thank God. Although that brought its own set of problems. Ray wasn’t about to lose his resolve when he’d just found it, though, so he pointedly ignored the thought of just how close those hands were to certain other parts of Kowalski’s anatomy.

“So what now?” Kowalski asked uncertainly.

Ray hesitated a long moment before answering. “Well, Fraser’s right about one thing; like we already worked out, this thing could come in handy on the job. So, on the job, we use it. Off the job, we ignore it.” Easier said than done, naturally, but he’d done crazier things for Fraser and he didn’t doubt for a minute that Kowalski had too. The Mountie (and yes, in Ray’s head, he definitely meant the definitive article) had that effect on people.

“Yeah, okay, only one problem. Ignoring it’s gonna be a lot easier to do in some circumstances than others.” Boy, didn’t Ray know it. Yesterday’s wake up call was still burned indelibly into his brain. His cheeks heated, and the intensity of Kowalski’s stare didn’t help. “What are we supposed to do? Never jerk off again?”

“If you can actually manage that, be my guest,” Ray snorted. “As for me…if I could ignore my sister and her husband going at it in the next room, I’m pretty sure I can learn to ignore you.” Kowalski gave him a horrified look. Ray waved it off. “Perils of sharing a house with your whole extended family. Trust me, you don’t wanna know. Just think of me as an upstairs neighbor with noisy springs or something.”

Kowalski nodded uncertainly, but just then Dief came running over to them with Fraser not far behind, so the conversation ended anyway.


Over the next few weeks, they worked out a system of signals for on-the-job use. A slap on the wrist meant I need your attention. One tap with a finger meant one bad guy, two taps meant two bad guys, and so on. A hand on the forehead meant, Oh God, the Mountie just did something crazy, remember me fondly when I’m gone. (Fraser had gotten huffy about that one for about a second and a half before they’d managed to force him to admit it was accurate.) And a finger on the bridge of the nose meant put on your damn glasses and stop wasting bullets, Stanley, or I might just shoot you myself.

Ray would’ve liked to be able to say they figured out the off-the-job part too, but that would be mortal sin levels of lying. Even forgetting the masturbation problem–which oh, boy, he was not gonna forget that any time soon–he’d underestimated how utterly distracting little touches could become. Especially if the person Kowalski was touching was him or Fraser. A handshake. An accidental brush of shoulders in the squad room. It got to a point where he and Kowalski were avoiding each other nearly as much as that first day. Only worse, both of them were apparently afraid to touch Fraser too, even though Ray had basically given Kowalski his blessing. Which didn’t exactly help with the whole “not hurting the Mountie” plan. He walked around with a dazed, wounded expression on his face almost constantly, and Ray was miserable because he didn’t know how to fix it.

Plus, he just started noticing things about the way Kowalski touched people. A gentle hand on the shoulder of a victim or witness. The way he’d jerk a perp’s hands behind their back to cuff ‘em like they’d done him a personal injury just by existing. The way he always knew whether to greet somebody with a handshake or a fistbump or something Ray didn’t even have a name for. Even the way he drove all that bottled up anger into the punching bag on the rare nights he got off work early enough to go to the gym. All of it told Ray more than he’d ever wanted to know about Stanley Raymond Kowalski.

He started to understand what Fraser saw in him. Problem was, that only compounded the other problem. You know, the one where his dick reallyliked the way Kowalski handled it by proxy.

In spite of what they’d agreed on, he and Kowalski had both tried the living like a monk thing for about a week. By the end of it, they’d both been so ready to burst that it had been almost a relief to give in.

Ray knew he’d been lying to himself when he’d said it couldn’t be any worse than being forced to listen to Tony and Maria. What he hadn’t counted on was that the more it happened, the harder it became to ignore the nagging voice at the back of his head: the one that said, if it felt this good when Kowalski was just touching himself, how absolutely mind blowing would it be if they were touching each other? Sometimes the mere thought of that potential feedback loop was enough to finish him off.

God help him, but he wanted it. And for the first time in his life, he really understood why Fraser hadn’t been able to let Victoria go, even knowing how bad she was for him.

“Ray.” Ray almost jumped out of his skin at the touch on his shoulder. He usually stopped by the family residence for dinner on his way home nights–because Ma still made the best baked mostaccioli this side of the Alps, which meant it was the best in the western hemisphere–but he wasn’t ashamed to admit that there had been a fair amount of fleeing the scene involved this time. It was a relief to realize that the hand on his shoulder was an actual touch, and better yet, that it was only Frannie. Even so, it took a few seconds to make his heart stop thudding.

“Geez, Frannie, you wanna warn a guy before you sneak up on him?” Ray almost snarled.

Frannie’s eyes widened for a minute before narrowing. The skin between her eyebrows creased and her lips pinched into a frown. “I was just gonna say Ma’s got dinner on. What’s gotten into you all of a sudden?”

All of a sudden? Ray almost laughed. Thank God Frannie’s courses at the Academy kept her busy enough that she wasn’t around the station much these days. At home, she might know he was acting weird, but she wouldn’t be able to identify Kowalski as the source of it. Especially not if he only saw her for about an hour a day. “Nothing. I’m fine. I’m not hungry.”

Frannie snorted. “Since when? You haven’t turned down one of Ma’s meals since you got back from Vegas.”

“Yeah, well maybe I just don’t have much of an appetite tonight. That a problem?”

She stared at him for another minute, then a muscle clenched in her jaw and she positioned herself between him and the door, arms folded defiantly across her chest. “Yeah, that’s a problem. You’ve been acting weird for weeks, and now you turn down dinner for no reason? Something’s off and I wanna know what.”

Shit, so she had noticed before. Ray squared his shoulders and glared back at her. “Frannie, nothing–”

Just then, Kowalski stubbed his toe on something. Something hard. Ray doubled over, cursing inventively, both at the pain shooting through his foot and the damnable as always timing of it. Forget fucking him. Right now, Ray was right back to wanting to shoot Kowalski, regardless of the consequences to himself.

Frannie stared at him mystified for another minute, then a light went on and her face exploded into a brilliant smile. “Oh my God! I know what’s going on. You met your soulmate!” She threw her arms around him, which made Ray let out a squawk of protest. “Ray, that’s fantastic! Who is it? Is it somebody I know?”

Ray pushed her away with a little more force than was strictly necessary. It was on the tip of his tongue to demand how she could still have any faith left in the concept considering Ma and Pop, but then he and Maria had always shielded Frannie from the worst of it. Still… “Fuck soulmates,” he growled. “I never needed one before, I don’t need it now.”

As if to prove it, he punched the wall of his bedroom, hard. Kowalski wanted to give him a limp for an hour? He could have some sore knuckles for a few minutes in exchange.

Frannie grabbed his arm before he could throw another one. She held him back with surprising strength, but not nearly as surprising as the stormy look that he found on her face when he turned to her to protest. “What. The. Hell is wrong with you?” she demanded in a cold voice. “You got somebody on the other end of that now, remember? What, did you think it was a good day to channel Pop or something?”

Ray went cold all over so fast he almost shivered. Okay, so Frannie wasn’t as ignorant as he’d hoped. And God, was that really what he looked like to her? Like Pop? It wasn’t the same–it wasn’t–but how was she supposed to know that. “I didn’t mean it like that, Frannie, I swear. I just…this whole thing is so fucked up, I don’t even know…” He pulled back, backing away from her until his knees hit the bed in his old room and he sank down on it, dropping his face in his hands.

Somewhere on the other side of town, gentle hands took a break from carefully inspecting Kowalski’s toe to cradling his fist, which must still be stinging just like Ray’s was. Ray held his breath for a minute. Maybe this was it. Maybe this was finally it.

Frannie plopped down beside him. “Ray, tell me what the hell is going on before I decide to bring Ma in as backoff.”

“Backup,” Ray corrected automatically. He felt Kowalski pull his hand out of Fraser’s–it had to be Fraser’s, no one else would be so tender with him as someone who loved him, forbidden or no. And the hands he’d felt had been too big to be Kowalski’s ex.

“Whatever.” Frannie forced Ray’s chin up and frowned at whatever expression she saw in his face. “Ray, who could possibly so bad that you’d hate having them for a soulmate so mu–?” She stopped on the verge of finishing the thought, her mouth dropping open and a hand flying to cover it. “Oh my God. Oh my God. It’s Kowalski, isn’t it?”

Ray gave her a look that used to cow her into backing off. But Frannie’d gained a lot of confidence in the year he’d been gone–no thanks to him–and she only started to smile behind her hand. “It is, isn’t it?” The smile turned into a laugh. “Ray, that’s brilliant.”

“It’s no such thing!” Ray insisted. He didn’t bother denying that she’d hit the nail on the head. She’d be watching them closely now to prove him wrong if he did, and it wouldn’t take long. “It’s terrible!”

“Ray, he’s not a bad guy–”

“I never said he was!” Ray exploded. It was one thing to have Fraser singing Kowalski’s praises. He didn’t think he could take it from Frannie too. “But he’s not…” He’s not mine to take. He’s Fraser’s. Just like I would be if the universe weren’t so fucked up.

Frannie squeezed his hand and the two of them sat there in silence for a minute. A minute in which, despite Ray’s hopes to the contrary, Kowalski and Fraser did not make up and start fucking. “Have you talked about this? I know that’s a long shot, but believe it or not, verbal communication is still gonna be a lot more effective than just…hoping he reads your body language or whatever it is you’re doing.”

“Believe it or not, yes,” Ray answered wearily. “And we both arrived at the same conclusion; that it would be a terrible idea and it’s not gonna happen.”

Another disbelieving snort. Frannie patted his hand and stood. “C’mon.”

Ray narrowed his eyes at her suspiciously. “Where?”

“Kowalski’s. Clearly you two can’t be trusted to actually behave like adults about this, so I’m going to sit you both down and make you.”

If it had been anyone other than his baby sister, Ray might’ve told ‘em that trust him, adult behavior was not the problem here. Or…well, so okay, it was definitely part of the problem, but definitely not in the sense she meant.

Then the rest of what Frannie said registered. “Oh, hell no. We are not going to Kowalski’s. Not now!”

That seemed to take her aback a little bit. “What do you mean, ‘not now?’”

Ray struggled to find an excuse, any excuse, other than the truth, but the way Frannie was looking at him wasn’t the expression of a naive younger sister who’d take anything her big brother said as gospel. He tried to pull the wool over her eyes at this point, and she’d see right through him. “Fraser’s there. I am not having the kinda conversation you seem to want me to have in front of Fraser.”

“Wait, how do you know Fraser’s there?” Frannie’s eyes about bugged out of her head. “Are he and Kowalski–?”

“No!” Ray blurted, perhaps a little too urgently. “Look, Frannie, you want me to talk to Kowalski? Fine, I’ll talk to him. Tomorrow at the station. Okay?”

If before had been like a light coming on in Frannie’s face, this was more like a nuclear explosion. He could see the moment she got it. “That’s what this is all about, isn’t it? It’s Fraser. You’re both hung up on him, that’s why you don’t want to get involved with each other. Oh my God, Ray. Why didn’t you ever tell me?”

“C’mon, Frannie.” Ray smiled feebly at her. “The way you were all over him? When was ever gonna be a good time to tell you, ‘Hey, I really wish you wouldn’t look at my partner that way ‘cause only I get to do that’? I knew how much you liked him.”

