Captain James T. Kirk (
mr_enterprise) wrote2017-11-18 05:03 pm
You Can't Go Home Again [for
primelogic]
As promised, the retired captain's Nexus apartment is only a short walk from the party at the cafe. The lobby of the complex is somewhat busy, with costumed children being escorted around the local businesses with their parents in tow, but once the lift takes the couple up to the tenth floor, there is blessed silence.
Jim's apartment is a little smaller than the one he once had as an admiral, with fewer things to fill in the empty spaces. The walls hold only a few paintings and none of the antique weaponry he once collected, nor model sailing ships on display, but he does have a few bookshelves that he has been slowly restocking with the classics he's always enjoyed, and his kitchenette is well-stocked with all the necessities. As always, his living space is clean and well-organized, old habits left over from life aboard a starship.
He opens his mouth to say, 'make yourself at home,' before thinking better of it. "Make yourself comfortable," he says instead, hanging up his jacket by the door. As much as he feels he needs to hear what Spock has seen and done in the years since his... disappearance... part of him is also reluctant to leap straight into what is sure to be an emotionally-taxing event, even for someone as tightly controlled as a Vulcan. "Do you want some tea?"
Jim's apartment is a little smaller than the one he once had as an admiral, with fewer things to fill in the empty spaces. The walls hold only a few paintings and none of the antique weaponry he once collected, nor model sailing ships on display, but he does have a few bookshelves that he has been slowly restocking with the classics he's always enjoyed, and his kitchenette is well-stocked with all the necessities. As always, his living space is clean and well-organized, old habits left over from life aboard a starship.
He opens his mouth to say, 'make yourself at home,' before thinking better of it. "Make yourself comfortable," he says instead, hanging up his jacket by the door. As much as he feels he needs to hear what Spock has seen and done in the years since his... disappearance... part of him is also reluctant to leap straight into what is sure to be an emotionally-taxing event, even for someone as tightly controlled as a Vulcan. "Do you want some tea?"

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He frees one of his hands, moving it to touch Spock's, as much to reassure the Vulcan as himself. After all this time, all these years, it's an easy guess what Spock is thinking, seeing the guilt etched into those deep lines on his aged face. "You had no way of knowing. If it wasn't for the nexus, I would have actually been dead."
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After so many years unshielded Spock doesn't think to do so now and the same rush of emotions Jim would have sensed from the old Vulcan before when they were holding hands at the party are making themselves aware again. He won't be able to know what causes them--not without a proper mind meld--but the bond unshielded gives even the psiblind Kirk insight into Spock's emotional state when they hold hands.
"I too...have been displaced into another universe before coming here to the Nexus."
Spock's admission is quiet, barely more than a breath.
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Searching eyes seek out Spock's face, surprised by the confession and concerned by what he feels lurking behind it, a great weight that the Vulcan still carries despite the joy of their reunion. "What happened?"
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The words come slowly, rotting teeth ripped out of an infected socket. He cannot keep the sorrow from his voice. No matter how many years pass the pain doesn't go away. The shame and regret stain his hands and squeeze his old heart painfully in his side.
"We were trying to save Romulus from destruction. It's sun had become unstable. It took considerable effort and the development of red matter into a stable usable form, but we engineered a solution. I learned well from you never to give up. I took our fastest ship but I was too late. Romulus and everyone on it...all gone."
The Romulans are not Spock's people but so great a failure resulting in so many lives lost affects him as if it were his own. If only that were the end of it all.
"A Romulan ship prevented me from escaping the black hole I caused to cease the spread of the dying sun. We were both pulled in. They first, and then myself. Exiting the wormhole had brought us back in time but again, Jim, I was too late. Nero destroyed the Kelvin and waited twenty five years for me to appear after him, though it was only minutes for myself. I didn't know."
Spock shakes his head again.
"I didn't know. He captured me and stranded me on Delta Vega. Alive only so I could understand his pain. Vulcan is gone, Jim. I watched him destroy it with the very red matter I had developed to try and save Romulus in my time."
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Hearing of the loss of Romulus is sad, but somehow, Jim doesn't think that it's responsible for the devastation he can feel echoing through the bond. The destruction of the Kelvin... he doesn't know the exact timeline, but the name of the starship is more than familiar, one of his own parents' assignments before he was born. But it must have been after that, surely, if Spock's remarks about one of the other partygoers meant what he thinks it does. "Spock," he murmurs, sad for the loss of the ship and her crew, whoever they were, but even more for Spock, already reeling from the loss of a planet he tried to save.
But then comes the finishing blow, and it all makes horrible sense. Not just Romulus. Not just a starship. Vulcan itself. All that history, all those people, gone. Destroyed with a superweapon he's never heard of, a tool that Spock had developed to save lives, not end them. It's a staggering loss, and all Jim can do is hold on, knowing Spock's pain is far deeper than his own, no less raw and fresh than it must have been the day it occurred. "I grieve with thee," he says, once he can think of something to say. And he does. Earth's oldest friend and ally, centuries upon centuries of civilization and advancement, and some of the noblest people that Jim has ever known. Spock's home, his very heart.
