Flash narratives

Past:

I was born into this strange world that isn’t worth much. I was born in Montgomery, Alabama. It wasn’t long into my life when I had to face travesty and despair. The death of my grandmother, then the death of my father and finally the death of my other grandmother….This all happening in a 6 month span. This event in my life has had the largest effect on my life. I have grown up without family other than my mom I became distant to a lot of people. I didn’t much feel like dealing with friends or anyone to that sort. It took a long time to feel normal again, it was like feeling lost but knowing exactly where you are and being unable to get what you need. After a long time getting back into the way of things, my mom and I moved to my hometown of Winfield, Alabama. At this point I was quiet and distant from everyone. My teacher hated me, I was just one of her least favorite students and she treated me horribly. She would go out of her way to get me in trouble, but I made it through then and then eventually I moved on. As time moves I reach 7th grade I had acquaintances at school, but nothing I would consider a friend. That year I decided to join the band, this was the spiral into the best part of my life as of yet. When I joined that I slowly talked to more people and getting closer to them, but to no avail I didn’t have a real friend. It wasn’t until 9th grade year that I felt I had finally made friends, Josh and Ren the names of my friends. It was a good year the second best of my life. Now forward to the best year of my life so far sophomore year, this year I was happiest I’ve been and I had met my current girlfriend and I had even more friends. That year was also the one I went to universal. Then finally the travesty of my life. Moving to the state of Colorado going to Mitchell, this would start a whole new lifestyle for me and I didn’t, and still don’t like it. To the present.

Yeah people die, not fun usually… This is a fact of life, we all die and we can’t do anything about our inevitable fate. But most people will face the death of a family member by the time they are sixteen. Statistics say that 87% will face this. To deal with this people grieve in weird ways. Some people will deal with it by crying and being distant, some will resort to alcohol and drugs, some cut, kill themselves. Everyone does it different.

 

The Present:

I’m still at Mitchell doing my thing trying to get by. I personally hate Colorado, It’s an insufferable state. The snow, the cold all of it, just dreary and unwelcoming. As a person of the southern. But recently my cousin last week overdosed and died. After being on life support for a few days but have little to no brain activity she needed a miracle, but didn’t get one. This time was difficult at first. I know her too well, but she was still family. Me personally I didn’t grieve because I didn’t really know her. It’s not as if I didn’t care but more of the fact that I don’t feel as though I am worthy or I have a real reason to be. She had a daughter and a son and I haven’t much seen them seen them since her death but I have asked about it.  You see they have plenty reason to grieve…I’m not sure if they did Well the daughter mostly did but the son I think he is in his own world rejecting the fact that she died Obviously I don’t know for sure but In my honest opinion I feel it would be more than likely that they reject the fact that they lost a parent I mean Everyone has a different way of grieving maybe they did something completely different way of doing it…Maybe I was spot on. Recently I learned that the daughter is most definitely doing worse she took it very hard and has plenty reason to also. While the son, he has a mental issue so people bought him an Xbox and games play on it….He isn’t doing bad, but I mean obviously he is having a few hiccups, but other than that he is happy with it, he was bought off and thus delaying his griefs? Maybe he feels completely different on the inside, but he’d just a kid he can’t do something so elaborate. Right?

Research

100% of people grieve differently, the reason is, is because every person has a different connection with the person they lost and they have different feelings in the moment. A lot of people will say they are okay but inside they are lost and sad but they are actually just rejecting the fact the person they cared about is gone forever. This was estimated for up to 1 in 17 people will reject the loss of a loved one.

 

 

 

 

Future

Obviously in my lifetime I will lose a lot of people. Life is about choices and what you do with it right? Well in the end does it really matter because you can do everything in your life right but you will still get health issues or something like that? So knowing you can do everything right you could still get problems. Then my questions is why does do things right even matter. Right now a lot of my direct family has health issues, some even have a death sentence…That meaning they have a health issue. It is a depressing live we live knowing we are going to lose people we care about. I feel that one of the scariest things is that one day you will outlive your partner and the grief of a loss like that at an old age like that would be the death of me. I’m usually patient with people and I try to keep how I feel a little on the inside. I have a fear of death whether it’s me or someone I love…The thought of losing someone or dying myself scares me infinitely. Though life itself is a question? This question that many people life is just WHY? Why do any of this? In life you are always in a constant state of loss…you are born and make childhood friends, then you lose those friends, then you move to middle/high school and make friends there just to move to college and lose them, then to college you make new friends, after that you start a life, losing those friends… somewhere along the way you might meet someone and have kids or something and then your kids leave you and then all along this way you lose your family until you lose and die. That is just plainly depressing, all this loss in your life and in your future, most will hear this and not acknowledge the truth to this statement, but one day they will meet death and look back on life and realize all this loss. The best part is, that you can’t do anything about this… absolutely nothing…utterly depressing. But you have to make the most of life as it is because you are reasonably stuck here.

A study shows that in one’s life on average they will lose 7 people to death, and 23 friends and people you will care about to no communication and life’s infinite cycle of loss.

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Scotty

“Scotty”

by

Chris Riker

 

Dry rot. Figures, in a 74-year-old boat. He’d be spending most of the winter high and dry in the yard, ripping out Marcail’s ancient planks and beams, most of the transom, stanchions, cleats … och! All by hand, if ‘twere done right. He narrowed his eyes and pursed his lips. “Right, or not at all,” Scotty ruminated to himself. What the hell else was there to do in retirement besides marry an old sloop with a half-rotted arse? Or watch the occasional new Enterprise begin her long dance in the heavens…

“You look like my Baba Vania on Sunday.” Back from the bar at last. What the hell was that little-boy grin doing on this grown man’s face? Of course, it had always been there. “Sunday vas dry in Baba’s house. Luckily for us, today ees Tursday,” Pavel said, swinging two obscenely large and garishly decorated cocktails onto their table.

“Next time, let the waiter handle the order. I just asked for a wee dram o Scotch, lad.”

“Eet’s in dere. Along vit wodka, jeen, and …” Pavel squinted, as if that helped, “someting.”

“It’s blue.”

Scotty sampled the outlandish concoction–not as bad as he thought. The sign on the wall spoke truth: the word “synthehol” in a circle with a line through it. The glowing blue drink complimented the fried mozzarella sticks (definitely not McCoy-approved) on the table. When was the last time they’d been in Finnegan’s? Was it just after the A’s shakedown cruise? Or was it all the way back to 1701’s big refit? Those were long nights of drinking and arguing over specs with Will Decker. Those memories seemed clear as a morning after a storm, but he couldn’t reconcile how many years had passed. Now, he shared a drink with Pavel to prepare for the launch of a new starship on a mission the two of them would only witness in Starfleet reports.

“She’s got a Sulu at de veel and a good keptin on de breedge.”

Scotty grunted under his breath. “Harriman’s got the numbers on paper, sure enough. But he’s not skippered anything this complex.”

“No vun has. De B is de new golden child, packed vit all de new doodads, set to do every meeshun Starfleet Command can dream up.”

“With a captain who’ll ne’er say no to the brass.”

“Not everyvun’s a Jeem Kirk who can break de rules to fit his ideals. Harriman lives in de real verld. Besides, de B eez not our vorry.”

