Free
Association
Light,
shadows, soft dappled patterns of leaves arching overhead, high branches
forming a bright latticed canopy. A cool breeze shakes the trees, steam rises
from the hot spring, and I sink farther into the bubbling water as the symbiont
stirs within me. Or it may be that I am the one who has begun to stir, as the
warmth and weightlessness of the pool evoke memories of a distant home. No
matter. Every Trill knows that it is unwise to ponder such things too deeply.
The only
sound is the distant warbling of a bird. This small planet, not far from the Cardassian
border, has been uninhabited for the past several years, since a group of
Federation colonists realized the extent of their folly and moved on. It's
certainly not what most people would call a prime vacation spot; in fact,
Starfleet has a travel warning in effect for the entire sector, so I am quite
assured of being alone here.
Alone. I
turn the word over in my thoughts and watch as it bounces and comes to rest
again, like a smooth, gleaming pebble dislodged from a riverbed. A joined
Trill is never alone. In ages past, when our ancestors bargained with the symbionts
for immortality, the loss of solitude must have seemed a small price to pay.
A yellowing
leaf detaches itself from an overhanging branch and drifts silently to the
ground, coming to rest in the tall grass beside my towel and my clothing. I
can almost imagine that I hear a woman's light footsteps swishing through the
grass, but surely it is the wind, no more. Another gust picks up the leaf and
tumbles it toward a drift of fallen leaves. I lost her so many years ago,
although it was only yesterday that she left me.
"Lenara."
Her name forms on my lips, a plaintive whisper. I hear the inward echoes as my
past hosts murmur it back to me, the echoes repeating and darkening like a row
of double-mirrored images curving endlessly away. It is one of our strongest
taboos, what we call reassociation, the choice to resume a loving relationship
from a past host's lifetime. The symbiont should not desire this, for its
nature is to seek new experiences, not to dwell on the past. Reassociation is
seen as proof that a joined Trill has become dangerously unstable; thus, when
the host dies, the symbiont is left to die as well. This is deemed a merciful
end.
I close my
eyes, watching the shadow-patterns of light and dark flitting across my
eyelids, unwisely pondering my existence. I would have sacrificed immortality
for another chance to love Lenara, but she was unwilling to defy the taboo.
Did she fear death so much? Did she love me so little? Is her symbiont
stronger and more stable than mine? Is her spirit weaker, more easily
overborne by social expectations?
The
shadow-patterns dance silently over my closed eyes, yielding no answers.
Around me
the water goes on bubbling, hot and tangy with the scent of alien minerals.
Sharp and compelling, it is a scent of life, or death; after so many
experiences, so many hosts, the dividing line between the two has become
blurred in my thoughts. Death is no more of a mystery than life, and it holds
no fear for me. It is just another transition.
The wind
ripples through the tall grass again, now sounding even more like Lenara's
footsteps, a cruel trick of the imagination. Surely she must be very far away.
"Dax.
Jadzia Dax. My dearest one."
Her voice,
soft and familiar and, of course, quite thoroughly impossible. I open my eyes,
blinking up at the apparition who now stands at the edge of the hot spring.
"I
found out your flight plan. I couldn't stay away . . ."
She is
undressing even as she speaks, flinging her clothes down into a disarrayed heap
next to my neatly folded stack. Then she is in the water with me, her hands
and lips eagerly roaming over my body, the pleasure of it filling me as I
respond in kind. Although we have never been together like this, not as Lenara
and Jadzia, her deft fingers move without hesitation, somehow knowing exactly
how I want to be touched.
I am Dax.
I am Jadzia. I am all of my previous hosts, a formless blurring of
identities. As my body arches instinctively toward Lenara's touch, I am
female, soft and yielding; then in an instant I am male, hard, erect,
demanding. Lenara begins to change shape as well, her features shifting from
those of one past lover to another. The images multiply in the dark mirrored
chambers of my mind, cresting like a wave of destruction.
It is too
much. I close my eyes as my release builds. I can hear myself crying out, but
I cannot say if it is in rapture or terror. The wave overtakes me, and I fall,
endlessly. I do not know who I am.
Lenara
withdraws, and I slowly regain my awareness of myself. One female Trill body,
one symbiont deep within, both of us lying quietly in the soothing waters of
the hot spring.
It is
death. Or life.
I take a
deep breath of the mineral-scented air, and I open my eyes.
The
branches above me are almost completely still, only the tiniest leaves
quivering in a very slight breeze. The sky has darkened toward twilight, and
the birds are silent. I am alone in the hot spring. The tall stalks of grass
stand upright, completely untouched, where Lenara's clothing should have been.
A long
moment passes before I am able to comprehend the fact that she was never here
at all.
I climb out
of the bubbling water, the cool air on my bare skin making me shiver as I reach
for my towel. I think of my Trill ancestors as I dress, those foolhardy souls
who sought immortality so long ago, exchanging one death for many. Did they know,
when they made the bargain, that there would be no way to go back, no way to
reclaim what we were? Did they know that the joining would result in such a
precarious existence, perched forever on the edge of madness, bereft of the
simple comfort of a lover's familiar touch?
My hands
are cold. I rub them together, seeking warmth that is denied me. I am alone,
or so it seems, but even this is not true, never true. Lenara chose wisely
when she left me, I know. We have left behind too much of what we once were, surrendered
too much to the symbiont's needs for any other choice to have been possible.
Perhaps we
were never meant for immortality.