“Lust is not quite the same thing as liking,” Frannie grinned. “I mean, in case you haven’t noticed–which apparently you have–Fraser is pretty nearly a perfect specimen. I wasn’t looking for a soulmate, I just…well, who wouldn’t want a chance to melt that particular block of ice?”

Ray groaned. “Frannie, it is gonna make me sick to my stomach if I have to sit here one more minute discussing sex with Fraser with my sister, so can we please change the subject?”

Frannie grinned. “Okay. But you promise me you’ll talk to Kowalski at work tomorrow? Because if I drop by for lunch and find out you haven’t–”

Ray squeezed her hand gratefully. “I promise.”


Ray really had to stop making promises. The last thing he wanted to do when he spotted Kowalski across the squad room the next morning was pull him aside for an intimate little chat. Especially not when Kowalski seemed to be already having a nice intimate little chat with Fraser. Much as he hated to admit it, though, Frannie was right about one thing. They had to talk this out, figure out a better solution.

So, Ray squared his shoulders, stuck his chin out, and marched up to the desk. He turned to Fraser first, relieved to discover he didn’t have to force a smile. “Hey, Benny. Have a good time at Kowalski’s last night?”

There was no snide undercurrent to the question, but Kowalski still turned an interesting shade of purple.

Fraser, bless him, at least took the question at face value. “Yes, as a matter of fact. We had a pleasant if not entirely healthy dinner, and a good talk.” He gave Kowalski a look that Ray couldn’t read.

He nodded. “Good. I’m glad. Only now I need to have a little talk with him. You mind?”

Fraser shook his head. “No, of course not. Be my guest.”

Kowalski’s face took on a more belligerent cast than normal as he stood and followed Ray into the hallway. He was headed for the bathroom, but Ray managed to redirect them into what had once been his favorite supply closet, not the least because of all the time spent in close–if chaste–quarters with Fraser in there.

“You woulda felt it if we’d done anything,” Kowalski blurted out as soon as they were out of earshot. His arms crossed defensively.

Ray pulled the chain to switch the light on, then turned to stare at him, bewildered. “Jesus. You’re killing me here, Kowalski.”

Defensive mutated into openly angry. “Hey, you said you could handle it! And besides, it’s not like you’ve been doing such a great job on the not-jerking-off thing either.”

Oh, for God’s sake. “That’s not what I’m talking about,” Ray corrected him with deliberate calm. Hey, if Fraser could keep it cool through this whole mess, so could he.

Kowalski blinked. “Okay, then what are you talking about?”

“We agreed to this little non-arrangement because of Fraser, right?”

“Right.”

Now it was Ray’s turn to cross his arms. “So why the hell aren’t you with Fraser?”

“Because you dragged me into a closet,” Kowalski retorted.

“No, Stanley; I mean, why aren’t you with Fraser?”

Kowalski’s jaw hit the floor. “Wait, you mean, with with Fraser?”

Ray made an expansive gesture with both hands that hopefully conveyed ‘what did you think I meant?’ well enough to get it through Kowalski’s thick skull.

Kowalski spluttered a moment, then came back with, “Why aren’t you with Fraser?”

“Cause I’m not the one that goes around looking like a kicked puppy if Fraser doesn’t look at me for five minutes.”

Kowalski let out a snort. “I’m sorry, have you seen yourself lately?” He shook his head as if trying to make some sort of sense of what he’d just heard. “Wait, you want me to hook up with Fraser?”

“Was that or was that not basically what we agreed upon three weeks ago?” Ray demanded, exasperated.

“No, we agreed that there was no way we could possibly hook up with each other because Fraser was lying like a rug about wanting us to.” The same exasperation was starting to creep into Kowalski’s voice. “I thought you wanted him. Unless you go around kissing all your plutonic friends like that?”

Ray felt the blush start at the tips of his ears and the middle of his bald spot, then work its way inward. “I think you mean ‘platonic.’ And yeah, of course I want him. Who wouldn’t?” Literally. The whole world seemed to think Fraser was, as Frannie’d so eloquently put it, a perfect specimen. “But it’s not about what I want. Fraser wants you. He’ll never say it, because he’s determined to push this whole soulmate thing with us, but I’ve seen the way he looks at you.”

“Yeah, well, you’re forgetting I felt the way he kissed you.”

Ah, hell. Ray grimaced. “Ah, yeah, sorry about that.”

“Um, actually…” Ray watched the red of Kowalski’s hair leech into his face again and tried not to think about how it was actually kind of a good look on him. “I didn’t mind so much. It was kinda hot.”

Ray suddenly remembered the reaction he’d gotten from Kowalski, the one that had confused him so much it had probably stopped things going any farther. And then Kowalski wasn’t the only one turning the color of stewed beets.

They stared at each other awkwardly for a minute. Then Kowalski ventured, “Do you ever wonder about it? I mean…what it would be like with both of us?”

The rush of heat moved quickly southward, and if Ray’s next question came out sounding a little dumb, it was only because most of his blood was headed away from his brain. “Both of us kissing Fraser?”

Kowalski’s pupils almost swallowed up his irises and Ray could feel the way both of their pants were becoming a little uncomfortably tight. They may not be able to share mental images, but apparently Kowalski had a doozy of one of his own. “No. I mean…Jesus, yeah, that would be hot too…but I meant you and me. With each other.”

Ah, fuck. They kept talking like this and Ray was gonna have to do something about it. In the closet. With Kowalski not only feeling it but watching. His throat was so dry that his voice came out hoarse. “I thought we decided that was a no-no on account of Fraser.”

Kowalski shrugged. He was giving Ray a look now that almost suggested blow jobs might be in their immediate future. “Yeah, well, we both pretty much know that Fraser wants us both.” The heat in his eyes faded a little into hesitation. “What if, uh…what if I maybe want that too?”

God, yes. It was probably stupid to give any other answer than that out loud, since his body language was making it pretty obvious. But this was Fraser, the last bastion of propriety. “Are you seriously suggesting we invite Fraser to join us in a ménage à trois?”

Kowalski’s eyes pinched in confusion. Or possibly frustration. Maybe both. This was rapidly becoming an increasingly frustrating conversation, in the explicitly sexual sense. “I don’t speak Italian, Vecchio, but if that means threesome, then yeah. That’s exactly what I’m suggesting.”

Ray rolled his eyes, but managed to refrain from pointing out that it was French. “What if he says no?”

Kowalski smirked. “I dunno, I think between the two of us we can probably convince him.”

Something in Ray snapped. Suddenly he had Kowalski shoved up against one of the shelves, not caring that he could feel the metal digging into his own back as well. Then he was kissing him for all he was worth.

It was just as weird as he’d expected. There were moments when he even forgot which tongue was his and made the mistake of trying to move the wrong one, which made things even more awkward and fumbling than your normal first kiss. But it was also one of the hottest things he’d ever experienced without actual genitalia being involved.

When they finally came up for air, Kowalski ground against him, laughing breathlessly. “Need some help with that, Vecchio?” he asked.

The feel of their erections brushing against each other, even through four layers of fabric, was more than Ray could take. Especially feeling it from both sides. He groaned. “Fuck you, Kowalski.”

Kowalski’s grin turned into a leer again. “Okay, if you insist.”

Then he was down on his knees, unzipping Ray’s pants and easing him out. A heartbeat later, Ray had a mouthful of his own dick, but he didn’t even care because what Kowalski was doing to it…Jesus, and he’d thought the man was good with his hands.

They came at the same time–the one small remaining sliver of Ray’s brain that could still form thoughts briefly wondered if that was going to happen all the time now–and then both slumped down to the floor and just stared at each other.

“Fuck.”


Operation talk-Fraser-into-a-threesome went into effect sometime after they both managed to pull themselves together, clean up, and go back to actually talking. They decided it would be best to do it at Vecchio’s place, since Fraser might get suspicious if Kowalski invited him over two nights in a row, and not in the right way.

Fraser had seemed genuinely pleased to accept the invitation, even if his eyes had been tight and his smile forced as he looked between them. Fraser’s always been a little too observant where other people were concerned, and the fact that he had a sense of smell only slightly less well-honed than Dief’s didn’t help.

Speaking of Dief; the wolf had taken one look at them and let out a snort that Ray almost understood in spite of himself. Then he’d laid his head back down on his paws and proceeded to ignore them both for the rest of the conversation.

They made a point of not leaving the station at the same time. Ray left first, as soon as Welsh okayed it, since he was the one with the most preparation to do. His apartment was not exactly what you’d call clean, after all. And if he was even vaguely hoping to have sex tonight? With either one or both of his partners? He was damned well going to at least change the sheets.

He ended up doing a lot more than that, and probably a lot faster than he’d ever done it before in his life. So fast that he nearly slammed his fingers in the drawer when he was putting away the silverware.

Damn it. He shouldn’t be this nervous. For Christ’s sake, he’d already kissed them both and basically screwed Kowalski. But apparently the part of him that had asked, “What if Fraser says no?” wasn’t entirely convinced by Kowalski’s reassurances. So, here he was taking it out on his apartment.

Kowalski arrived next, pizza in hand as they’d agreed. Okay, so it wasn’t the most romantic meal for a planned seduction, but it was them in a way that anything fancier just wasn’t. Fancy was more just Ray, and that wasn’t what they were offering.

It helped that Ray wasn’t the only one who was nervous. Kowalski kept up a pretty much constant rhythm with his foot on the floor whenever he was standing still, which wasn’t often or for very long. It was driving Ray nuts. He finally had to step on Kowalski’s foot to get him to stop. “Keep that up and by the time Fraser gets here, I might be a lot less enthusiastic about this plan,” he warned him.

“Yeah, right,” Kowalski retorted with that leering grin that Ray was starting to fall in love with maybe a little bit. He pulled a tray of ice out of the freezer and started dropping cubes into the glasses he’d set out. “Like you haven’t been thinking about what you wanna do to me since the minute I walked in the door.”

“Never said I wasn’t,” Ray acknowledged dryly. “But if you keep that up, it’s gonna involve a lot less sex and a lot more violence.”

Kowalski’s grin just got bigger. “Sweet. Never knew you were into the kinky stuff.”

Ray hit him with a dishtowel. Kowalski retaliated by dropping an ice cube down his neck. He yelled, “Worth it!” as Ray yelped and chased him out of the kitchen. It succeeded in breaking the tension, but had the unfortunate side effect that they forgot completely about dinner and were wrestling on the couch, each trying to get the upper hand–and remember which hands were theirs–when Fraser finally knocked on the door.

They sprang apart, looking at each other apprehensively.

Fraser knocked again, a little more uncertainly this time, and Ray swallowed hard. “Well, here goes nothing.” Disentangling himself from Kowalski, he made a vain attempt to smooth down the front of his shirt and stumbled to the door.

For a split second, he was almost disappointed to see that Fraser had taken the time to change into his civvies, even though he and Kowalski’d done the same. If there was one thing he’d known for years he wanted, it was messing up that uniform. Even before he knew he wanted to do it in quite this context. But that leather jacket looked pretty damned good on him too, and the jeans hugged Fraser’s ass in a way the uniform pants weren’t designed to do, so he wasn’t gonna complain. If things went well, there’d be time for the other later.

He really hoped things went well.

An easy smile slipped onto Ray’s face. “Hey, Benny. Right on time as usual. Come on in.”