“Aye, that’s true. I’m just the engineering adviser. They won’t even let me review the daily reports.”

“Keptin Harriman von’t disappoint de Admeeral.”

“Retired,” Scotty pointed out, for no one’s benefit but just to say it. “Och, tis one thing to bend a rule to please the queen, another to toss out the rule book because it cannae give ye what ye want.” His face darkened. “That’s just beggin’ the devil for a dance.” Scotty held up his right hand, forefinger, ring finger, and pinky bent down, to underscore his point. On any other human hand the gesture would be obscene.

“In thirty-someting years, I don’t tink I’ve ever seen you do… dat.

Pavel was staring at Scotty’s right hand. He looked, too, a little surprised to see himself openly displaying the socket of his long-absent middle finger. He refused to allow a doctor to properly regenerate it. He’d worn the occasional prosthesis over the years, even been fond of one with a miniature built-in tool kit. In the end, though, he’d grown tired of watching his native flesh age around the cybernetic digit and learned to do without.

“I suppose dere’s a story dere …”

Scotty took a long sip, then replied, “Aye, there is.”

 

…………………

 

“Scotty, the Qing emperors never had a magician as talented as you!” Skipper Liu rarely smiled, but the steeping chrysanthemum tea did the trick. “I don’t even want to know how you got the protein resequencers to get this just right.”

Knowing how Scotty had actually pulled off this trick made Monty smile.

“Something amusing you, Engineer?”

“No, Ma’am. Sir.”

“Skipper.”

“No, Skipper.” Suddenly, Monty wished he hadn’t tagged along with Scotty this morning. He’d rather be outside, checking the hull for dust scoring, a serious piece of maintenance. He’d rather be anywhere at this moment than standing in the confined space of Skipper Liu’s ornately decorated cabin, under the severe countenance of a jade phoenix staring daggers into his innards.

“Stick close to Scotty and watch. That’s why you’re here.”

Scratching his scalp through his wild red mane, Chief Lyle “Scotty” Bell piped up, “Oh, Monty’s doing more than watching. He’s already shown me Starfleet’s latest methods to coax another .97% out of our dilithium matrix.”

Skipper Liu’s eyes measured the young man, up and down. “Then, The Cixi is getting something out of my deal with Starfleet after all. I was afraid you were all spoiled by serving aboard ships with unlimited resources. It’s a different story when you have to count every crysto-plexi patch and every erg of power.”

Montgomery Scott, “Monty,” shifted his weight and looked at the deck. “I’m not technically in Starfleet yet, Ma’am–Skipper. I’m still in the screening process, a sort of transition between the merchant marines and the fleet. Right now I’m on break, trying to gain experience out here in real space and I’m learning a lot aboard Cixi.”

“It’s pronounced Cixi.” For the life of him, he couldn’t hear the difference. “It employs third tone. Cixi. Whenever you say it, Crewman, it comes out: sushi. She’s a ship, not a spring roll.” Monty made a mental note to learn Mandarin. How hard could it be?

She refreshed her flower tea from an unglazed clay pot, a tiny pig adorning its lid. Lifting the cup in her delicate hands, she took another sip and ate a bite of reconstituted Jian Bing while clicking through several reports on her screen. Monty noticed that she kept her gooseneck monitor twisted just enough to keep him from getting a good look. “SE 19754 T: I believe that makes you Starfleet. I have you listed you as an engineer adviser for the brief time you’ll be with us. We’ll have to see if you learn anything worthwhile for your next captain.” And then a wicked look crossed her face. “Of course, you could jump ship and turn your back on The Cixi and Starfleet, too.”

His voice quavering like a poorly tuned hyper-spanner, he said “I don’t think so, Skipper.” He looked around for some place to fix his attention, quickly passing over the unsettling faces of the bubble-eyed goldfish ogling him from their small aquarium and finding a bronze lion-dog thing sporting a dour expression like its jade cousin. Scotty had told him their captain’s cultural accoutrements were chosen with a purpose: the Skipper’s corporate benefactor admired ancient Chinese culture, so Skipper Liu, who grew up between worlds on freighters, mined deep into her own heritage to create a pleasing persona. To her credit, she gathered, organized, and assimilated the cultural flotsam, learning the differences between Han and Manchu aesthetics, sampling each new dish, even learning to genuinely appreciate the dizzying, dazzling productions of the Beijing Opera, so as to avoid presenting mere clichéd affectation.

Her dark eyes darted over yet another set of readouts without looking up. “In the past three years, I’ve lost four crewmen to the companies on Deneva Prime. Now, the leadership is breaking ground on a shining new city on the hill. They need engineers, especially talented ones.” Monty silently hoped his face wasn’t somehow betraying his plans. He’d been reading whatever he could find about the nascent Denevan capital. Officials were proudly playing up their vision of art-centric architecture with open sunny plazas and shady niches. Monty scoured the computer to find more details about the massive power nodes under construction there and in the planet’s other major cities. Deneva Prime was the anchor planet of eight adjacent sectors, thanks to one of the richest mining operations in the Federation. It spread throughout the Deneva system’s massive asteroid belt, which swung a wild 80 degrees off the plane of the ecliptic, the remains of some doomed colossus. If these newest specs were correct, then The Great Belt could be home to a series of solar and ore-powered energy generators. Dozens of small stations would power Deneva Prime and her immediate colonies, with the potentially dangerous generators kept safely off-planet. The lambency of Deneva’s golden age would only intensify, beaming prosperity to scores of worlds.

Seeing Monty appear adrift, Scotty made a polite remark and promised to keep a close eye on his protégé. Skipper Liu nodded and waved them out of her cabin. It wasn’t until later that Monty realized that the skipper had been probing him to get a sense of where his loyalties lay, no mean trick since he hardly knew himself.

 

Life aboard Cixi quickly fell into a routine played at breakneck speed. True to her name, this fine, imperious dowager demanded constant attention. Monty was one of fourteen engineers out of a crew of twenty-seven. They worked long hours each day just keeping all the major systems operating nominally; much of that time making certain the new, state-of-the-art systems played well with the vessel’s more venerable components. Monty ran through dozens of micro tapes, meticulously absorbing the specs of each device as well as the myriad improvisations aboard this ship.

Even in a post-scarcity age, starships consumed resources. Currency was out of vogue in most parts of the Federation. But, trade had proved to be an ever-expanding universe. They could requisition basic comestibles and other essentials on Deneva Prime or at the nearest outpost, but Skipper Liu aspired to do more than just get by. She had her crew do favors whenever possible, or carry specialty items that were not strictly kosher under maritime law. The miners, who shared a handful of overworked shuttles between many installations, were grateful for the extra supply runs. Bottom line: Cixi could call in favors from nearly anyone in the system. Skipper Liu also employed some good old-fashioned horse trading to gain little extras, such as three refurbished phase cannons to ward off cheeky independent operators out of the nearby Orion systems. The Trame Incursion era relics were obsolete and required a great deal of upkeep. But they still packed a punch.

The Great Belt consisted of exactly 931,963 far-flung rocks above pebble-size. Of these, barely seventy were large enough to support a mining operation/power plant, habitat, and crew. Cixi’s cargo bay six held two such habitats, each roughly twice the size of the recreational shuttle Monty’s family had used on holiday years ago. The habs had eight miners sharing one head. Almost every work stop included emergency plumbing of the sort Monty chose not to list on his curriculum vitae.

