Conversations I've had with my bird in the last 24 hours:
"You cannot eat the power cable."
"I need my arrow key back, please."
"Please stop eating my desk."
"Is there a rule that says you MUST poop on my laptop screen?"
"You need to get down off the ceiling fan."
"I need my shift key back, please."
"Can you please teach your friend that he is capable of flying OUT of the bedroom instead of just flying into it and then screaming when we aren't with him?"
"Please stop serenading the dog."
"It looks like someone exploded a feather pillow in here."
"Please stop sending unintelligible messages to my friends, and I need my enter key back, please."
https://archiveofourown.org/works/62063797/chapters/167953606
āYou still believe there are survivors,ā she declared, her words flat as her lips thinned. āThe statistical likelihood of survivors is less thanāā āI donāt care about statistics, Seven,ā Kathryn cut in, shaking her head. āSurvivors or not, Starfleet or not, weāre not alone here. It explains the ladder, the doorāand thisā¦thing.ā
-----
Fandoms: Star Trek: Voyager x Star Trek: Discovery
Relationship: Kathryn Janeway / Seven of Nine
Rating: Mature
Synopsis:
After Captain Janeway contracts an illness during an expedition to an uninhabited planet and ordersĀ USS VoyagerĀ to leave her behind, a certain hardheaded Astrometrics officer isn't so keen on abandoning her Captain. As Janeway and Seven learn to navigate the strange new dynamic forming between them, it becomes apparent that the planet they now call home has a much deeper story to tell--one that seems to defy logic, reality, and even the natural order of time itself. ----- This is a standalone fic but can be read as additional worldbuilding to my "For the Optics" series. Timeline runs about a year prior to the events of "A Binding of Stars."
Kirk: Federation law is very clear on this
Kirk: (Proceeds to do whatever he wants anyway)
Picard: Federation law is very clear on this but Iām a very creative reader
Janeway: Guys youāre not going to believe this; Federation law has fucking NOTHING relevant to this current situation but Iām going to read 20 hours of other captainās logs to make sure. Buckle up though because weāre probably going to do some buckwild shit after the commercial break
Oh no. Why did I do this to myself?
Why did you do this to her? Judith begged of the ship. Why now, after everything sheās done for us? Ithaca remained still, more silent than sheād ever been. The Commander's gaze met hers through the window, and Judithās heart fractured. The possibility of Lyrisā end, the idea that she might actually be mortal, was simply too devastating to comprehend. If even she could fall, what hope was there for the rest of them? āIāll come back for you,ā Judith choked out, her voice barely a whisper. But even as she made her promise, even as she righted herself and took off for the nearest transporter, Judith wondered if there would even be anything left of the Commander, of the life that had always so fiercely refused to be extinguished, to come back to.
This was THE specific moment I started shipping them š„²
@frozenmemories1987
One of my favorite aspects of writing characters is really trying to get into how their minds might work--and when it comes to pairings, I greatly enjoy making something out of nothing.
Prior to 2023, I wasn't a Star Trek fan. I had seen the newer movies, and as a lifelong sci-fi nerd, they were fun to watch, but I always preferred Stargate and Farscape. I've historically been one to connect with characters who are "different"--Seven, Scorpius, Airiam, Saru--and I was in the midst of a particularly bad mental health spiral when I happened to turn on Star Trek: Picard. Seven of Nine was immediately someone that piqued my interest, not only because she was canonically LGBTQ, but because she was clearly someone that had a backstory. This led me to Voyager, because I wanted to see that backstory.
Shipping Janeway and Seven dragged me out of a 6 year writing hiatus, and I started working on a fanfic, though I never intended to post it, and I never finished it.
In 2024, I started Discovery, and was completely unprepared for how much S2E09 would mess me up. I'm a sucker for a tragic character on a good day. Make it a character we didn't know much about, then add an emotional scene between her and the female lead who barely ever interacted and apparently this is all it takes--that and being a bit grouchy about rare pair voids. For the first time since 2017 I was able to not only write something, but FINISH writing it. And then write and finish five more. More than that, I was actually happy with how they turned out, and how my writing evolved as they went from a one-shot to the longest thing I'd ever written.
Sometimes it seemed strange to Burnham, feeling that Airiam was beautiful. She suspected not everyone did, that they might see Michael as defective or faulty for feeling that way about someoneāsomeĀ thingālikeĀ that. She knew from the outside it was easy to forget Airiam had once been human, had once looked just like every other human aboardĀ Discovery, butĀ theyĀ only ever saw the augmentations the Commander couldn't hide beneath the trim navy and silver Starfleet uniform. They couldn't see the rest, the places where metal and machine fused into the organic remnants of a woman who had lost far more than just her life.
Brains are weird, and they latch onto weird things. As terrible as I consider Discovery overall, I can't complain about the fact that it was able to bring something back to me I hadn't been able to do in many years. The fact that it has now also translated into letting me write my own original fiction again, and allowed me to get back into the HABIT of writing again, is something I will be forever weirdly grateful for. The last time I finished an original piece was 2007. I'm looking forward to changing that next month <3
This August,Ā StarTrekPotluckĀ returns for ourĀ sixthĀ celebration of food, drink, and community! Sign-ups open in TWO DAYS, on May 19th at noon (GMT+1)!Ā (What time is that for me?)
See you all in the mess hall āšāØ
Another snippet from "The Measure of Logic."
Janeway didnāt need protectionāsheād never needed thatābut Seven couldnāt overlook her own compulsion to provide it. Perhaps it was a desire for controlāan affinity the likes of which the blonde knew both women shared. Perhaps it was merely an aversion to the sense of abandonment sheād foolishly allowed to creep into her system from the first time Tuvok had implored that Voyager leave her Captain behind. That same fear, compounded when sheād learned that Janeway had agreed, had all but sent Seven of Nine tumbling over the precipice of a neurosis she had never known to exist before then. It was never an option to leave the Captain alone on the planet. The concept was incomprehensible, Voyagerās plans advancing into a foreign, unintelligible language that even the Borg could not have successfully translated.
Graphic designer and aspiring author of LGBTQ sci-fi, fantasy, & romance. Faithfully defending my pet turkeys from the local homesteaders. Probably still mad about Airiam. AO3: AdelineIsermanJaneway x Seven | Michael x Airiam | Sam x Janet | SwanQueen Star Trek: Discovery | Star Trek: Voyager | Stargate: SG-1 | Stargate: Atlantis | Farscape | Once Upon a Time
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