Fraser entered, eyes widening in surprise when he spotted Kowalski. “Ray! What a pleasant surprise,” Fraser greeted him, before turning back to Ray. “I wasn’t aware that you had invited Ray as well.”

“Yeah, well, that’s kinda the thing,” Kowalski interjected. “Me and Vecchio, we got something we wanna talk to you about.”

How Fraser could exude pure panic and yet at the same time say, “Yes of course, Ray,” in a voice that was completely even, Ray didn’t know, but then Fraser’d always been good at hiding.

“After we eat,” Ray interjected. Not because he wanted to prolong Fraser’s misery, not by a long shot. But if they started that conversation first and things went the way they wanted them too, Ray knew they weren’t likely to get around to eating at all.

Kowalski tore his eyes away from Fraser and nodded. “Right. Food first.”


Okay, so maybe it would’ve been the better idea to just go ahead and let the pizza get cold. Because dinner was, quite frankly, torture. Fraser made politely pleasant conversation, but his eyes died a little bit every time Ray and Kowalski reached for a slice of pizza at the same time, or spoke to each other, or looked at each other. The tension thickened as the evening wore on and their appetites waned, as much from the former as from satiation. It got almost dense enough to force all the air out of the room by the time Kowalski finally broke.

He set down his half-eaten slice with a little too much force and blurted, “Look, Fraser, it’s not what you think.”

Fraser looked at him, and Ray could almost see the ruler he was using to measure his words. “Oh? Do you mean that you and Ray are not together?”

Oh, this was gonna be fun. Kowalski looked at him, the memory of their earlier encounter burning hot in his face and in parts lower. Ray smiled back sweetly and folded his hands in his lap. “No…” Kowalski half-stammered. “I mean…we are–sort of. But…”

Ray took pity on him and interjected. “What Stanley is trying so eloquently to say, Benny, is that while you may be right, it’s possible we could be good together, we’re never gonna be great. Not without you.”

Fraser frowned. “Ray, I never had any intention of failing to continue on as your partner–”

This time it was Kowalski’s turn to interrupt. “Not our police partner, Fraser. We want you to be our partner partner.”

Fraser looked from one to the other, bewildered. Ray could tell he still wasn’t quite getting it. “You said it yourself, Benny. Having a soulmate is no guarantee you’re gonna be happy. But the three of us…I think we could make each other happy. If you’d let us. God knows we’ve both been in love with you probably as long as we’ve known you.”

Benton Fraser was always one of the most beautiful men God ever created. But when he smiled–genuinely and helplessly like all the strait-laced Mountie training in the world couldn’t hold it back–he was quite possibly the most beautiful thing God had ever created. “You want me to be part of your relationship?” he asked like he couldn’t quite believe it.

Kowalski just nodded, swallowing hard.

“Would you like that, Benny?” Ray managed to ask gently.

Fraser floundered happily. “Well, I…I would…this is highly unconventional, Ray.”

“Forget conventional,” Kowalski snapped. “Do you want us? Would that make you happy?”

“Yes.” Ray could tell it slipped out, but Fraser had never sounded more sure of anything in his life. He looked at them both, and God, there it was. That look of pure adoration that Ray’d envied so much when he’d seen it directed at Kowalski. Only this time it was pointed at both of them and he didn’t care if they saw him. Better yet, there was hope for the first time that Ray’d ever seen. “I can’t imagine anything that would make me happier. But are you sure about this?”

Kowalski jumped up from the table like someone’d installed a spring under his ass. Circling around to Fraser, he grabbed his face in both hands and kissed him like his life depended on it.

Ray closed his eyes and let out a low groan of satisfaction. It was every bit as good as he’d ever imagined it could be.

When they pulled apart, Kowalski demanded, “That feel sure to you?”

Fraser nodded wordlessly, then looked at Ray. His eyes were so dark the blue had almost vanished, and his breath was as ragged as if he’d just chased a purse snatcher clear across Chicago. “You felt that too, didn’t you?” he asked in that breathless tone. Okay, so it was stating the obvious, but sometimes the obvious needed to be stated.

Ray could only nod, his throat too dry and his body too turned on to form words right now.

Fraser drew a long, deep, shuddering breath. “That must be…I can only imagine.” It took a second for Ray to clue in what he meant by that, but finally he got it. Fraser’d done the soulmate-on-soulmate thing, sure. And he’d probably felt Victoria kiss a few other guys–although maybe not so much while she was in prison–but he hadn’t wanted those guys just as bad as he’d wanted Victoria. In fact, it had probably hurt like hell.

An idea hit Ray so hard it turned his dick to rock in about five seconds. Kowalski’s head snapped around to look at him. “Vecchio?” he asked warily.

Ray drew a shuddering breath, then grinned at him before turning that grin on Fraser. “You wanna feel what we’re feeling? I think we can make that happen.”

Fraser swallowed. “How–?”

Ray gave him his best Kowalski leer. “Simple. Everything you do to one of us, the other’ll do it to you. How does that sound?”

Fraser made a noise that sounded like a strangled gurgle and Ray’s grin just got wider. Kowalski smirked back at him. “I think that’s a yes, Vecchio. What do you think?”

Ray pushed back from the table so hard, his chair fell over. “Bed,” he managed to rasp out. Walking the few feet to the bedroom was not gonna be fun in his condition, but he was not about to do this on the dining room floor. Maybe in the future, but not this time.

Fraser made an eager nose and pushed back his own chair to comply. Ray was never sure afterwards how the hell they made it to the bedroom, but within seconds they were falling onto the bed together with Fraser in the middle. Clothes went flying, neither Ray nor Kowalski really caring where they landed. Fraser was a bit more meticulous, but that meant he was still working on his buttons by the time the other two were down to nothing.

Ray looked at Kowalski, and without a word or a touch they both went to work on Fraser, Ray stripping his shirt and his undershirt over his head while Kowalski eased down the zipper on his jeans and stuck his hand inside.

Both Fraser and Ray moaned at the same time. Kowalski grinned. “You like that?” Then he let go to finish stripping Fraser’s jeans off. The minute Fraser was freed from his pants, he rolled over on his side and swiftly applied his mouth to Kowalski’s neck. Ray bit back another noise of his own and kept his promise, spooning himself against Fraser’s back and nipping at his neck in as close to the same spot as he could get.

Fraser shuddered between them, visibly struggling to hold it together. His hands flailed out, grasping onto Kowalski’s hips as if they were the only thing keeping him from floating away. Ray dug his own hands into Fraser’s hips for pretty much the exact same reason, promise or no promise.

They were all hard by now, and Ray was quite possibly in the best place he’d never even imagined being. He could feel Kowalski’s dick rubbing against his–or rubbing against Fraser’s rather–even as he rubbed his own against Fraser’s perfect ass.

Kowalski’s eyes rolled back in his head. “Fuck me,” he breathed.

Ray made a noise of agreement and Kowalski grunted in frustration. “No…I mean…want you to fuck me.”

Fraser apparently figured out that fucking Kowalski meant getting fucked by Ray at the same time, because suddenly he was trying to press into both of them at the same time. “God, yes,” he consented fervently.

It took a little bit of rearranging–if they were gonna give Fraser the full being-Kowalski experience, then he was gonna have to take him from behind for symmetry–and at one point Ray had to get up to grab the lube (also thoughtfully provided by Kowalski, who’d picked it up on the way to pick up the pizza), but soon they were back down and Fraser was carefully easing one slick finger into Kowalski while Kowalski squirmed against him. It took all of the brain power Ray had left to imitate the gesture, so caught up was in the feeling of Fraser gently easing Kowalski open.

Fraser threw his head back with an awed, “Oh!” and almost forgot to continue. He pulled himself together with an effort; enough to add a second finger, then a third, gasping each time as Ray copied him.

Kowalski threw his head back so hard it was a wonder he didn’t crack Fraser’s nose and kill the mood in the process. “Oh, God, Frase, please…”

It was no wonder he was on the edge, considering he was essentially getting finger-fucked by two guys instead of one, and with a lot less awkwardness than that sort of thing probably usually took.

Fraser took the hint. He also took the lube and applied it liberally to his dick before handing it back to a so-turned-on-he-was-nearly-numb-with-it Ray. Only when Ray touched a slick finger to his back to indicate that he was ready did he finally push into Kowalski at the same moment as Ray pushed into him. Kowalski arched like someone had just put 20,000 volts through his body.

Normally Ray figured it would’ve probably taken them a little while to figure out a rhythm. But he could feel the rhythm Fraser was setting up as he pumped into and out of Kowalski, so it was the easiest thing in the world to fall into it. Just like it was the easiest thing in the world for both of them to follow Kowalski over the edge when he finally just couldn’t take it anymore. The world whited out for an unbelievably long time and then they all collapsed in a messy pile all over Ray’s freshly-ruined sheets.

He’d heard afterglow described as being blitzed out before, but never had that metaphor seemed so appropriate. For those first few moments, there was nothing left of Ray Vecchio. He’d been completely subsumed in Fraser and Kowalski and he didn’t even care. Tomorrow, maybe, he’d go back to finding them the most annoying people on the planet, but for now he just wanted to lie there: head pillowed on Fraser’s right shoulder staring into Kowalski’s eyes where he lay on the left, feeling both their arms around him.

Kowalski smiled at them, and for once it wasn’t a grin or a leer, but a genuine, affectionate smile. “Hey, Frase,” he managed in a lazy voice, and Ray felt it rumble through Kowalski and Fraser both. “Still think the conventional way is better, or you maybe want to try our way for a while?”

Fraser closed his eyes and smiled. He was too close to look at them, so he tightened the arm that was curled around each of their backs instead. “For as long as you’ll have me,” he vowed.

Ray grinned and closed his eyes. Maybe this soulmate thing wasn’t such a bad deal after all.


End note: I am unfortunately incapable of writing a soulmate AU without subverting the trope a little, but that was the prompt that grabbed me, so I ran with it. I also wanted to play with a way of identifying your soulmate that I hadn’t seen before, hence the touch thing. (It’s entirely possible it has been done before and I just haven’t seen it, but I hope I at least gave it an original spin if so. *g*)

A few notes about how the touch bond works in my head, in case anyone’s curious about it:

  • The connection is formed the first time soulmates touch each other, and they feel everything the other feels from that point on.
  • It is possible, but extremely rare, to have more than one soulmate. It is also possible to have no soulmate; this is most common with people who are aromantic asexual, but it does happen in other circumstances as well.
  • The shared sensation lasts just as long for both the person physically experiencing it and the person(s) psychically experiencing it.
  • One soulmate dying does not kill the other(s), but if the death was violent, the pain can put the other(s) in a coma for a while.
  • Because of the existence of soulmates (or rather, of people interpreting the touch bond as proof of soulmates), taboos against same-sex and poly relationships do not exist as such. There are, however, taboos against getting involved with someone who is not your soulmate once the touch bond has been formed. Before the bond is formed, it’s treated as a necessary evil.
  • Soulmate relationships are not guaranteed to be healthy, as I suggest in my story by way of Fraser/Victoria and Ma/Pop Vecchio.
  • As a result of the previous two factors, there are movements to legitimize post-soulmate non-soulmate relationships.