During the few hours each week they had free, Scotty inculcated Monty in the fine art of pleasing the boss. His first attempt failed miserably. Monty went to raise the overhead in the skipper’s rack. He gave her another four inches, allowing her to sit up in the cramped bunk. Skipper Liu responded by dressing him down for entering her cabin without permission. Monty quickly sought to redeem himself by repairing an elaborate relief of The Cixi that had worked free of its mountings in the mess. For two weeks, the model sat leaning precariously on a countertop, her chambered hull resembling a highly-fecund termite queen. Monty cantilevered the heavy facsimile into the bulkhead, carefully avoiding the web of relays and conduit embedded on the other side. It cost him most of a night’s sleep. He worked slowly, careful to muffle the drilling to keep from waking the day shift. The following Sunday, Skipper Liu joined her crew for lunch, as per her weekly custom. Monty watched her face for any glimmer of approbation, instead finding her as inscrutable as a Vulcan mystic. Then, as she rose to leave the mess, she paused beside the sculpture and ran a finger over the small brass plate added by Scotty that read: MS-8178 Cixi – L. Liu, Master and Commander. Then she was gone. Scotty and Monty volleyed a grin. It was nothing, but it was everything.

 

“You’re doing it again, Monty.” Nthanda Chambers reached one hand behind her as she squeezed her head and shoulders into the access panel, inelegantly located waist-high in the bulkhead.

Monty handed her a newly recharged poly-bonder. After a beat, he asked, “Doing? I dinnae think I’m doin’ anythin’ but handin’ you tools.”

“And staring at my butt, Mr. Scott,” came her voice through the open hole in the bulkhead. That was followed by cursing in an African dialect he did not recognize. “That’s what happens when somebody overclocks the pattern buffer trying to input a recorded matrix… on a Mark-2 freight transporter. Tell Scotty it would be easier on the hardware if he just grew chrysanthemums in hydroponics.” Nthanda finished replacing the seared data chips. Monty felt his face redden as she wriggled to extricate her upper torso from the cramped space. He couldn’t help but look. There was just something about this woman’s callipygous stern section that captured his eyes like a black hole. His own sophomoric simile made him blush deeper crimson. As her face came into view, her startlingly intelligent, earthen eyes robbed Monty of the power of speech. “It’s OK, just don’t let Skipper Liu or Scotty catch you,” she said.

He would swear she gave him a come hither look. No, that was impossible. Why would a beautiful woman set her sights on a 23-year-old Starfleet hopeful? Didn’t she usually hang out with the tall security chief… or had something happened there? Was there a chance? The deck threatened to turn to liquid beneath his feet.

Nthanda gathered up the tools, neatly slipping the poly-bonder into a loop in her vest along with a magnetic probe. The bulky ensemble could not conceal her bonnie figure as she made her way to the service tube.

“‘Scotty’ Bell and ‘Monty’ Scott: too confusing.” There was that mocking smirk again. “It’s bad enough having two Scotsmen on one ship. When you two get to talking, I can’t cut the brogue with a particle blaster.” Montgomery Scott, holder of three master’s degrees in engineering and warp theory, had a great comeback for her … which leapt to his dry tongue about three seconds after she climbed down the ladder to deck three.

 

They serviced three more asteroid stations over the next two weeks, dropping off supplies and assisting the miners with maintenance. There was precious little time in the ship’s schedule for Monty to try and be alone with Nthanda, though she seemed open to that possibility. He sat with her whenever their meals coincided. Then, he enjoyed a lucky break. They spent three days overhauling the main motor on the ship’s grappling claw together, exchanging intimate dialogue only an engineer could love.

Their conversation drifted from work to life in general. Once, Nthanda mentioned a child, but quickly clammed up. He didn’t press, nor did he find the courage to ask about other things he wanted to know. It was easier and more enjoyable to let their hours together set their own course.

She was never overt, but did manage to brush her body against Monty from time to time as they worked in cramped quarters. When her hand touched his inside the duotronic bowels of a bridge workstation, she smiled and made a cute remark. “Mind on your work, Engineer.” She obviously enjoyed his awkwardness. Growing up with three older sisters hadn’t really prepared him for attempting an actual relationship with an older woman. But, what was he thinking? How much of a difference did five or six years make?

The roiling emotions didn’t end there. It was a small ship. His crewmates figured out the situation quickly enough and teased him mercilessly, especially Pinuoul, whose bright penny complexion and pink Ithenite-style fez distinguished the diminutive navigator, a Dayen, as one of only three non-Terrans aboard. She never said a word, but made smoochy noises whenever he turned his back. So much for maintaining professionalism in the workplace. Why did he let it get to him? Nothing had happened between him and Nthanda. At least not yet…

 

Skipper Liu was in engineering, checking a spike in the readings from the port warp nacelle. Suddenly, the board flashed then went dark. A second later, the whole ship juddered. More jarring was the blare of the ship’s klaxon. Monty knew the situation before the instruments snapped back to life. “Someone hit us with a low-intensity, highly focused meson beam. It created a slow energy build up.”

“And damn near destroyed my nacelle. Battle stations! I want blood, gentlemen. We need to send a message to these bastards that we don’t screw around.” Everyone knew who she meant. Orions were usually satisfied to cheat on trade deals, but lately they’d become more aggressive, as Deneva’s wealth grew to irresistible levels.

The skipper ran to the bridge trailing Mandarin curses while crewmen dashed from one compartment to the next with chaotic purpose. Monty grabbed a tool kit–he needed a damned tool vest–and headed to his action station at the aft phase cannon. The jury-rigged controls were here, rather than on the bridge, so this part of their defenses was up to him and Security Chief Paul Obasanjo. Standing beside this imposing man, Monty felt a flush of… something, but he put it out of his mind and focused on the immediate crisis. He suspected the Orions would probably go after the rear cargo sections, hoping to isolate them long enough to knock out the transporter shields and beam out everything they could get. They’d have to move in close, though, and he and the chief would be ready with a wee surprise.

This enemy captain had made an ally of guile. He had chosen a rock not much bigger than his vessel, hugged it close, and maneuvered to keep it between him and Cixi’s sensors. He likely had mounted a small scanner on the rock’s opposite side like an ancient periscope. He definitely spotted the Cixi first. In fact, Cixi’s targeting scanner picked up the incoming missiles before it offered a firing resolution on the Orion vessel. The ship’s computer called out a sickening countdown to impact. “…four… three… two…one” before the missiles found their mark and rattled the ship with wild concussive force. The shields held against three of the low-yield warheads, but the fourth breached their defenses and cut into the hull. The scream of tearing metal-ceramic sent shockwaves all along Cixi’s 238-meter length. Nthanda led the damage control party, sealing off the exposed sections, while the air filtration system worked to scrub the atmosphere of the acrid fumes.

Monty hoped these bloody brigands enjoyed their one good shot, as he and Obasanjo locked on and fired. The cannon’s beam torched through the attacker’s sheltering rock, sending fiery bolides in all directions. A debris cloud dispersed, revealing the Orion ship with her characteristic necklace of spinning nacelles. It appeared to have suffered only light damage, but was holding position, its captain possibly planning his next move.