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Spock couldn't let his younger self miss out on the Enterprise and her crew. Not knowing how much they mean to him all these years later. Miss out on the friendships to be created and cultivated.
"There is no way back to my own time, Jim. So I stay on New Vulcan and I help where I can. And whenever possible, I check in with the you in that time. His crew. It is the least I can do after causing so much turmoil and suffering."
His voice trembles with barely kept in check emotion. An old man near tears gripping Jim's hands tight enough to nearly be painful as he is threatened to be swallowed up in that grief. To most others, it would look as though Spock had merely found a picture hanging slightly askew and was annoyed but Jim has known the man long enough to categorize each of those subtle changes in his expression.
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The pain in his own hands is a small price to pay for what little comfort he can give, his own touch not nearly enough to soothe this kind of pain, but he doesn't hesitate a moment to give it, to give everything he has. He's never seen Spock so distraught, never felt such anguish through the connection they share. The loss of millions, perhaps billions, is such a staggering void for a human alone to contemplate, without even taking into account the network of family bonds that must have been so harshly severed for all the survivors.
"Spock, I'm so sorry."
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No one person can take on that kind of weight in lives, human nor Vulcan. The staggering scope of it all crushes until there's nothing left. Inch by inch, day by day the Ambassador's back bows a bit further underneath it's mass. He can't keep living like this.
"You would have done better." Such conviction in his voice when Spock says so. He loosens the grip of his hands. Murmurs a quiet apology for squeezing too hard.
He does not pull away.
Spock never wants to pull away again.
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That hasn't changed one bit.
It feels like there is so much still unsaid, so many questions to ask, but Jim can understand why Spock does not volunteer to say any more. The weight of what he's already revealed is a heavy enough blow, his punishing feelings of guilt so clear that even the psiblind human can easily see it. And what's worse, there is nothing that Jim can say or do to make it right, or ease the burden. What's done is long since done, and Spock has been living with this knowledge for all this time already. There's no undoing that.
He can't quite smile at Spock's faith in him, unwavering even after all this time, the seriousness of what he's just been told too severe to respond otherwise. "I'm not sure I would have. I know you, Spock. I don't believe for a moment that your choices weren't the most logical ones you could make. But... I am so sorry I wasn't there for you."
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Spock bows his head forward, unable to meet Jim's gaze. His greatest shame he cannot bear to see Jim's reaction to.
"I felt you die, Jim. Your young counterpart. And I knew you had not all those years ago. In that moment. I knew it was different and I had abandoned you."
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If the temporal nexus was a gilded cage, then it seems Spock has experienced its exact opposite, some sort of hell almost tailored to him.
There are so many moments where one small choice might have led to his own death, but he can think of only one that led to Spock's. But events can't have repeated themselves that accurately, especially not so much earlier, not with such a large ripple in the pond of time. Could it? "What happened?" he asks, dreading the answer.
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The only thing Spock is grateful for in all of this is that he was not present for the attack. Did not have to watch the destruction and the fear on those children's faces. He swallows.
"He made the logical choice necessary to save the ship. The recovery was different from my own. Dr. McCoy saved his life through enough grueling hours of work that I feared he'd collapse. I stayed at his side while he was in hospital. I was determined not to abandon him as I had you."
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Would any of this have happened if he'd been there, as Spock suggested? Did he make a mistake in not choosing a better time to exit the other nexus, given any point in time and space to emerge? Who really abandoned who? Sympathy, guilt, regret. "You're the most loyal man I've ever known."
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Surrounded by the reminders of his failure and the guilt of all those lives lost, isolated in a time he does not belong in. The calls he would get from the young Captain Kirk asking for advice, looking for someone to talk to...they were fulfilling and yet also painful. The Ambassador is tired.
"I have caused you pain, as I knew I would." His words are so quiet now but he finally raises his face to meet Jim's gaze again.
"I apologize for this. That was not my intention."
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He doesn’t have the first idea what he can do, other than be a listening ear. But perhaps if there’s one path open to him, it’s reassurance. Love. And all that filters through his touch, unconditional and unwavering faith in Spock, no matter his mistakes and his regrets. James Kirk thinks no less of him for anything he did or didn’t do, no matter how he sees fit to punish himself.
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More than enough.
It is every wish Spock has had since the day James T. Kirk disappeared from the Enterprise-B. That brilliant blue light wrapping his mind in a security blanket of warmth, love, and faith. Shushing his anxieties and turning away his doubts.
This.
He has missed this dearly. Spock gets up then, only retracting his hands when he absolutely has to and carefully removes his cloaks so that he might properly sit and enjoy the tea Jim has brewed for him. Careful to move at least one hand back to his lap in case Jim wants to take it again.