Oh, and I don’t know if anyone would WANT to play in this universe, but you’re welcome to. Just one condition: send me the link! 😉

Posted in due South, Fraser/RayV/RayK, Slash | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Fic: The Separation of These Elements (B5, Susan/Talia)

Author’s Note: Just for clarification, this story is in no way intended to reflect the real experiences of a person with Dissociative Identity Disorder; it is built firmly on the Jekyll and Hyde model instead. Mental health tags were included as potential trigger warnings, just in case. The title is, naturally, taken from a quote in Robert Louis Stevenson’s The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll & Mr. Hyde.


“What do you mean, ‘you don’t know’?”

The woman who had recently been Talia Winters pursed her lips in annoyance. Bester had come to collect her personally, which was no surprise, although it was a bit of one that he’d been conveniently close enough to get here within a day. But then, no one in the Corps had as much of a vested interest in taking down Babylon 5 as he did, even if his reasons were a bit more…personal than the Corps’. His frustration with her inability to give him the key to that downfall was understandable. Hell, she shared it. But the way he was looking at her as if he thought this were deliberate on her part: that was inexcusable. “Just what I said. I don’t know. I can’t remember.”

Still frowning, Bester rose from his seat and began pacing the length of Winters’ quarters aboard the station, every now and then pausing to give her another suspicious stare. “Stop looking at my like I’m one of the traitors,” she snapped. “I couldn’t be even if I wanted to. You know that.”

“I do,” he answered briskly. “But the program was designed to completely eradicate the original personality, while leaving the memory intact. You should know everything that Talia Winters knew.”

“I should,” Control answered, folding her arms defensively. “I don’t. Trust me: this is just as frustrating for me as it is for you.”

“As it should be.” Bester agreed. He looked at her and pasted on a smile that was almost sweet, if not for the undercurrent of spite in it. “Please, Ms. Winters, don’t stand on my account.”

“Don’t call me that,” she snapped. “Talia Winters was a traitor to the Corps. She was weak. I am not Talia Winters.” She couldn’t disobey a command from a ranking member of the Corps, though, even an indirect one, so she sat.

Bester seated himself opposite her, still watching her with narrowed eyes. “Fair enough. How about ‘Ms. Jacobs’? I’m told ‘Jacob’ is Hebrew for ‘Supplanter,’ which seems…fitting.”

Jacobs. Something about that did feel right, fitting, as he’d said. No matter how she felt right now about the person bestowing it on her. ‘Jacobs’ gave a curt nod.

“Very well, Ms. Jacobs,” Bester continued with false cheerfulness. “Perhaps you would care to explain to me how the program could work perfectly on every test subject and yet still fail in your case?”

She hesitated a moment before answering, scrolling back through Talia’s memories to confirm what she suspected. There were so many holes, but most of them were small. There were certain moments, certain conversations and thoughts that were absent, but the moments framing them were still there. And since Jason Ironheart was far beyond the Corps’ reach, most of Talia’s memory of him was intact. All except for one thing…

“It’s Ironheart. He…changed her somehow, made her stronger. I don’t know how, though. She’s keeping that from me too.”

Bester leaned in, the skin between his eyebrows creasing into a frown. “Why are you talking about her like she’s still there?”

“Because she is,” Jacobs spat out angrily. “You’re right, when I was activated it should’ve wiped out her personality entirely. But whatever Ironheart did to her protected her somehow. I can feel her, I can even hold her back, but I can’t get at her. I can’t destroy her.”

Eyes widening in alarm, Bester rose from his seat and began pacing again. “That isn’t what you told Commander Ivanova.”

She didn’t bother asking how he knew that. Oh, he didn’t get it from Ivanova (although why she was so sure of that was something else she didn’t understand), but all he would have had to do was eavesdrop when the Commander told someone else.

“Of course it isn’t,” was her curt reply. “If they knew there was anything left of Talia Winters in me, they’d never let me go.” A shiver passed through her at the thought. She was programmed for self-preservation. She’d tell a thousand lies not to have to go back into that dark corner of Talia’s mind, or worse…be wiped out entirely. “They’d try to…bring her back.”

“Well, we can’t have that.” Folding his hands matter-of-factly behind his back, Bester smiled at her in a manner that was almost kind. “Get some rest, Ms. Jacobs. Our transport for Earth leaves first thing in the morning. With any luck, a good night’s sleep will jog your memory.” Then, with a jaunty salute so smart she could practically hear his heels click, Bester left.


She was supposed to be dead. Why wasn’t she? Anything had to be better than this hell, tossed like a discarded toy into the darkest corner of her own mind, cut off not just from everything and everyone she cared about, but even from her own body.

No. She knew why. That…thing controlling her body had said it herself: Jason. Jason’s “gift” was the reason she was trapped here. Why, Jason? Why would you give me just enough power to survive, but not enough to fight her? Why didn’t you warn me that she was there?

Oh, she’d fought. She’d fought like a cat, clawing and kicking at the darkness even it swept over her. She’d battled for control as the imposter ripped into Susan, mocking and twisting what they’d shared with the implication that it had all been a lie. She’d fought harder than she’d ever fought in her life, but nothing had worked.

Talia…

If she could have cried, she would have. He’d heard her. Somehow Jason had heard her. Which meant somebody knew she was still in here. Jason, why? she asked again, her mental voice sounding as weary and beaten down as she felt.

He didn’t answer. Talia, you must break free.

I can’t. I tried, but she’s too strong.

Jason’s presence expanded in her little corner of her mind until it felt like he was filling it, embracing her. You are stronger than you know. But no one can fight this battle alone.

Then help me, she pleaded.

I have given you all the help I can. Jason’s voice was quiet and resigned as he spun images at her, images of all the precious secrets he had helped her keep. I am not what you need to win this battle. Not anymore.

It was on the tip of her non-existent tongue to ask, then who is? But the answer came to her before she could because it was one of those secrets. It came to her in a whisper of silk on skin, of long auburn hair tangling around her fingers, and in the shock of climax when a mind that had always been closed was suddenly opened to her.

Talia muffled a cry. Susan thinks I’m dead.

Jason’s mind wrapped around hers in one final caress. Then show her you are not.


Susan…

Susan tossed fitfully, her body recoiling on instinct away from the empty spot on the mattress that Talia had occupied last night. She was vaguely aware that she was dreaming, aware enough to be a little surprised that she’d managed to sleep at all. Her darkest secret was out, and not just to the Captain but to someone who now had no reason not to give her up to the Corps. Truthfully, she should have run, should have just deserted and hopped the first transport out the minute Talia transformed before her eyes. But she couldn’t. Because it was Talia, and keeping her secret meant nothing if she had to sacrifice Talia to do it. The Control personality might be right; there might be nothing left of Talia to save. But what if she were wrong?

Susan, help me…

As if conjured by her doubts, the figure of Talia slowly materialized in front of her. She was wearing the same suit she had been this morning, her hair gleaming like sunlight in the strange, sourceless light of this dream world. But instead of the proud, disdainful smile Susan had last seen on that painfully familiar face, she looked lost, pleading. One gloved hand stretched out towards her as if trying to grab onto something, anything to keep her from falling into the pit that yawned beneath her feet.

Susan’s first instinct was to reach for that hand, to take hold of it and keep hold of it no matter what happened, to Talia or to her. But fear seized her before her feet could move. Because what better way for the false Talia to trick her into revealing herself than to get her to close what could only be the visual representation of a telepathic circuit?

“How do I know it’s you?” she demanded.

It’s me, Talia promised, her face pleading. Please. I know what she told you, but I’m alive. I’m still in here.

“Prove it.” Her voice sounded harsh even to herself.

Her eyes even more desperate, Talia glanced down at her hands. With barely a thought, she ripped the gloves from them, casting them aside into the surrounding darkness. The Psi Corps badge on her lapel followed.

Susan’s heart skipped.

She couldn’t do that, even if she wanted to, Talia urged, confirming what Susan suspected. She reached out again, this time with a bare hand. As she did, the room around them seemed to stretch and thin, the distance between them widening as if Talia were being once more pulled out of her reach.

Reacting without thought, Susan lunged forward, grabbing Talia’s hand and holding on as if she never intended to let go. The moment she did, the connection between them that had flared to life for the first time only last night spilled open again, flooding through them both with a rush of mutual relief. Because there was no possible way she could doubt anymore: this was Talia, not the cheap imitation of her that had twisted in the knife only hours ago.

But, how…? Susan asked in amazement.

You remember Jason. How he gave me a ‘gift’? Susan could only nod. Talia smiled tiredly. Well, this was part of it. But I can’t fight her alone. I need your help.

Of course. Just tell me what I can do.

Talia’s fingers curled gratefully and almost possessively around her own. You can’t let Bester take me away. I think I can beat her, given enough time and if I have your support, but I won’t get that chance if he gets me off the station. Susan, please. I don’t have much time. I can’t do this when she’s awa—

Susan sat up with a gasp, snapping back to awareness. Her heart was pounding in her chest like it was trying to drum out the 1812 Overture.

She’d always hated dreaming. Whether it be nightmares about her mother, her brother, or a thousand other things, nothing good had ever come from one of Susan’s dreams. But this felt different. This felt real.

And if it was…then she had only a few scant hours to save the woman she thought she might love.


John’s door chimed. Then it chimed again. And again.

Peeling bleary eyes open, he glared at it for a moment before finally forcing himself to sit up in bed. He glanced at the clock and swore. Who the hell would drop by his quarters unannounced in the middle of the night?

The chiming persisted. “All right, all right!” John shouted at the person on the other side of the door, even though with the sound-proofing they couldn’t hear him until he commanded the door to open. Grumbling, he grabbed a robe from the nightstand and threw it on, stomping through his sitting room to open the door and stare in angry disbelief at his second in command.

“Commander, what the hell is so important that you couldn’t just call me on the link?” he demanded.

Susan didn’t answer immediately, instead ducking under his arm and into the room. Only when he turned away and let the door close behind her did she speak. “I couldn’t take a chance of being overheard. Have you swept your room lately?”

Blinking in surprise, John nodded after a moment. “Yeah, with everything going on right now, I sweep it at least once a day. Now, what the hell is going on?”

Hesitating a moment, Susan plopped herself down on John’s sofa before answering. “You can’t let Bester leave with Talia tomorrow.”

He followed her, speaking with a hint of exasperation. “Susan, there’s not a whole hell of a lot I can do to stop him. As far as everyone but the command staff and Lyta Alexander is concerned, that is still Talia Winters, and she’s leaving of her own free will. I can’t hold her against her will without charging her.”

“Then find something to charge her with,” Susan answered abruptly.

John’s eyes narrowed as he lowered himself into a chair opposite. His mind kept working at the problem until finally it nudged an answer loose. “Oh hell. She knows, doesn’t she?”

When Susan looked at him blankly, he added, “What you told me last night. You let it slip to her sometime before all of this happened.”

Susan looked sheepish. “Yes, but that’s not what this is about.”

John’s expression hardened, despite the worry blossoming in his own chest. That was the last thing they needed. If Psi Corps got their hands on Ivanova, she could do more damage to their cause than a thousand Talias combined. Not to mention the fact that she was his friend as well as his subordinate. “Commander—”

She cut him off. “Talia’s still alive.”

He stopped, shocked. “That’s not what you told me earlier.”

“It’s not what I thought earlier,” Susan admitted. “She came to me. Called to me. In a dream. She asked for my help.”

John frowned. “What makes you so sure it’s really her and not…the other one?”

She met his eyes evenly. “Did Garibaldi brief you on the Ironheart incident?”

He nodded. “Not in exhaustive detail, but he went over the basic facts of the case a few months ago.”

