
she’d spent onVoyager. But Starfleet had also tended to assume that when one crash-landed on an
inhospitable planet, one would usually have one’s emergency medical kit, phasers, and so on. At the very
least, they’d assumed one would have clothes.
B’Elanna had nothing but her own two hands and her wit.
One of the first things she had done was to find water. She dimly remembered something about a few of
Boreth’s plants that weren’t deadly, and began to forage berries, fruits, and edible tubers and roots.
After about day two, she’d overcome her repugnance sufficiently to add insects to her diet. Making fire
was easy—she’d always had a knack for it and teased Chakotay about it mercilessly.
She had two goals that were occasionally in conflict with one another. The first was to simply stay alive
and[5]as healthy as was possible given the circumstances. The second was to keep moving in the
direction her mother had indicated on the map. Both were challenging, but the latter more so. With no
compass and a complete un-familiarity with the terrain and even the stars that speckled the sky that
arched over this world, Torres had very little frame of reference.
The map had indicated thatMiralwould be waiting for her somewhere to the northeast of the temple.
Torres had wasted two precious days traveling in the wrong direction before she remembered that
Boreth’s sun rose in the south and traveled north during the day. Upon realizing her mistake, B’Elanna
Torres raged with a fury that would have impressed Logt, had she been witness to it.
Her redundant organs were serving her well during this time of extreme physical duress. She recalled the
conversation she had with the Doctor, when he had argued as persuasively as he was capable of doing in
favor of the extra lung and other organs littleMiralwould have. Humans would have had a very difficult
time of this, and even she, half-human as she was, fell into exhausted slumber at the end of every day.
Her feet started to blister at the end of the second day. She rubbed them with mud to soothe them and
started to think about what she could use to create makeshift shoes. Her first try, wrapping large leaves
around them, was a complete failure. A half-hour’s worth of walking on not-very-rough terrain shredded
them. She realized that she was going to need something sturdier than plants.
She was also going to need something more substantial to eat than roots and grubs. Torres began
walking at[6]first light and didn’t stop until dusk, when she would search for shelter and make a fire. She
was burning calories like mad and was starting to feel weak and shaky.
Reluctantly, she came to the conclusion that she would need to make a weapon. Boreth was rich with all
kinds of wildlife. A singlemaasklak would provide both food and clothing. It was a logical deduction, but
the thought made her feel even sicker. Torres took no pleasure in killing. She fought when she had to,
and had killed in self-defense more than once, but that was a long way from deliberately setting out to
take a life, even an animal’s life. She imagined that for most Klingons who undertook the Challenge of
Spirit, coming to grips with killing an animal was probably the least of their worries. But it disturbed her
greatly.
She’d talked to Chakotay once about hunting, back in the early days when she was first getting to know
him. He was, as she ought to have expected, quite philosophical about the whole thing. He seemed to
have no qualms about it in theory or in practice, if there was a need.
“But you’re a vegetarian,” she had pointed out.
“I have access to a replicator,” he had countered. “I don’t need to go out and hunt my meals.”