The phase cannon’s firing array hissed, overloaded and useless. Anticipating this on the quarter-century old refit, Monty had stashed two spares nearby. He scrambled to yank out the control assembly and install a new module. “Like changin’ a fuse. You can target her engines now, Chief. I dinnae think the ugly beastie has much in the way of deflectors.”

“I’ll target her bridge,” the security chief stolidly trumped his suggestion.

“One well-placed shot will lay her out like a holiday grouse.”

“I believe you heard the skipper, Engineer Scott.” He felt the chief’s anger, and not just against the Orions. A grim scowl on his ebony features, Obasanjo unleashed the second salvo directly at the ship’s bridge. This time the phase cannon’s control assembly held together long enough to turn their attackers’ brain center into slag and plasma. Bodies tumbled into the void on a lonely journey without end. Minutes later, the damaged vessel hobbled off and out of range. Monty could only imagine survivors in their engine room scrambling to make repairs while dealing with the loss of their captain. He said nothing, but couldn’t help but feel that Obasanjo’s strategy made no sense. They’d drawn blood and the Orions were not simply going to forget it. Even if one ship was out of commission, others would step in.

The truth about space battles is that winners and losers part ways in a very short time. The excitement was over. Now, the port nacelle needed about four hours’ attention, the breached cargo area about seven.

At 23:30 hours, after a final check of systems in engineering, Monty headed back towards the cabin he shared with Scotty, who promised to be along shortly. He could barely drag his feet, and could not shake the feeling that he’d been part of bloodshed that could have been avoided. He was lost in reflection walking through companionway C-2, when Nthanda’s soft hand reached out from the shadows and pulled him into a storage locker. What followed surprised, terrified, enervated, and amazed him.

 

“Wha first shall rise to gang awa,  A cuckold, coward loun is he!  Wha first beside his chair shall. fa’,  He is the King amang us three!

     “We are na fou, we’re nae that fou,

But just a drappie in our e’e!

The cook may craw, the day may daw,

And ay we’ll taste the barley-bree!”

The melody hovered about uncertainly like a young wifey on her wedding night, the volume swelled to painful levels, and the brogue left onlookers bemused. Still and all, Scotty, Monty, and the boys and girls from the good ship Cixi sang from their hearts so fervently that Rabbie Burns could hear them in far-off Dumfries.

Trading her drab duty fatigues for pearls and a hip-worshipping cinnabar qipao, Skipper Liu joined her raucous crew in a homely pub in the old fourth ward of Deneva Prime’s burgeoning capital. “I can’t tell if you’re too drunk to sing or too sober.” Some saluted, which was not a Cixi custom. She admonished them to be back to the sole shuttle on time or forfeit a month’s credits. She drank a round with a darkly handsome Denevan wearing a finely-wrought silver bracelet of twin dragons before the two left the pub together.

“This is how we do it in Aberdeen. How are ye holdin’ up, lad?”

“I thought we knew how to drink back in Linlithgow. I’ll have to give Aberdeen a try,” Monty answered and drained his pint of dark stout ale.

“A scion of Linlithgow, eh?” Scotty said, much too loudly, stopping nearby conversations. “I visited the great castle on a school outing once.” He looked around to make certain he owned the room. “I kissed a braw raven-haired lass, then kissed her buxom ginger friend.” A pause. “And rode home with one proud grin and two rosy red cheeks!” The crowd laughed and made rude noises.

Nthanda chimed in. “You might have gone home with more had you shown some manners.” She moved to stand with Monty, drawing a boozy “oooooh!” from their shipmates. At that point, Obasanjo, who had remained on the edge of the action, downed his drink in one gulp and left the pub.

Monty waited until they were in the next tavern to ask the obvious question. She didn’t hesitate: “Paul and I have a past. In fact… we have a daughter. But she is mine; I raise her. Paul and I are–“

“Friends?”

“History.”

She had said that too easily, somehow. “Where’s the wee lass now?”

“With my sister in Pretoria. You’d love Charlene. She’s a four-year-old charmer. And smart! She pulls her toys to pieces to get to the lithium cells–she calls them dilithium–and puts them back together perfectly.”

“Takes after her ma.”

“This is my last run for now. If I’m careful, I’ll be back to her soon… and with a lot more to offer her than a mother’s smile.” Monty wanted to ask more, but she stopped him with a kiss. As he tried to pull her closer, she pushed back. “I’m afraid that’s all for now. I loved the other night, but it really is a small ship.”

“Aye, all ships are small.”

 

Monty piloted Cixi’s workhorse shuttle on their third and final trip to the mining camp on Asteroid D-47, affectionately dubbed “Camp Lulu” in honor of the miners’ patron saint of questionable cargo.

“My parents thought it sounded like poetry,” explained Skipper Lulu Liu, who took second chair on this trip. “The first one who smirks will find himself walking back to sector 001.”

The go team consisted of six members: the skipper, Monty, Scotty, Obasanjo, another security guard named Marks, and the cook and life-support tech Gaj, a pugnacious Tellarite who nervously dipped into a small bag for a pinch of pungent herb and sucked it up into his snout with a grunt and a sigh.

The camp’s bare-bones construction belied its potential for producing ore; it lacked even some basic features, let alone luxuries. On their last visit, “Camp Lulu” consisted of a pressurized landing bay which held numerous work skiffs and adjoined to a small storage chamber. An interior hatch led to an enormous airless vault, a natural cavity inside the big rock formed eons ago, where the miners stored valuable mineral ore by the ton. Despite the installation of artificial gravity, the work required the use of hard suits, which consumed time and cut productivity. The crew hab provided their only shirtsleeve environment, containing communications, work stations, minimal living accommodations, and a compact but powerful PXK reactor.

The shuttle slowed to a crawl over the asteroid’s scarred and broken surface, barely 800 kph, and swung around the plant’s external superstructure. A dozen kilometers beyond, they followed an encrypted short-range beacon to the main landing bay, carefully concealed in the rockface. The enormous exterior hatch yawned back about 45-degrees from the cliff, revealing the red glow of lights inside. Monty’s instruments barely showed energy readings, even with the hatch open. He knew the miners did what they could to shield their main base from unwelcome eyes.

It took longer to unpack the shuttle than he had hoped, even with all eight of the miners and most of the Cixi contingent helping. Gaj and Obasanjo begged off the duty, saying they had work to do on the waste reclamation system. No one challenged them on that, although Monty wondered just how many mission specialties Chief Obasanjo had, beyond security and ship’s weapons. “Jack of all trades, master of none, if you ask me,” he thought, then realized he was being jealous.

“Wait til you see our new home. We turned on the heat and made the final pressure tests eight days ago. We’ve been living like kings ever since.” Camp Leader Cam Bennif beamed with pride, spreading his arms in a sweeping gesture as they walked past the trans-hatch lockers containing the helmeted work suits. He passed out hard hats and some basic gear, but that was all. Bennif explained that his crew had just finished super-compressing the native rock to fill in every possible gap, trapping the atmosphere. It had taken plenty of effort and ingenuity to coax air and water from the asteroid’s secret depths, but, nearly three billion years after cataclysmic volcanism produced this stone, the vault held breathable air for the first time. This was only one of many such attractive vacancies hidden throughout The Great Belt. What the miners had done here, crews could replicate in hundreds of other places, providing living space for new multitudes.