“Well, when Ironheart…ascended or whatever the hell it was he did, there was this…light that came out of nowhere and touched Talia. He called it his gift to her.” Susan glanced at him to make sure he was following before going on. “Talia told me once that, after that, she could do things that a P5 shouldn’t have been able to do, things that a P12 shouldn’t have been able to do. Things that she kept secret from the Corps even before she started to break her conditioning because some part of her knew what would happen to her if they ever found out. One of those things was the ability to hide away parts of herself—secrets, abilities—from stronger telepaths.”

John frowned. “And you think she’s hidden herself away from the implanted personality.”

“Yes.” Susan’s expression turned anxious. “But if Bester leaves this station with her tomorrow morning, it won’t matter how well protected she is, we’ll lose our only chance to get her back. Because once Psi Corps figures out that the program didn’t work properly, that it can’t give them the information they want…”

Glancing down, John noticed that Susan’s hands were knotted together in her lap so tightly that the knuckles were turning white. He nodded in acknowledgment, his own mouth drawing into a pinched line. “Right. All right, I’ll see what excuse I can find to keep her here. In the meantime, Garibaldi said he had a line he wanted to follow up on about this. Why don’t you go ask him if it’s panned out.”

Susan’s eyebrows shot up in surprise and a touch of amusement. “You want me to wake Mr. Garibaldi up in the middle of the night,” she repeated.

“Absofragginlutely,” John grunted. He smiled wryly at her. “Why should we have all the fun?”

With a grateful smile, Susan rose from her seat. “Yes, Sir.” She paused about halfway to the door. “Oh, and Captain…? Thank you.”

John grimaced. “Thank me when it’s over.”


“Run that by me again?” Bester asked. He was all courtesy on the surface, but there was a dangerous undercurrent to his voice.

Stephen squared his shoulders and repeated, “It is my considered medical opinion that the conditioning of the alter personality currently in control of Ms. Winters’ body makes her medically incompetent.”

Bester waved a dismissive hand. “Yes, that part I understood. What I fail to grasp is why you seem to think this in some way prevents me from leaving with her this morning. Ms. Winters is a member of Psi Corps. If she is not competent to make her own medical decisions, power of attorney reverts to next of kin, which is the Corps.”

“Unless the member in question chooses a different next of kin.” Stephen felt a swell of triumph when Bester gaped at him. He’d started reading up on the law the moment Captain Sheridan had called him last night and asked if he help keep Talia Winters on the station until they could be sure the Control personality couldn’t be removed. “There’s no statute that forbids it. There can’t be, or that would destroy the illusion of autonomy you give your members. You just rely on the loyalty you program into them from birth to ensure no one ever does.”

“Are you telling me that Ms. Winters changed her next of kin?” Bester’s voice sounded incredulous.

“She did.” Luckily, that was the truth. She’d come to him only a few weeks ago, when her loyalty to the Corps had been finally, irretrievably broken, and asked him her options. He’d been as surprised as anyone when she chose Commander Ivanova, but it had made sense on reflection. If anyone would fight to make sure that Talia’s wishes, not the Corps’, were honored, it was Susan.

“I see.” The Psi Cop’s eyes narrowed. “Doctor, don’t think I don’t know what you’re doing? It’s only natural her friends would want to keep her here to see if there’s any way the Control personality can be removed. But I promise you, it can’t. And even if it could, there is nothing left of Talia Winters to save. You’re only delaying the inevitable.”

“That may be,” Stephen acknowledged. “But I’m her doctor, so until I’m satisfied, she’s not leaving this station.”

“Very well.” Bester folded his hands together and smiled sweetly. “Then until then, neither am I. I do hope you have enough of the sleepers to last that long, or else…” He tsked, shaking his head. “Who knows what some strong emotion might float to the surface?”


“Kosh. Your lead that you wanted to follow up on was Kosh. The Vorlon.” Ivanova’s voice sounded tinny and distant in the breather, but her skepticism came through loud and clear.

Garibaldi shrugged, a rueful smile crossing his face under the glass faceplate. “I know it sounds crazy, but Talia told me once about this weird negotiation Kosh had her sit in on. In hindsight, from the way she described it, it almost feels like he knew this was coming. And hey…” he grimaced. “Beggars can’t be choosers, right?”

She sighed deeply in acknowledgment. “Right.”

Garibaldi said nothing, just raised his eyebrows and lifted his hand to the door chime. The door slid open before he could ring it, though, and Kosh stood there looking at both of them expectantly. Or at least, it felt expectant: it was weird how expressive that dammed encounter suit could be without ever actually changing. Maybe it was something in the tilt of his head.

“Ambassador,” Susan exclaimed, sounding startled. “I’m sorry, we didn’t mean to disturb you…”

Kosh gave her a look that managed to convey ‘of course you did’ without saying a single word or moving a thing but his neck. “So,” he stated in the sibilant but musical tone of his translator. “It is done.”

Garibaldi couldn’t quite suppress a snort. “If by ‘It is done,’ you mean Talia Winters has been reprogrammed by the Psi Corps, yeah, I guess it is. We’re hoping you can tell us how to undo it.”

Kosh said nothing, didn’t even acknowledge that he had spoken. The iris of his encounter suit remained pointed straight at Ivanova. It was no wonder she squirmed, even if she kept her eyes level and never flinched from that weirdly piercing gaze.

In spite of himself, Garibaldi felt a little insulted. Not that he wanted to be the object this little staring contest, but what was he, chopped liver? “Talia told me what you did. With that Vicker? You recorded her personality. Almost as if you knew this was coming.”

This time, neither one of Michael’s companions acknowledged him. Kosh just kept staring at Susan, and she stared right back defiantly. Much to his surprise, Kosh was the first to break the silence. “Is she essential?”

Is she essential? Wow, that took some nerve. It was on the tip of his tongue to retort that some of them didn’t judge another person’s value based on how useful they were, but Susan cut him off.

“Yes.”

She said it with such conviction, such passion, that Garibaldi did a double take. Wait a second, since when did Susan I-Hate-the-Corps Ivanova talk about a telepath like she was essential to her very existence?

Kosh regarded her for a heartbeat more, then inclined his head.


It was like waking up slowly from a never-ending nightmare. Normally Talia could barely function, if at all, while Control was awake, but the moment Susan and the Captain walked into her rooms, she started to feel again. Oh, she still drew input from her senses even if she couldn’t control the body that housed them, but knowing what was going on around her and feeling the slightest ability to affect it were very different things. The minute her eyes—Control’s eyes, for the moment—locked on Susan, she felt a glimmer of the latter for the first time in two eternal days. Especially when Susan didn’t flinch away this time as she had when Control had taunted her.

Her body reacted very differently of course, responding to the fear and the anger of the personality currently controlling it. “I don’t know what the hell you think you’re doing, but you have no right to hold me like this. No matter what your precious doctor thinks.”

Sheridan nodded. “I see Mr. Bester has already briefed you on the situation. Good. That’ll save us both a lot of time and trouble.”

A smile twitched at the corner of Susan’s mouth, even though every line of her body screamed discomfort. Talia wanted more than anything to reach for her but her hands wouldn’t cooperate, balling instead into fists.

“You’re grasping at straws,” Control spat again. Talia refused to grace her usurper with the name she had chosen for herself. “When Psi Corps finds out about this—”

“Which I’m sure Mr. Bester is trying to make happen as quickly as possible,” Sheridan interrupted. He smiled. “Mr. Garibaldi’s gremlins ought to keep him busy for a while yet, though. And when he does get through, he might find EarthGov slightly less cooperative than he’d like. You see, we’ve already informed them that…another party has taken an interest in your case.”

Talia felt the other’s confusion a heartbeat before she spoke. “What other party?”

The door slid open again on cue, and much to the surprise of both souls currently at war in Talia’s body, Ambassador Kosh of the Vorlon Empire stood there, regarding her with an expressionless stare through the iris of his encounter suit. Behind him stood a figure that was, in his own way, every bit as strange as the Vorlon, even though he appeared human on the surface.

Talia took in the broad-brimmed hat, colorful suit and cheerful expression of the Vicker she’d known as Abbut and her spirits lifted. All those nights she’d lain awake wondering what Kosh could possibly want with a recording of her thoughts and memories…she’d imagined the worst but she’d never imagined this. Had he known, somehow? About the enemy sleeping in her mind?

Even more surprising, Talia felt Susan reach out and gently brush her thoughts. I know you said you could beat her given time…but we didn’t have time.

Unfortunately, raw and untrained as she was, Susan didn’t have the finesse to direct that thought only to the part of Talia that was still under her command. Control reacted. Spinning to face Susan, she spat out, “So that’s what you’ve been hiding, you bitch! God, when the Corps finds out about this, I will make sure they make your life miserable!”

No! Talia cried out in desperation, unheard or ignored. She’d fought so hard to keep that precious secret. Susan couldn’t just throw her life away like this.

Susan still didn’t flinch. Stepping forward until she was standing almost nose to nose with Talia, she simply stated, “No. You won’t.”

Kosh lingered in the doorway for a moment as if for dramatic effect, then glided into the room, Abbut following on his heels. He regarded Control with that same enigmatic one-eyed stare he’d turned on Susan earlier. She shrank back.

The head of his encounter suit swiveled to look at Sheridan and Susan. “Go,” the translation matrix commanded, it’s echoing tones even more severe and ominous than usual.

Sheridan nodded and turned back towards the door. Susan didn’t move.

“Ivanova,” the Captain called curtly from the doorway.

“I’m not leaving.” Susan remained resolute. She flicked her gaze to him briefly and then back to Talia. And no matter who was in control, Talia knew that look was meant for her. “I made a promise.”

Kosh’s attention pivoted back to her. He regarded Susan for another moment implacably, then turned away. “Acceptable.”

Sheridan nodded once again and left, the door closing behind him.

Control lunged for it with a fearful cry, but Susan blocked her way. “And what are you going to do?” Control spat venomously. “Hold me down?”

“No,” Susan answered baldly, grabbing her hand and ripping the glove off before wrapping her fingers around Talia’s just as she’d done in the vision they’d shared last night. “Just hold on, like I promised I would.”


If asked about it afterwards, Talia could never quite describe what it had felt like when Kosh had given her back her mind. Like any battle, there were some moments, some images that were clear as a data crystal, but most of it was a blur of pain and fear. She understood now why Lyta Alexander had become so…strange after she touched Kosh’s mind, but as for what had actually happened to her…Talia could only guess.

Truth be told, she didn’t want to know. She could have asked Susan if she did, but the memory of those nightmare days was something she just wanted to put behind them. That Susan had fought for her, that she’d even risked herself to do so, that was all Talia needed to know.

“If you don’t want to think about it, then stop thinking about it,” Susan mumbled sleepily from beside her, her face burrowing deeper into Talia’s hair. They were sprawled together across Susan’s bed, just as they’d been nearly every night since that day. Somehow after facing their worst fears together, the fears they’d harbored about each other had seemed so much smaller and more trivial by contrast.

Talia laughed deep in her throat. “Sorry.” She twisted around in Susan’s arms to face her, one finger reaching up to trace the line of her lover’s jaw in wonder. “Do you ever wonder…what Kosh meant when he asked you if I was essential? Somehow I doubt the Vorlon Empire is that concerned with your love life.”