"If I might continue to intrude upon you I would find that agreeable."
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"You're always welcome wherever I am," he replies, and despite the tragic events that Spock has described tonight, he can't deny the feelings of happiness, of things finally being right, that come along with Spock's presence. This apartment may not be much of a home, but maybe it feels a little more like one now, with him there.
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The prim reply is perhaps the first beginnings of humor to have leaked out of this older Vulcan since Jim ran into him. It's certainly a very familiar response from Spock. Pretending to be proper and dignified to cover up being unsure or confused about something yet too proud to admit it.
And they say Vulcans don't have feelings.
The tea is warm and as familiar as the presence sitting next to him. The turmoil is still there in Spock's heart but there exists something else now that hasn't before.
Belonging. Love.
"Where abouts in this place did you come across a shop selling Vulcan spiced tea?"
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He'd been expecting this question since the moment it truly sank in what had happened to Vulcan. Is it strange to find a piece of a lost world in a place such as this, he wonders, or inevitable? Whatever the case, if he can offer some small comforts of home, he will do that and more. "It's a small hole-in-the-wall kind of place, deep in the markets, called Shom-Sfek." His pronunciation of the Vulcan language is rusty from long disuse, but Spock should be able to easily interpret the meaning. A resting place at the side of the road, meant for only a brief refuge during a long journey.
"They don't have much, but they carry tea and incense," he continues, "and some cooking spices."
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A Vulcan shop all the way out here? Fascinating. And a travel store, at that. He has to wonder how often the shop is frequented and what sort of journeys it's patrons are on. With so many different worlds at their fingertips it could very well be anywhere or anywhen.
He nods slowly.
"This was once common. Not many federation shops cater to Vulcan cuisine as most species are not strictly vegetarian. They were designed to provide small remnants of home to those travelling off world. As space is something of a premium on ships, it makes sense that their selection would be limited and kept to small items easily packed into one's effects."
Such stores are not common in his time now, for obvious reasons.
"I would like to visit there some time, if you are amenable."
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"I'm more than amenable," he answers, glad that he can at least offer this one thing. So small, not nearly enough to balance the immense depth of loss that Spock must feel, but a light in darkness is a light nonetheless, and worth kindling. "I haven't had much to do besides explore. Old habits die hard."
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Nor would Spock wish to keep him from it either. James Tiberius Kirk lives to see sights no one has seen before. To seek out the new and undiscovered. The bar may have to be lowered slightly to account for their age and new surroundings, but there's nothing saying that exploration is no longer a viable hobby.
"Please, tell me about your exploration here." He wants to hear Jim talk. See the man get lost in his own memories and exploits. Watch him light up and come to life when he speaks of things he's passionate about. They have shared enough sadness for now. Better to appreciate their reunion for what it is.
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And now... now he has someone to share the experience with.
"If we'd found this place on our first five-year mission, we could've spent the entire time here and never even scratched the surface. I've lost count of the number of new species I've met just in the last few months alone." He's missed this, sharing his memories and discoveries with Spock as if he'd just come home from a particularly interesting shore leave on a new planet. "I spent a few hours listening to a singing grove of trees about a week ago. Didn't understand a word of it, but they didn't seem to mind, and it was a beautiful performance. I was thinking about bringing them a recording of something from Earth, if I can find something they'd like."
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They are so very similar and yet...
The Ambassador sets down his now-empty cup before folding his hands back in his lap primly. Doesn't even realize the small smile that's warming his face as he nods along.
Spock has missed this. The one picture he has was never enough. Nothing compared to the man himself sitting next to him brushing Spock's knee with his own to make sure they're touching even when he's got his hands full making those gestures of his.
"I think they would find that a lovely gesture, Jim." So thoughtful and warm with everyone.
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This. This is what's real. And it does not compare for one moment to the smothering, all-consuming happiness that the nexus tried to give him. Despite the pain and the sorrow that have made their mark in those aged features, this is home. They're things we carry with us, the things that make us who were are... if we lose them, we lose ourselves. His own words, as true now as they were then.
"Maybe you could come along with me," he suggests, and while he knows damn well that things can never be what they were - never captain and first officer, beaming down once again to explore strange new worlds - that does not mean the road has to come to an end. "Infinite diversity, Spock. That's what this place truly is."
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Contentjoybelonginglove--
He sends his emotions through the touch to his t'hy'la and enjoys feeling Jim's mind accept them as it has not been able to in so many years.
"That would be most agreeable." Spock's done his part in rebuilding New Vulcan. The aged Ambassador is no longer of much use to them now. It would be trivially easy to leave there and make a new home for himself here in the Nexus for as long as he has left. "I would need to find a place here of course but once that is accomplished I could accompany you anywhere you liked."
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"I'm sure we can find you a place here," he answers, making no attempt to hide the loving smile on his own face, nor through the simple touch of their fingers, sharing in that contentment. It isn't perfect. It never was, and it never will be. But it's theirs.