As they stepped into the expanding darkness, there was one more surprise. “Would you do the honors?”

Skipper Liu gladly took the remote from Bennif and keyed in the command. In an instant, the boundless, inky-black vault flooded with brilliance. Banks of lights shone down from the ceiling, an impossible distance above them. The eye could now see that this natural cavity went on for several kilometers, with recesses stretching beyond the visible horizon. Used to life aboard the confines of Cixi, the visitors struggled against vertigo as their senses adjusted to the enormous scale. Mountains of ore stood ready to be used to fuel the energy production units. Vehicles and equipment looked like toys in the distance. The floor of the vault held an even grade, thanks to regolith churned out by the kiloton from the ore hoppers.

“You brought dinner, right?”

“I brought the ribs you asked for,” said Skipper Liu. “I was afraid we were going to have to eat them standing up, squeezed cheek by jowl in the hab.”

Bennif grinned and pointed to one of a series of old-fashioned tents. “All the comforts. The mess hall is open. The grill is out back.”

“Ribs! Let’s sloch!” Scotty was practically drooling.

Dinner was nothing short of a banquet, as miners and spacemen exchanged news, gossip, and tall tales, while licking sticky fingers. One of the miners begged the Cixi crew to bring him a box of starter soil, so he could create a self-sustaining farm inside D-47. He swore that within five years, they’d turn the place into a real colony, the first thriving city in The Great Belt. No one doubted it.

Skipper Liu proposed a toast with some 120-proof baijiu she’d brought. “To boldly taking on great ventures, with all the risks and rewards that go with them.”

The crowd responded with a hearty, “Hear! Hear!”

Bennif pontificated, “Many great projects can be measured in human sacrifice.” Turning to the skipper, he continued, “It’s said a million men lie buried beneath China’s Great Wall.” Then, to Monty, “Starfleet Academy itself stands in the shadow of the Golden Gate Bridge, whose construction claimed eleven lives – ten in a single accident. It’s a grim fact of life: all our planning cannot protect us. In the end, we choose to either risk everything or to stay home.” A mood-killer, the team leader’s speech prompted people to drain their cups.

After the gathering finished off the last of the food, people spread out. The miners showed off their tent city, complete with workshops, multiple showers, and surprisingly clean latrines. The miners and go team members then formed sides for football. The miners had easily improvised the goal nets from plentiful cargo webbing and tubing. The ball was originally designed for use in a sub-freezing vacuum. It came from a Mars-based company that discovered a ready market in colonists who insisted on indulging in competitive sports in the most inhospitable of places. Free to clash without hard suits, the miners whooped and howled with each bruising impact of body on body.

The young Starfleet loaner proved to be a one-man assault force. Scotty tried to keep up, but lost his footing on the sandy pitch. He reclaimed his pride with a diving save, which Monty relayed into the net. Catching his breath, Scotty said, “I’m sorry your bonnie jo coudnae join us on this trip. I have her re-aligning the comm array.”

“What? We did that two days ago. Anyway, she’s nae me jo. I guess I dinnae ken what she is.”

Scotty passed him a flask. “Now that is about as fine a description of the opposite sex as ever I heard: ‘I dinnae ken.’”

“That goes both ways, me laddybucks,” chimed in one of the miners, mocking their accent. “You men are as big a mystery to us as the heart of a magnetar,” she said as she grabbed the ball and gave it a great kick. That tied the score between Team Cixi and Team Lulu.

Scotty leaned in to Monty, “Ne’er you mind. Two hearts beating as one and all that romantic twaddle. You’ll work it–”

At that moment, a klaxon screamed into life. This was getting all too familiar. Bennif ordered his men to find out what was going on. Skipper Liu made a quick head count. “Twelve. Where the hell are Obasanjo and Gaj?”

Monty answered, “They’re working on the waste reclaimers.”

“Who the hell asked them to do that? There’s nothing wrong with ‘em,” hollered Bennif, who should know.

Skipper Liu’s communicator chirped twice as loudly and twice as fast as usual, a setting Monty had never heard before. She turned her back so that he couldn’t hear the skipper’s conversation with the ship, but he definitely heard her curse loudly. “Incoming!”

People froze, waiting, but not for long. An odd snick sound raised to earsplitting levels resounded through the multi-billion-year-old rock walls. The impact raised clouds of dust from the floor and ore piles and collapsed several of the tents. A second impossibly loud stone-on-stone snap accompanied another major jerk that swept over the cavern’s volume. Then a third. That was followed by a slowly grinding earthquake. Monty corrected himself: asterquake. Then a localized explosion hit, not far away. Then, nothing but the sound of anxious breathing.

Half-a-dozen tricorders appeared in the hands of miners and members of the go team, their sensors producing a dissonant whistling. “Report!” cried Liu and Bennif at virtually the same time.

“Meteors. Three direct hits,” came the answer. Engineers on both teams got into an argument about the source of the meteors. Some suggested a magnetic rail gun. Others insisted a rail gun would have to be kilometers long and would therefore be impractical and tough to hide anywhere in the Deneva system. They felt the better method would be to use a ship’s grapple to tow one or even three rocks then deftly sling them on an intercept course with D-47. That might require strapping portable attitude jets to the space bullets. In any case, it meant someone had to provide exact coordinates to aim the rocks so they could strike the asteroid’s shell above Camp Lulu. One of the miners delivered more immediate news: “There are micro-fractures all through the strata. We’re venting atmosphere.”

“Listen up!” ordered Skipper Liu. “Miners, get to the shuttle. Scotty, Monty, find Gaj and Obasanjo and then get to either the hab or the main lock. Move!”

One of the miners came running back from the direction of the main landing bay with a distressed look on his face. After a quick conference, Bennif told the others, “The bay is open to space. Somehow, the outer hatch is open and non-functional. So is the hatch to the storage area.” Monty knew from the specs that that shouldn’t be possible. He also knew that their options were drying up. The miners’ shuttle was in use at another asteroid camp, and the work skiffs lacked an independent air supply for an operator. With the vault breached, that left them only one safe haven.

“The hab?” Skipper Liu, Monty, and two miners ran to the prefabricated unit, which stood more than one hundred meters away from the mess tent. Smoke and residual flames confirmed this was the source of the explosion, the one that had followed the impact-triggered temblors. An overpowering stench emanating from the hab confirmed that the blast had been fatal. Once inside, Monty located Gaj, or what was left of him; most of his face was missing. Obasanjo lay against the opposite wall, badly burned and moaning in a semi-lucid state.

Skipper Liu looked at her security chief and said in a flat tone, “Paul, we messed up.”

Scotty came inside. “I’ve got the miners prepping their hard suits. It’s the only way to get them to the shuttle. There’s just one hitch.”

“Let me guess,” Monty sighed.

“Ten working suits, plus a pile of non-working ones stripped for spare parts. Fourteen of us.”

“Thirteen,” Monty corrected, gesturing to the gooey, charred remains of Gaj.

The skipper attempted some gallows humor. “Next place we stop, let’s make sure they have proper air-locks.”

“I estimate we have about twenty-five minutes left before we black-out. I have one last idea, Skipper.”