Susan opened her eyes, gazing sleepily into Talia’s. “Well, there’s that whole thing John just figured out about telepaths being an effective weapon against the Shadows. With Jason’s gift, you make one hell of a powerful weapon.”

“Not as powerful as we make together,” Talia responded with a smile.

Susan hadn’t lied when she’d told John her own latent telepathy was so minor as to be almost negligible, but Jason’s enhancement of Talia’s gift seemed to more than make up the difference, especially since that gift had blossomed in way she never imagined since she’d reclaimed her life. Perhaps it had only been Control’s presence in her mind holding it back to begin with. But now…now it was no wonder that Kosh had agreed to not only help free her, but also to take her under his protection so Psi Corps couldn’t touch her without risking the ire of the Vorlon Empire.

Either that, or even Vorlons could be closet romantics after all.

Susan grunted in amusement, blinking lazy eyes. “You know, I never asked for any of this,” she grumbled mildly. “I was perfectly happy pretending to be a mundane and keeping every telepath I met at arms’ length.”

Talia laughed again. An idle thought slipped free from Susan’s drowsy mind that she loved Talia’s laugh, and that just made her smile more. “You might have been satisfied, even content, but happy? Really?”

Susan smiled sheepishly. “Well, I thought I was. I suppose I didn’t know how happy I could be.”

Talia leaned in and kissed her. Neither did I.

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Fic: The Mantle of the New (Babylon 5, gen)

Author’s Notes: I was trying to write a drabble or ficlet in response to a request for “Alien seasonal celebrations.” It…kind of got away from me. *g* Anyway, the concept of the Day of Jonalla was taken from the Minbari Federation Fact Book for the B5 RPG, but I expanded considerably on both the holiday itself and what role Jonalla plays in Minbari culture. *g*

Written for: schneefink for fandom_stocking.


“Lieutenant Commander Ivanova?”

Susan recognized Delenn’s voice before she actually saw her. That soft, lilting accent was unmistakable. Fortunately, of all the ambassadors on the station, Delenn was probably the one that she felt the least need to avoid. She wasn’t sure if that quite qualified as irony, considering the history between Earth and Minbar, but she wasn’t about to complain that it wasn’t Ambassador G’Kar and/or Mollari demanding her attention.

Turning towards Delenn, it wasn’t hard to summon up a polite but reserved smile. “Yes, Ambassador. What can I do for you?”

Delenn returned the smile. “It is my understanding that Commander Sinclair has been for some time somewhat…engrossed in the ongoing negotiations between the Drazi and the Markhab, so I was hoping I might make a request of you instead.”

“Of course. I’d be happy to help you with anything that’s in my power,” Susan answered sincerely. She gestured for Delenn to join her.

The Minbari ambassador stepped to her side and the two resumed walking along the central corridor. “As you may know, there are nine major holy days that my people keep from year to year, most of them dating back to before the time of Valen.”

Susan raised her eyebrows. “I didn’t know that, actually, but please: go on.”

Delenn inclined her head and folded her hands in front of her. “One of those holy days is approaching: the Feast of Jonalla. It marks what I believe your people call…the ‘winter solstice’: the shortest day of our year. The major celebration is held at the shrine of Jonalla on Tavalan, one of our colony worlds, but it is permissible for those who are not able to make the pilgrimage to mark the day wherever they may happen to be.”

“All right.” Susan nodded. “I’d be happy to help. What is it you need? Security? Permission to bring something aboard the station?” At least if there was some sort of sacred plant involved this time, Londo wasn’t likely to do everything in his power to thwart it.

“It is traditional for the ceremony and celebration to be held in a garden,” Delenn answered.

That made Susan’s eyebrows do another upward crawl. “A garden. In the middle of winter?”

Delenn’s smile didn’t even flicker. In fact, if anything, her eyes grew warmer. “Where possible, yes. There are places near the equator of every world where the winters do not strike as fiercely as they do closer to the poles. And the shrine of Jonalla on Tavalan is kept in a state of perpetual spring. Since there are no seasons on Babylon 5, the garden here seems an excellent alternative to traveling to the shrine.”

“That makes sense,” Susan acknowledged with another tilt of the head.

“Anyone who wishes to would be welcome to attend, or merely observe,” Delenn hurried to add.

“In that case, I don’t think it’ll be a problem. I’ll have to confirm it with the Commander of course, but I think we can definitely accomodate you. Just keep us posted about what you’ll need for the ceremony.”

That made Delenn’s smile bloom in full. “Thank you, Lieutenant Commander.”

She turned to go, but Susan called after her. “Delenn–just out of curiosity, who is Jonalla? I mean…if it’s not considered sacrelige or something to ask.”

“On the contrary, it means a great deal to me that you care to know,” Delenn answered. “Before the coming of Valen, there were a great many…holy figures on our world. I believe the closest word in your language is ‘gods,’ although that is not entirely accurate.” Her expression turned thoughtful, as though she were trying to translate her explanation in her head. Maybe she was, Susan acknowledged. Delenn spoke excellent English, but it was still not even close to her first language.

“Jonalla represented the cycle of death and rebirth,” she finally settled on. “Her shrine is meant to symbolize the Place Where No Shadows Fall, where the soul goes to rest before being reborn.”

Susan nodded. “I understand. There’s a religion on Earth that, if I remember right, decorates its temples to look like their idea of Heaven.” What Delenn described sounded like a cross between that and…Nirvana? Maybe not. Nirvana was supposed to be the end goal, not a reincarnation way station. Which she knew because an old CO of hers had been fascinated by Buddhism, even though in practice he was more…eclectic. “Many winter festivals on Earth have a similar theme of the dying of the old year and the birth of the new. I’d be curious to see what else they have in common.”

Delenn nodded again. “Perhaps you would like to attend?”

“If I’m not on duty, I’d love to,” Susan agreed. “Just let me know when and—” She smirked. “—well, I guess I already know where.”


The first thing Susan noticed, as she stepped into the part of the garden that had been set aside for the ceremony, was a nine-pointed star hanging on a slender pole above a table. It was a symbol she hadn’t seen before: most Minbari buildings she’d been in seemed a little obsessed with triangles. That intrigued her right away.

Lennier appeared at her side. He had a handful of what looked like sticks of incense in his hand, one of which he offered to Susan. On closer inspection, she realized it was a very slender candle.

“What’s this for?” she asked curiously.

“It is traditional to light a candle to honor those who have been reborn amongst us in the past year,” he explained with his usual polite haste. “The candle is then extinguished to recall those who have departed from us to begin the cycle anew.”

Susan felt a sudden surge of grief as her father’s face swum into her vision. She blinked back tears.

Lennier looked alarmed at her reaction. “It is not necessary, of course.”

“No,” Susan assured him hastily. Sitting Shiva, when she’d finally allowed herself to do it, had been a much needed catharsis. And her grief was still fresh enough that another one wouldn’t be unwelcome. Even if she didn’t know any babies that had been born recently for the other half of the symbol. “I think I like the idea.”

Lennier gave a relieved nod and moved away from her into the crowd to continue distributing candles. Susan found an empty spot and settled into it, looking around her curiously at the crowd. Most of the Minbari she saw were dressed very much like Delenn and Lennier, which she assumed meant they were also religious caste, but there were a few black-clad warriors. She was surprised there weren’t many worker caste—at least that she could spot on sight—but then if there were many workers aboard Babylon 5, she had no idea if their employers respected their holy days. Hell, it was only due to Jeff that she’d gotten the High Holy Days off this year. Earthforce didn’t much care what holidays its members celebrated: they worked you straight through them all.

Speaking of Jeff…Susan saw him moving through the crowd and waved. He smiled and made his way to her side. “Hey.”

“Hey,” Susan responded. “I didn’t know you were coming.”

He smiled. “After what you related to me of what Delenn told you, I couldn’t resist. One doesn’t get many glimpses of what Minbari culture was like before Valen.”

Susan didn’t quite return the smile, although her mouth tried. She raised an eyebrow instead. “Who’s watching C&C?”

Jeff’s eyes twinkled. “Lieutenant Corwin.”

She swore under her breath in Russian and he laughed. “Don’t worry; he has strict instructions to call us immediately on the link if anything goes wrong.”

Susan winced. “Let’s just hope it doesn’t go wrong in the middle of the ceremony. Delenn might forgive us, but I’m not so sure about Lennier.”

As if he’d heard her, Lennier was studying them with narrowed eyes from across the garden. He relaxed only when Jeff held up his own candle and Susan realized he’d been trying to remember if he’d given him one. Apparently Jeff had managed a much more sneaky arrival than she had.

Delenn stepped up to the table with one of the candles, lit, between her hands. A hush fell over the crowd. She spoke a few words in Adronato, then turned to light the candle held by Lennier. He then stepped to the front of the group and lit three other candles. Susan noted that each one was held by a member of a different caste. Those three then moved into the crowd and began lighting the other candles.

She wasn’t really surprised when a warrior approached them. The warrior in question didn’t look particularly pleased by the idea, but since the candle lighting seemed to be divided by caste, Earth military apparently fell under the warrior umbrella.

Jeff murmured a thank you to their candle-lighter before turning to smile wryly at Susan. Clearly he’d noticed too.

Once all the candles were lit, Delenn spoke again somberly. “Each flame is unique, just as each life is precious. When it goes out, there will never be another quite like it. On this day dedicated to Jonalla, we remember those lights which have been extinguished.” She closed her eyes for a moment, murmured something too softly for Susan to hear, then blew out her candle.

One by one, the others in the audience did the same. Susan closed her eyes and whispered, “Andrei Ivanov,” before blowing out her own candle. She felt a hand reach out to squeeze her shoulder and knew it was Jeff.

Delenn waited until all the candles had been extinguished and collected before continuing. “Valen said, ‘It is not only when we die that we are reborn. The soul is reborn whenever it chooses to cast off an old life and take on the mantle of the new.'”

Susan leaned over to whisper to Jeff. “So much for avoiding Valen.”

He chuckled a little under his breath but raised his finger to his lips.

Delenn continued. “In honor of Jonalla, who is reborn with each turn of the moon, I call upon those who wish to be reborn into a new life to come forward.”

A few Minbari moved forward through the crowd, including a family units with a child. Susan craned her neck in interest: she hadn’t seen many Minbari children before and there were several in the crowd. Even the ones that she knew lived on the station were rarely seen in public: perhaps there was some tradition against it.

The family reached Delenn first, leading the little…boy? girl? by the hand. With the still-developing bonecrest, Susan couldn’t tell what sex the child was supposed to be. Its clothing appeared to be entirely neutral, although she’d seen definite gendered trends of dress amongst at least the religious caste.

The child’s mother spoke in Adronato and Delenn’s face broke out into a wide, welcoming smile in response. She crouched down to the child’s level and asked in a clear voice, “Is it the calling of your heart to follow the way of Jonalla?”

The little one responded in equally clear English: “It is, Sat—I mean—Entil’min Delenn.”

Apparently this wasn’t a complete surprise, because Lennier appeared at Delenn’s side carrying a bundle that had clearly been prepared with care. He handed it to her, and she in turn handed it to the child. “Then accept this gift of a new life. And may you always hear the calling of your heart as clearly as you do today.”

