
“Thank you, Tuvok,” she replied. She uttered no question or commentary on what she was witnessing,
[9]for which Tuvok was silently grateful. “Doctor,” she said suddenly, “Tom and his father are coming
down to meet me andMiral.I’d like to receive them in my quarters, if that’s all right.”
“As long as you go directly from that bed to your bed, you should be fine. The brief walk won’t hurt
you, and actually would be good for you. But if you start feeling weak, let me know at once, and don’t
overtire yourself.”
“Believe me, I won’t,” said Torres. She eased out of bed, tapped her combadge, and, cradling the
infant, headed out of sickbay while talking. “Tom, can you meet us in our quarters? I’m getting very tired
of sickbay. ...”
Tuvok gazed after her, grateful for her discretion. The Doctor brought a chair for Sek, then placed
cortical monitors on both Vulcans’ heads. Discreetly, he stepped as far away as possible.
Tuvok looked up at his son. To his consternation, he felt a rush of emotion. He had missed his family so
much. Sek saw the reaction and recognized it for what it was: a sign that the disease was progressing.
“Do not worry, Father,” he said gently. “Soon, these distractions will be gone.” Sek closed his eyes,
calming himself, then reached and placed his long, slim fingers on his father’s brow. “My mind to your
mind ... your thoughts to my thoughts. ...”
Sek’s presence in his mind was like oil poured on churning water to Tuvok. At first, there was only a
surface calm; then, gradually, Sek’s thoughts penetrated deeper. He felt the young man’s mind traversing
his own, finding and searching out the synapses that carried the destructive virus.
[10]He and his son had not melded since Sek was an infant. Tuvok, T’Pel, and Sek had bonded then in
an extremely deep and profound union of minds. It was an ancient rite, lost for centuries and then
rediscovered, that dated back to when Vulcans first began to harness the incredible powers of the mind.
It had been easiest to meld with family members with whom one shared blood, then with more distant
relatives, then strangers and, finally in recent history, members of other species. But the initial bonding,
established so that the helpless infant could be linked to his parents more firmly, had been the most
sacred and powerful.
It was this familiarity that swept through Tuvok now. The irony was not lost on him that this time, it was
his son who was nurturing him, not the other way around. In this case, the bonding was to protect father,
not child.
Sek’s thoughts raced through Tuvok’s mind, finding the damaged part of the older Vulcan’s brain. There
they were, the mutated cells, and Tuvok could see in his mind’s eye that they were unnatural and out of
harmony with the complex, delicate balance that was the Vulcan brain. The disease was spread through
the neurological pathways. Tuvok knew that Sek, whose mind was undamaged, would be instructing his
father’s own cells to protect the uninfected part of the brain. The blood bond between them magnified the
intimacy of the connection. It was the only way the condition could have been treated. Reaching so
deeply would not have been possible without that link.
On a cellular level, Sek began to “speak” to Tuvok’s brain.There has been damage here. These cells
are[11]dangerous. You are not to access them any longer.Gently, but firmly, Sek urged the cells to
put up their own barriers. Information and stimuli were henceforth to bypass these areas. They were to
become inert. Tuvok felt a strange rush, an imaginary tingling sensation as, under Sek’s gentle urging,
areas of his brain that had hitherto never been used opened up and responded to stimuli. Cell by cell, Sek