“Monty, I need you on the shuttle,” Skipper Liu shot back. “I’ll stay here with Scotty and Marks.”

“Skipper, I can make this work,” Monty pleaded.

She started to object, but saw his determination and judged it to be an essential asset right now. “Fine. Scotty, you pilot the shuttle! And that’s enough second-guessing on everyone’s part.” She had chosen the three potential sacrificial lambs. Marks looked less than enthusiastic.

For the next fifteen minutes, the two team leaders hustled their people into the suits, an agonizingly slow procedure even ignoring safety checks. They could now open the connecting hatch between the vault and the other chambers long enough to get the suited personnel through. “It’ll cost us even more atmosphere, though,” figured Monty. They could save ten. Three were in serious trouble. All of Cixi’s EVA suits were currently stored onboard their shuttle, but opening the hatch a second time would negate any chance of rescue. Likewise, trying to get three unsuited people across the airless landing bay would not end well.

With everyone suited up, Scotty made sure his friend, the skipper, and Marks were well back from the hatch. The nanosecond it opened, the stone giant exhaled with hurricane force. It took nearly ninety seconds to get the ten people–two carrying Obasanjo, whom they had quickly stuffed as gently as possible into a suit–to the other side and reseal the hatch. Monty used the time to signal the ship. He rechecked the remaining pressure and calculated that they now had less than four minutes before they passed out. The camp had emergency breathers, but those were designed to aid in case of caustic leaks inside pressurized areas. Trying to breathe through a mouthpiece while surrounded by vacuum would only provide them with an especially painful death.

“Nthanda, it’s time for a miracle.”

“I’ll do my best.”

“Beam us up, lassie!”

“Uh–”

“I know. It’s a freight transporter. I need you to cross-circuit in a specific sequence to boost the resolution.”

“Monty! This thing was built to move building supplies, meat and vegetables. I mean dead meat and dead vegetables. If I so much as try to beam up a chicken, it’ll come through… wrong!” They both knew this model of transporter had limited use. It could read and reassemble molecules, but it hopelessly scrambled active brain patterns. Livestock suffered irreversible cerebral damage, materializing on the pad, flopping to the deck, writhing and dying within minutes. There had never been human trials on the Mark-2. It simply lacked the resolution found in the high-end model transporters that were standard on all Starfleet vessels.

“That’s the third time my ears have popped,” chided the skipper. “I would appreciate action soon.”

“Nthanda… listen to me. You need to cross-sequence bank-A to sub-matrix-delta. Now, that’s going to overload the buffer. But, it will hold long enough for you to be able to transfer all the data to Cixi’s main computer. You’ll want to tie-in to a good heuristic algorithm. You get that from a subspace tie-in to Starfleet Corps of Engineers main medical library computer, or Memory Alpha. Use my serial number as a password. From there, you can download the whole kit and caboodle back into the stream re-integrator. It coudnae be more simple.”

Nthanda was no coward, but Monty could hear the emotion in her voice. “Monty. I can’t do this. Maybe you can, but I am just not up to your level on transporters. I will not push the buttons that kill three people, including you and my skipper.” Monty began explaining his plan again, more slowly, but she shouted, “It’s a goddamned freight transporter!”

“So, ship some goddamned freight!” Skipper Liu and Monty looked at the terrified man in the red coveralls.

“Lad, if you ken some way outta this…”

“Beam down one of the habitats we have in storage,” suggested a clearly terrified Marks.

“That I can do!” shouted Nthanda’s voice over the communicator. “Locking on to cargo bay six now.”

Skipper Liu barked the order: “Energize!”

The thinning air in the ancient stone chamber rang out with the familiar carrier wave of Cixi’s powerful if not terribly bright transporter. They looked up as one nearby volume came alive with effervescent sparkles, trillions of infinitesimal shooting stars moving from the ship above them to–

“Crap!!”

The hab materialized about fifteen meters above the floor of the cavern. I hung in mid-air for a split-second like an ancient animated comedy, then plummeted. It crashed to the ground, splitting open like an extra large egg, throwing useless gear and debris all over the ground. Marks sat down where he was and put his face in his hands.

“What the hell happened, Engineer Chambers? Report!”

“I’m getting interference on the transporter’s targeting scanner, maybe from some magnetic ore. I can read the vault, but it’s far too indistinct. I thought I had the coordinates right, but– Oh, God! That’s why we usually haul the habs into place the hard way.”

Monty jumped in, “Don’t quit just yet, lass. We’ve got one more hab onboard.”

“If I guess wrong again, the same thing will happen, or else it will materialize inside a wall or the cavern floor. I need a site enhancer and we don’t have any onboard.”

Panting visibly now, Skipper Liu pressed Monty. “Engineer Scott, I am breathlessly awaiting your next magic trick.”

“We dinnae need a site enhancer. We just need to brighten up the picture.”

“How do we do–”

“Lass, are ye ready to give it another go with the second hab?”

He heard the whirs and chimes of the transporter’s controls over his communicator. “Yes. Ready.”

“Watch your scanner like a hawk.” His own eyes were beginning to sting from the drop in air pressure and he could feel his thoughts getting fuzzy around the edges. “You’ll see what you need in about five seconds.” Monty already had the back off of a tricorder and was furiously fiddling with its intricate guts in a way they were never meant to be fiddled. He simultaneously ran away from his crewmates in the direction of the football pitch. As the instrument began to issue a soaring whine, Monty wound up for a windmill pitch to throw it like a grenade. A split-second before he released it, the overloaded tricorder went off like an old-style roman candle. It painted the surrounding terrain with energy easily read by Nthanda aboard Cixi, who immediately beamed down the second hab. The blast also mangled Monty’s right hand, splaying bone, flesh, and sinew in ways that exceeded critical design parameters. He dropped to the ground screaming in pain, clutching his ruined hand in his good one and feeling his consciousness slip away. The last thing he remembered was seeing the hab spring into existence on solid ground, about three centimeters from his nose.

 

Monty lay in his rack for two days, each heartbeat sending a painful throb through his bandaged right hand. Cixi had neither sickbay nor surgeon. As the ship’s designated EMT, Pinuoul had done a fine job repairing Monty’s three shattered fingers. The fourth was entombed on the asteroid below, buried somewhere under the most beautiful habitat in the universe. She assured him he’d soon have full use of his hand. Starfleet would doubtless suggest regenerative therapy, but somehow, he knew he’d refuse. He owned this wound. This new normality would serve as a reminder.

Scotty tried to be a good roommate, but there just wasn’t much to say. He dutifully fetched snacks from the galley and scrounged up technical manuals to help his friend pass the hours. Skipper Liu stopped by to check on him. After some idle conversation, Monty allowed his tortured thoughts to form the questions he did not want to ask.

“D-47 took three solid, well-aimed, ballistic hits. Someone on the ship must have found a way to signal the Orions.”

“That’s right,” admitted his friend.

In his head, an insistent voice said: “Wait. You knew? But, you were in the camp. Who…?” Monty tried very, very hard to push away the rest of that thought.

So, the pirates had hoped to damage the mining operation just enough to drive out the crew, then slip in and load up on a fortune in refined ore and maybe some mining hardware. Without witnesses, the bandits could blame any of a dozen other parties for the theft. Deneva’s wealth attracted attention from very far away. Finishing the thought out loud, Monty said, “So the Orions had an agent on the go team waiting to signal them once everyone evacuated, but he never got the chance.”