The child beamed, turning eagerly back to…her? parents. Susan still wasn’t sure. The parents proceeded to open the bundle and pull out what was essentially a miniature version of the outfit Delenn herself wore, although in different colors. What the symbolism was, Susan wasn’t sure, but the parents knelt and gently removed the outer robe of the outfit the little girl—she was sure now that it was a little girl—had been wearing and replaced it with the feminine garments. Still beaming, the girl turned to fling herself into Delenn’s arms.

Her parents looked a bit scandalized at that. The Minbari weren’t exactly a touchy-feely people; even Susan knew that. Delenn just smiled, though, and held the little girl close for a moment before letting her go and stepping back. The next petitioner approached, this one an adult male, although once again wearing a more gender-neutral style of dress. The ritual was repeated, and only when the bundle delivered by Lennier once again contained garments much like Delenn’s did Susan realize what was going on.

“They’re transgender,” she managed to blurt out not loudly enough for everyone to hear.

Jeff nodded. “That makes sense. I did a little reading after we spoke, and it seems that Jonalla’s sex is reputed to change with the phases of the moon. He/she is probably the protector and patron of anyone who experiences a similar dysphoria.”

If there had been anywhere to sit, Susan might’ve needed to sit down to take that in. Especially since Jeff and Delenn had both said that Jonalla pre-dated Valen. Which meant this was something the Minbari’d had in place for over a thousand years. She wondered for a cynical moment if Earth would ever reach that point. Oh, they’d come a long way from even just two hundred years ago, but still…

The Minbari had their flaws. Like raging xenophobia and whole new levels of arrogance, not to mention Susan wasn’t always too keen on this caste system of theirs. But she’d give them props for this.

The ceremony went on. A couple more Minbari came forward. One was given a bundle of masculine clothes, and still another was given…both? Genderfluid, she supposed.

“Not what you expected, huh?” Jeff asked quietly.

Susan shook her head. “To be honest, I was expecting something more like that ceremony they put on for the religious festival a few months ago. Delenn said that was a…rebirth ceremony, of sorts.”

“I suspect ‘rebirth’ means many different things to the Minbari,” Jeff ruminated.

She couldn’t help but agree.

Next followed a very similar ceremony, only this time Delenn invited up those who felt they had been called to a different caste. Once again, they were given a bundle of new clothes, only this time typical of the new caste they had chosen, and again they donned the outer garments before the entire assembly. New clothes for a new life: there was something to be said for that idea.

The changing of caste was treated as a much more serious matter, however. The supplicant’s word alone was not enough; friends and family were required to give both testimony to the individual’s calling, and their blessing for the shift to take place. Oaths had to be spoken, and the most senior member of each caste represented aboard the station had to agree to accept the newcomer. There was even, according to Delenn’s admonition to each of them, a trial period. And perhaps to reflect that greater weight placed on the change, in addition to clothes, the newly accepted warriors were given a practice weapon, and the religious caste neophytes a book of sacred writings of Valen. No one switched to the worker caste, but Susan assumed they would receive the tools of their trade.

“Wow, and I thought finding a new job back home was hard,” she muttered under her breath. Jeff grunted, but didn’t reply. He had a thoughtful look on his face.

It occurred to Susan then that with both of the latter two ceremonies, those choosing to come forward and be reborn had been from all stages of life, at least insofar as she could tell how old any Minbari was. There was even one in the group that changed castes who looked close to retirement age, if Minbari retired. There was something striking to her in that too. If Susan’s heart had a “calling,” it was Earthforce: she’d known that since she was too young to enlist. She couldn’t imagine changing course so late in life. (Which, the cynical Russian part of her decided wryly, meant she was almost certainly destined to do so. It would serve her right.)

Things seemed to be winding down. After the last of this last bunch returned to their places, Delenn moved to stand beside the table again. She lifted the nine-pointed star from its place. Tiny bells tinkled. The Minbari were almost as inordinately fond of bells as they were of ritual and the number three, Susan decided with a smile.

“In honor of the one who awaits us in the Place Where No Shadows Fall, we honor those whose souls have died to be reborn into a new generation,” Delenn stated with too much conviction to be considered chanting.

The crowd bowed their heads and chanted, “Jonalla Veni.”

“In the name of the one who is reborn daily, we honor those who have chosen to embrace outwardly the inner shape of their souls.”

“Jonalla Veni.”

“And in the name of the one who rewards those who follow the calling of their heart, we honor those who have made the difficult choice to leave their caste.”

“Jonalla Veni.”

Delenn bowed to Lennier, who returned the bow, and then handed him the star. He carried it out, followed by the other religious caste Minbari who had helped with the ceremony, and then apparently it was over. Surprisingly short for a Minbari ceremony, Susan thought dryly to herself. Or at least, it had felt shorter than the only other one she attended, even though on reflection she realized it had probably been longer. Maybe it was the absence of food this time.

People began to drift away, although they paused to greet each other, and especially all those who had come forward to be “reborn,” on the way. Susan and Jeff weren’t the only non-Minbari who had attended, but most of those seemed to have satisfied their curiosity and disappeared quicker than the rest.

“Well,” Jeff clapped Susan on the back. “I think I’m going to go thank Delenn for a very moving and educational experience.”

His link beeped. Jeff’s face fell. Tapping it, he almost sighed out, “Sinclair.”

Susan laughed. “Well, like I said, at least it wasn’t in the middle of the ceremony. Anything in particular you’d like me to pass along to Delenn?”

Jeff shot her a look. “Only that I would love to discuss the matter further with her when time permits. I’ll see you later.” He stepped into an unoccupied corner of the garden to converse without disrupting or being disrupted.

Susan shook her head in amusement. She supposed she could’ve offered to handle whatever it was Corwin needed in Jeff’s place, but to tell the truth she wanted a word with Delenn herself. And unlike Jeff, who almost certainly would pursue the matter later on, she was more likely to forget. Or, in a worst case scenario, to lose interest altogether. She didn’t exactly have her CO’s reputation for curiosity about the other species aboard the station, and given time, if she got busy with other things, she might decide to keep it that way.


Susan needn’t have worried about seeking Delenn out; the Minbari ambassador approached her as soon as the crowd around her thinned enough that she could. “Lieutenant-Commander,” she stated with genuine pleasure in her voice. “I’m pleased that you and Commander Sinclair were able to attend.”

“Thank you for inviting us,” Susan rejoined with equally genuine enthusiasm. “I’m sorry Jeff couldn’t stay, but he did say he would love to learn more about Jonalla and the holiday if you get a chance at a later time.”

Something secretive and almost self-satisfied crept into Delenn’s smile. But her eyes danced too much and too warmly for Susan to read anything bad into it. “I would be pleased to teach him anything he desires to know.” She folded her hands in front of her and began to walk slowly towards the entrance to the gardens. Susan followed. “And you, Lieutenant Commander,” Delenn asked. “Did you enjoy the ceremonies?”

“Yes,” Susan answered honestly. “Quite a bit, in fact. We don’t have anything quite like that on Earth, at least not in any part of it I’m familiar with.” She grimaced and found herself waving her hands around a bit in clarification. “I mean…we have winter holidays that celebrate the turn of the seasons and the symbolic death and rebirth of winter turning into spring, frequently even with the exchange of gifts, but…” How could she explain to Delenn what had meant so much to her? “You celebrate lifestyle choices that on Earth, it’s taken us centuries to even begin to accept. And all of this has really been in place for over a thousand years?”

Delenn looked surprised, but nodded. An impish smile crossed her face. “Our history did not begin with Valen, you know.”

Susan flushed deeply and dropped her eyes. “Yes, of course. I guess I just…you talk about him so much…”

Eyes dancing, Delenn laughed kindly. “Perhaps you also would care to learn more if you get a chance at a later time?”

She almost said no, out of sheer embarrassment. After all, aside from the basics to avoid any major faux pas with any Minbari on the station, when was she ever going to need the information? And a small, angry corner of her heart still hadn’t let go of the losses suffered during the War, although that part had grown smaller as a result of knowing Delenn and Lennier. Hell, she wouldn’t be able to work here at all if she couldn’t forgive. And if she had the time to drop by the Ambassador’s quarters for a lesson in ancient Minbari religion…what did it hurt? She might even get a new friend out of the bargain.

Susan smiled. “Yeah. I’d like that.”


End notes: Here is the entry on the Day of Jonalla from the RPG book (everything else is my inference or elaboration):

“The Day of Jonalla. Jonalla represents death and renewal, a life spent in pursuit of pure goals and the deserved rest of the afterlife before returning to begin the cycle anew. Jonalla is alternately male or female, depending on the aspect of the moon orbiting her chosen colony world, Tavalan. Jonalla’s shrine is an open air temple with cultured trees for walls and living sculptures of hedge for furniture. Climate equipment maintains spring-like conditions within the shrine area year round, a symbol of the perfection that awaits all Minbari in the Place Where No Shadows Fall.”

The RPG book is not always a reliable resource–I suspect it was written WITHOUT JMS’s input *g*–but it does often provide a good jumping-off point, and that’s what I tried to do here: extrapolate logically from the information given in the book and what we already know about Minbari culture. I hope I succeeded in making it at least believable!

Also, according to John Hightower’s Minbari dictionary at jumpnow.de, “Entil’min” is the Minbari word for Ambassador (a more literal translation would be “representative of Minbar”), and the “Veni” part of Entil’zha veni/Isil’zha veni means “in the name of.” So, “Jonalla Veni” is intended to mean, “in the name of Jonalla.”

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Fic: Point Me Towards Tomorrow (B5, Susan/Talia)

Author’s Note: Thanks to medie for giving me the prompt for this one! Title is from “What I Did for Love”, from A Chorus Line.

Written for: ariestess for fandom_stocking.


The change was subtle, like the quiet snick of a door closing behind someone who didn’t want to be heard. It wasn’t the actual door closing, though, that woke Talia. It was the absence. One moment Susan’s mind was there, their dreams twined together, and the next she was gone.

Talia reached for her without thinking, her fingers ghosting across the sheets. But both the mattress and the space in her thoughts were empty. There wasn’t even a dent in either to mark where Susan had been.

Only then did she open her eyes. Susan? The thought slipped free of its own volition, already as natural as breathing, but there was no response save for a faint echo of fear, muted by distance, from somewhere outside herself.

Now fully alert, Talia stared for a moment in the general direction of the ceiling. It was hard to say which was more unsettling: the fears that she knew had roused Susan from sleep and from their bed, or the fact that she was already so attuned to her lover’s thoughts that the withdrawal of them was enough to wake her.

It shouldn’t have been possible. That it was set her heart racing with something that was as much terror as it was desire. Talia’d thought she understood Susan’s fear of the Corps before. Now…now she knew just how deep that fear ran and why.

Fragments of it still prickled at the back of her thoughts like icy fingers dancing along her spine. She shivered with the intensity of it.

Talia wondered absurdly if Kosh had known something like this was coming. If that, as much as what she knew about him, had been why he’d insisted she remain on the station after…well, after. Even Psi Corps hadn’t quite had the nerve to defy the Vorlon Empire, so remain she had, even though she knew they must’ve been dying to get their hands on the information in her mind.

Funny how the secret she knew now changed so much more, even though in the grand scheme of things it was so much smaller.

Decision made, Talia slipped out of bed and called for light, pulling on the same clothes that she had discarded last night. Kosh had offered her a choice, once, even though she hadn’t recognized it as such at the time. Or maybe she had, but the price he’d demanded had seemed too high. Now…the idea of being scanned by a Vorlon–even of going to the Vorlon homeworld and letting them do God only knew what to her–frightened her far less than the possibility that Psi Corps might find a way to overcome Jason’s gift and tear this precious secret from her. She would die before she’d let that happen.