Skipper Liu fielded this one. “That was Gaj, who, as it turns out, lied about his expertise with demolition equipment. He tried to set the charge onto the casing of the hab’s pergium reactor. But, he triggered it prematurely and the heat exchange unit went up right in his ugly face.”

“Gaj lied to… Obasanjo? Or to you?”

“Both. Obasanjo learned that Gaj had serious drug and gambling debts he was trying to pay off through dealings with the Orions.”

Scotty pulled up a chair and sat closer to Monty. “Lad, things got a wee bit mucked up.”

“Obasanjo was on our side?”

Scotty answered, “Still is.”

“Too many moving parts! No wonder your plan went tits up.”

“A colorful, but accurate assessment.”

“Why? Why do all this?”

Skipper Liu maintained phlegmatic patience. “To delay the power relay stations from going online. I have a… friend… on Deneva who tried to convince the leaders there of the need for a defense grid for The Great Belt, a series of drones and defensive satellites.”

“Pricey.”

“Lucrative.”

“And the Denevan leadership didn’t bite.”

“They did not. So, my… friend… decided to arrange for a demonstration, a sort of proof of concept display. He quietly maneuvered the Orions into doing what they planned to do anyway, but at a time and place where casualties could be kept to a minimum.”

“Tell that to Gaj.”

“—was an herb-addled idiot. He probably figured on there being enough suits for everyone to evacuate. Also, I didn’t count on him sabotaging the outer hatch. I had hoped to warp away in Cixi, then double back in time to catch the Orions as they tried to steal the ore.”

Scotty added, “All we really needed was proof of their treachery. We got more than we planned.”

Skipper Liu held up one hand to cut him off. This was her confession. “So, you’re right. We took risks we should not have. In any case, it’s done. The miners will have repairs completed in just a few months. We’ll help. Meantime, this morning, the Denevan leadership signed off on a full defense grid.”

He could feel a tone of insubordination creeping into his voice, and did not try to hide it. “You could have come to the Federation for help. Deneva has full protection.”

Scotty made an odd face. “Och, they’ll send a patrol to orbit Deneva Prime. But, safeguarding scores of flying rocks 270 million kilometers away is another story. Oh, one day… maybe when those big beautiful Connies we’ve heard so much about start rolling outta space dock, things could change. That’s in the future.” He put a hand on his friend’s shoulder. “Monty, I’ll tell ye no lie: I love your idealism. But the sorrowful truth is we cannae daydream about a perfect world. We have to make things work in the here and now. Hate it. Hate me. That’s what we do.”

Monty felt as if he’d aged a decade in a few days. He didn’t hate Scotty. But somehow, he didn’t look at his friend quite the same way anymore. Monty released a slow breath. “And the Cixi gets new upgrades and maybe first dibs on some new trade routes.”

“Your lessons aboard my ship went further than I had planned, Engineer. I trust those lessons include loyalty to your crewmates.”

“I take your meaning, aye.” Until that moment, Monty had not known whether he would tell Starfleet all he had learned. Having made his choice, it was as if his whole body suddenly unclenched. He actually felt relaxed for the first time in days. In fact, an insistent whimsy rose in him. “Still, it was nae here I learned loyalty, Skipper. I’ve been a loyal member of the Tartan Army since I was a lad.”

Scotty saw the blank look in Skipper Liu’s eyes, and interpolated, “Football, Skipper. A good Scotland fan.”

“Ah.”

 

He was writing a letter to his sisters when Nthanda came to his cabin. Their small talk faltered. Monty tried to fill the void with polite inquiries about her daughter, and about Obasanjo’s recovery.

“The skipper plans to ship him to a proper hospital planetside once he’s strong enough. He should make a good recovery.”

“So, where does that leave us?”

She took Monty’s bandaged hand and held it to her chest. “I’m sorry I didn’t tell you. I guess I hoped this would all play out without you catching on. That was stupid. The whole plan was– Look, I played my part. I have a daughter and a future to think about. I wish things had been different. I wish– There are just some things you can’t fix, Monty.” She started to leave, then stopped, closed the cabin door, turned down the lights, and faced him.

“As for us… you… and I… are right here, right now. All alone together.” He knew that look. He liked that look. “Unless you’d rather not?”

“Och, lass. I’m maimed, nae dead.”

 

…………………

 

Their drinks were long empty. “She sounds like qvite a lady.”

“Aye, that and more.”

“Did she stay on de Cixi? Or go to Deneva?”

“Neither. We shared a trip back to Earth on the Iroquois. And then we said our good-byes. We’ve stayed in touch off and on over the years. I requested her daughter for my engineering staff on the Enterprise.

“Lt. Charlene Chambers. Of course!” A beep from his communicator interrupted Pavel. An old friend had run into Admiral Kirk at a bar not far from there.

“I thought Jim was still observing crew training and simulations at Jupiter station. I wonder what he’s doing in town so early.”

“Looks like de rumors are true. Dey must have moved up de launch date on de Enterprise-B.”

Scotty’s hands whipped over the comm screen at their table. A quick check of some changes in the duty roster confirmed his fears. “Tomorrow?! When were they planning to tell us? She’s nae ready.” His voice flared and trilled. “She’ll fly arse over teakettle. Does braid make officers daft?” Scotty rose from his seat and started for the door. Pavel followed him into the brisk San Francisco night.

“And I know Hikaru vanted to see Demora off on dis woyage, but Excelsior ees still somevere around Epsilon Eendi.” Then, patting Scotty on the back, “Vell, ve can sort eet all out ven ve meet up vit de Admeeral. Eet’s a shame, though. I hate to leave Finnegan’s. Eet reminds me of a leettle place een Podolsk, outside Moscow.”

“Nonsense,” he said calmly, his angry squall having passed as quickly as always. “You cannae spend your whole night in one bar, lad.”

They decided to walk the few blocks to meet up with their former captain and friend.

After a minute, Pavel asked, “So, eef Bell vas ‘Scotty,’ how did you go from being ‘Monty’ to ‘Scotty?’”

“That’s a story for another time. Let’s just say, her name was Marja and when she called me Scotty, I coudnae want for any other name.”

“Details, Mr. Scott,” demanded the Russian. “I vant details!”

“I’ll trade you, Pavel,” said retired Starfleet engineer and boatwright Montgomery Scott in a lilting tone.

“Vat did you have in mind?”

“One for the lasses of our youth. Jump in anywhere–”

Pavel recognized the classic tune, and the two turned heads as they spread song beneath the cool and distant stars…

“Ae fond kiss, and then we sever;

   Ae fareweel, alas, for ever!”

 

 

###

 

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Picard’s Choice, chapter 2 (revised)

The Enterprise detached from the drydock station and headed away from Earth to continue its ongoing mission of exploration. A half-hour into its journey, the Enterprise was closing in on Mars, 12 minutes from passing the Red Planet.

 

The bridge was bathed in an intense light that emanated from a point in front of the main viewscreen. It momentarily blinded almost everyone on the bridge; only Data saw the being that abruptly appeared from its midst.