Glancing behind her as she closed the door, Talia studied the room that she wasn’t sure she’d ever come back to. But if she didn’t, it would be a small price to pay for Susan’s safety.

Kosh had offered her a choice, once. She could only hope the offer was still open.

 

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Fic: Parted from Me (ST:TOS/AOS, Spock/Saavik)

Author’s Note: This story was written as catharsis upon realizing that in the new universe established by the new movies, one of my favorite characters from ST II-IV will now likely never exist. Because said character got the bulk of her characterization off-screen, though, my story draws heavily on quasi-canon established in the novels The Pandora Principle and Vulcan’s Heart, and in one deleted scene from Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home. It should hopefully be understandable to anyone who hasn’t read those novels or descriptions of that scene, but I thought I ought to say something just in case. Thanks to my betas–Medie, who is the canon/nitpick goddess of all things Trek, and marag, who is also fabulous at things Trek, but even better at grammar (and she wouldn’t want to be deified anyway). 😉


My mind to your mind
My thoughts to your thoughts
Parted from me and never parted
Never and always touching and touched
–Vulcan bonding ceremony


What is, and what was. Billions dead, only thousands saved. For most, that would be enough to mourn. It is enough for his father. It is enough for the young man he might have been, almost too much. To ask more would be unkind.

No, it is left to him, and him alone, to mourn what would have been.

Saavik.

He feels her loss like a knife to the heart: both the child he raised and the woman he loved. It is illogical to hope that the woman who would have been her mother should be among the scant few survivors of their world. And even if she were, it is…unethical to wish upon her the fate that led to Saavik’s birth. The destruction of the Kelvin and resultant early revelations about the Romulans might very well mean that Thieurrull, as he found it, does not even exist in this reality. The good of the many would be better served by it not existing.

The life of one half-Vulcan, half-Romulan female should not matter so much. Even if he could somehow both guarantee and justify Saavik’s existence, the probability of their relationship taking the same or even a similar course is highly unlikely. That it took the path it ultimately did defies logic enough, and even most humans he has known have looked askance at it. Did he not raise her from a child? Was he not the nearest thing she had known to a father? How, then, could he even consider joining his life to her as he did?

But for the Genesis planet, he might have agreed with them.

To be sure, the balance of power between them when she was young was tipped sharply in his favor. Had he not given his life to save the Enterprise, had his body not been revived and rejuvenated by the power of the Genesis device, it might have remained so.

Had Doctor McCoy failed to carry his katra, or had David Marcus survived, it might have been irrelevant.

Instead, it became her turn to raise him from a savage child, to teach him what it meant to be Vulcan, at least until the memory of who he had been could be returned to him. Regardless that the journey took mere days rather than years, it counterbalanced the scales. It made them equals. Or rather, it made them equals in his eyes: Saavik had never seen them as anything less.

Another truth he would not learn until much later, when she felt he was ready to accept it, was that her guidance in one particular chapter of his rewound, accelerated life had also made them parents. That their children will never be born in this universe is one more reason of billions that he mourns.

It was unsurprisingly simple to insinuate Jim Kirk into the heart of this younger, more human version of himself. All that had been required was to point Kirk in the right direction and tell him the captain’s chair and his own unswerving loyalty were his to claim: the rest was merely the natural result of the force of that inimitable personality.

To reassemble the other piece of his heart…well, that would be much more difficult if not impossible. There are too many variables in play, not the least of which being that his younger self in this reality has already given his heart to Nyota Uhura, and he does not begrudge them that. It would be dishonest to say he had never thought that his relationship with that dear friend might have been very different if their lives had taken a different course: to know that he was correct is, in its own way, gratifying.

Nevertheless, there is a part of him that feels–more deeply than he would ever confess, even to her–that if he could only be sure of Saavik’s existence, he could be content merely to find her and to raise her once again. Perhaps even to “give her away” to Jim’s son, if that son too were born. It would be a…fitting way to close the circle.

He’s grown sentimental in his old age. Jim–his Jim–would have laughed to hear such fanciful thoughts from him. But it would have been the sort of laughter that comes from sympathy and delight, not mockery. He, Spock, understood these things because Jim Kirk had been part of his life, thus he had taken care to bequeath that legacy to the man he might have been.

He cannot fail to recognize the irony that Saavik’s legacy–the desire she kindled in him to reconcile the two disparate halves of their people’s soul–was ultimately what robbed him of her.

For her sake he tried to save Romulus…and failed. And because of his failure, the man he will become instead will likely never try. It is nearly enough to make him suspect the universe is telling him that they were never meant to be.

Yet, threaded through the grief, he cannot be but grateful that he was privileged to walk, if only for a little while, in the world where that fate was defied.

 

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Fic: Estella Adore (ST:E, Trip/Hoshi)

Author’s Note: Pure sap. Probably a cliche or several too, but this is what came to me. *g* I think the title translates as “to adore the star” but I’ve never formally studied Latin, so please feel free to correct me if I’m wrong. 🙂 Written for the “Challenge in a Can” at the Linguistics Database. My words were: Dorothy, adore, finger


The first time he saw her, he’d felt like Dorothy, plunked down in the middle of Oz. Journeying at warp speed through the cosmos became a walk around the block compared to this unfamiliar territory. The difference was, he knew he didn’t want to go back home to Kansas. Or Oklahoma or Texas or even Earth. Not alone, anyway. If he left her out here, among the stars, he’d leave his soul with her. He knew that with absolute conviction.

For the first time in his life, he knew what it meant to adore someone. To be utterly and completely devoted to this person in his arms.

“Hey.” Hoshi’s quiet voice broke into his thoughts, and he looked down into her bottomless, smiling brown eyes. “Isn’t someone supposed to be sleeping?”

Trip blushed, fond eyes dropping to where their daughter’s tiny fist wrapped firmly around his pinkie. “She won’t let go of my finger.”

 

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Fic: The Great Race (ST:E, gen)

Eye to eye, they faced each other, the silence thick with enmity.

The linguist spoke first. “I hope you know I’m very disappointed in you.”

Her antagonist blinked lazy eyes, but said nothing.

“Slow and steady wins the race, or haven’t you ever heard that before?”

No response.

“I stopped several times, handicapped myself to let you get ahead of me, and you didn’t even catch up!”

There was a soft, whuffling sound almost like a disdainful snort, and Hoshi threw up her hands. Scrambling to her feet, she kicked off one bunny slipper, then the other, and deposited her new Artaxian beach tortoise, Turtle, in his tank before climbing back into bed with the midnight snack of milk and cookies that the four of them had just retrieved from the mess hall.

Still unperturbed, Turtle splashed contentedly into the water at one end of his home.

“So much for the Tortoise and the Hare.”


End Note: Written for the Challenge in a Can at the Linguistics Database: my words were–linguist, enmity, turtle. Thanks to Deb for the title!

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Fic: The Greatest Gift (ST:E, Hoshi/?)

Author’s Notes: For anyone who’s read my fic before…expect nothing. *g* Dedicated to DebC, because being a Navy wife gets rough sometimes. *HUG*


Two more weeks. That’s how long it would be before she saw him again, when his ship was scheduled to return to Earth. Two more weeks…even though today was their anniversary.

Sighing deeply, Hoshi moved away from the window. It hadn’t been difficult, when they’d decided to marry and go public with their relationship, for her to volunteer to drop out of Starfleet. She’d never really wanted to join in the first place, and she told herself that she’d be happier back on Earth teaching again. Her tour of duty on Enterprise had been hard, left scars on both of them she sometimes thought would never heal. A mission of peace had turned into a mission of war, and they’d all suffered for it.

No, it hadn’t been hard at all to say she would give up the stars, even though he’d tried to convince her she would regret it.

As much as she loved him, it still irritated her that he’d been right.

But right now, it wasn’t the stars she missed. No, all she wanted was him, home safe and sound. And soon.

Sighing, she picked up the PADD and settled into the sofa. If nothing else, at the very least she could grade some of these essays and take her mind off her husbandless anniversary for a little while.

Naturally, she was just getting engrossed when the door chimed.

“Bloody hell,” Hoshi muttered darkly, echoing the sentiment in Japanese, Korean and Vulcan for good measure. She stalked to the door and threw it open.

There was an enormous package sitting on her doorstep. Open-mouthed, she stepped outside and slowly circled the box. If nothing else, she had to wonder where the sender had found such an extensive piece of wrapping paper, not to mention the gigantic pearly-white bow!

What on Earth?

About halfway through her inspection, she found a card taped to the side of the box, almost too high for her to reach it. She managed, however, to get just enough of a grip on the envelope to rip it free. The card inside was of a beautiful bouquet of calla lilies, matching the paper, and said, “Happy Anniversary” in a looping, gold script.

Her mouth falling open in a surprised “O,” Hoshi blinked back tears. God…he must have arranged for this before he left Earth, months ago.

Inside, beneath a simple greeting, a scrawl in his familiar handwriting confirmed it: “My dear, darling Hoshi. I may not be able to be with you on our anniversary, but know that I haven’t forgotten. Here’s a bit of something to keep you warm until I can return. I love you always, your husband.”

Hands shaking, she finally considered the box. The lid wasn’t tied down, thankfully, but it was almost too high for her petite figure to reach. Nevertheless, she stood on tiptoe and carefully pushed until the lid came crashing down on the other side of the box from where she stood, then peered inside.

“Well, it’s about bloody time!” a familiar voice teased.

Sitting inside, the box, and looking very cramped, was Commander Malcolm Reed, first officer and head of security on the USS Discovery NX-04.

Hoshi was almost speechless. “Malcolm…”

Struggling to his feet, Malcolm smiled sheepishly at his wife. “Happy Anniversary, Hoshi.”

“But you aren’t…what are you…when did…?” The woman who knew hundreds of languages finally gave up and settled on, “How?”

He nodded behind him, to where another familiar face was now peeking up above the fence, beaming from ear to ear. “I can’t take complete credit, I fear…Captain Tucker insisted on cutting our mission short…and on the method of presentation.” He sounded embarrassed.

Overwhelmed, Hoshi gave Trip a dazed wave and turned back to her husband. “Malcolm Reed, you get out of that box right this instant so I can give you a proper kiss!”

“Yes, ma’am.” He grinned and immediately raised his hands to try to pull himself up and over the side…only to succeed in unbalancing it and bringing both box and himself tumbling over to spill at her feet.

Hoshi burst out laughing. After crawling out of the package, Malcolm threw a scowl over his shoulder in the direction of the loud guffaws issuing from the behind the fence, then looked helplessly back at his wife as he struggled to regain both his dignity and his feet. “You’ll forgive me, darling, if I decide to use a certain Starship Captain for target practice tomorrow.”

“Absolutely not,” Hoshi scolded sharply, but with a warm smile. She pulled Malcolm close and gave him a very proper, very convincing kiss. “Not after he gave me the best anniversary present of my life.”


End Note: I’m not a R/S ‘shipper and never have been, but Deb was when we were in Enterprise fandom together (and might still be). So, for her sake, I put aside my preferences for a little while ’cause at the time she needed a cheer-up fic. 🙂 So this was pretty much the only one of these I ever wrote. Hope no one was expecting more, but if so…sorry! 🙂

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