 

Picard’s sight returned moments later, as did everyone else’s, and he groaned when he saw the being — Q — standing where the light had just appeared. Q appeared in the same human male form as he had every time he encountered the Enterprise and her crew, dressed in a red Starfleet command uniform identical to Picard’s. This time, however, he levitated in the lotus position, halfway between Data and Ensign Crusher’s stations and the viewscreen.

 

“Q!” shouted Picard as he bolted out of his chair, then lost his footing when the bridge shuddered. The captain stumbled towards Data, who caught him as the ship shook again. That second shudder triggered the Enterprise’s red alert klaxion.

 

Picard regained his balance with Data’s help before returning to his chair. “Mr. Data–”

 

“Checking sensors now, Captain,” Data said. “The Enterprise has just been overtaken by some sort of energy wave. The wave is heading away from us at warp 3.7.”

 

“Is this your doing, Q?” Riker shouted. Q acknowledged the First Officer with an abruptly raised hand, palm outward, as his eyes stayed shut. Riker noted that Q seemed very tense, rather unlike the usual arrogant, sometimes mischievous persona the enigmatic being normally conveyed whenever he encountered Picard or one of his crew.

 

As omnipotent (allegedly) as the Earth gods of old, Q usually seemed to enjoy antagonizing Picard in a variety of ways, often with ‘tests’ aimed at judging some aspect of humanity. At the moment, however, Picard judged that Q seemed to be mentally fighting something on another plane of reality.

 

That, or Q was in the midst of pulling another one of his tricks.

 

“Captain, sensor readings indicate another energy wave on a direct course for the Enterprise,” Data announced. “This wave’s composition is unknown, but its path is 2.74 billion kilometers long and increasing 1.895 percent per second. This wave is connected to the previous wave and is much larger in magnitude.”

 

“Where is this wave coming from, Data?” Riker asked.

 

“The wave is emina–”

 

“It’s coming from EARTH, Riker,” Q interjected, still hovering as his eyes shot wide open. He looked hard at the captain. “Jean-Luc. You have less than two minutes for your people to secure themselves.”

 

Within the time Q spoke, Data had further analyzed the wave. “The wave includes quantum and temporal elements. It is on course to impact the Enterprise sternside in one minute, 50.088 seconds–”

 

“Data, can we outrun it?” asked Riker.

 

“The wave is moving at Warp 5.3 and increasing. Warp 5.3…now 5.6–”

 

“You’re NOT going to outrun it, Jean-Luc,” Q interrupted again. “Your best bet is to stop and hide behind your deflector shields.”

 

“Opinions,” Picard said. “Quickly.”

 

“Go to warp as quickly as possible,” Riker said. “At least, try to stay ahead of it.”

 

“This is Q,” Worf said. “How do we know this isn’t another one of his games?”

 

“I understand your skepticism, Commander Worf, but I sense Q is not playing any kind of game,” Troi added. “I believe this time we need to pay attention to him.”

 

“THANK you, Counselor,” Q said.

 

“A decision needs to be made quickly–” said Data, before Q interrupted him with yells of “Yes, yes, YES!”

 

Data spoke to Picard before Riker or Worf could say anything to Q. “We will not reach maximum warp before we are overtaken by the phenomenon. If we were to increase warp now, we would still be overtaken in 2.68 minutes at warp 7.2.”

 

“You won’t survive impact at warp, Captain,” Q said, still hovering in front of the viewscreen. “Stop and prepare for impact. I will be able to shield you and your people will not die. Right NOW, Captain. Five, four–”

 

“Mr. Data. Bring the ship to a complete stop,” Picard said, telling himself he was following Q’s directive based on logic and not intuition. The captain pushed a button on the touchscreen panel on the right arm of his chair, which activated the ship’s intercom. “This is the captain. All hands brace for impact.”

 

“Wise choice, Jean-Luc,” Q said before closing his eyes, appearing to return to his meditative state.

 

Wishing he had a cup of coffee or something to throw at Q, Riker glanced at Picard, who acknowledged the look of disagreement from his first officer. “Mr. Data. Time until impact.”

 

“Twelve-point-two seconds,” Data said. “The wave is gaining speed exponentially…Nine. Eight. Seven. Six. Five. Four. Three. Two–”

 

Again, the bridge shook violently. Worf lost his footing and fell, as did two officers at the science stations behind him. Ensign Crusher’s panel briefly went out and one of the panels at Worf’s tactical station exploded in an array of sparks.

 

Ten seconds after impact, the violent shaking died down to a consistent but light rumble. Picard stood up from his chair and looked around. The two officers remained down near the science stations, while everyone else resumed their responsibilities.

 

“Status Mr. Worf,” Picard said while locking eyes on a still-levitating Q.

 

“Shields at 80 percent. Decks four, six through ten, 12, 15, 32 and 36 reporting minor damage and injuries but no casualties.”

 

“Medical team to the bridge. Two people down,” Riker said after contacting sickbay. “Data, where is this energy wave heading and are we close to passing out of it?”

 

“Scanning now, Commander,” Data replied. “The wave–”

 

“Is spreading out like a ripple from Earth,” Q interjected, opening his eyes. “It won’t be very long before we ‘pass out’ of it.”

 

“Q,” Riker said, “if you had anything to do with this I swear–”

 

“You’re going to THANK me for saving your life.”

 

“I’m going to–”

 

“Commander!” Picard said, sharply, while glaring at the still levitating Q. The captain then hit another button on his chair’s touchscreen panel that connected him to engineering. “Mr. La Forge. Status.”

 

“Captain, when that thing hit us the warp core went offline for an instant but it’s operating normally now,” La Forge replied. “We’re running diagnostics but so far from our end everything’s operating normally. Captain, does anyone up there have any idea what’s causing this shaking and when it’ll come to an end?”

 

Picard kept his eyes on Q. “Mr. Data is investigating the phenomenon. We know that it’s some sort of energy wave consisting largely of temporal and quantum properties. The ship is still in the midst of this wave.”

 

“We’re keeping an eye on things down here. If there are any changes you’ll be the first to know but it’d be nice to get this shaking stopped.”

 

“We’re still working on that, Mr. La Forge,” Picard said as Dr. Crusher and Nurse Martinez arrived on the bridge to attend to the injured crewpersons. “Picard out.”

 

Dr. Crusher held her tricorder over a crewwoman just now coming to. The Enterprise’s Chief Medical Officer and Picard were close friends who had known each other for years. Her husband, Lt. Commander Jack Crusher, served on the USS Stargazer under Picard’s command; after Lt. Commander Crusher died on an away mission, Picard accompanied the body back to Starbase 32, returning it to the commander’s wife and their son Wesley.

 

She joined the Enterprise as Chief Medical Officer when Picard took command, then spent a year as the head of Starfleet Medical on Earth before returning to the Enterprise. Picard held her, like his other officers, in the highest regard.

 

“How many injured are there, Doctor, and how badly?” the captain asked.

 

“One hundred and three, mainly bumps and bruises,” she said. “Five sprained ankles, a bruised collarbone and a teenager with a mild concussion. All easily treatable. Now, tell me what’s causing all this shaking and shuddering; are we under attack?”

 

Picard told her about the energy wave, and that Q — contrary to her and their initial suspicions — apparently didn’t cause the wave. Moments later, Q opened his eyes, straightened his legs and gently landed on the floor. The rumbling and vibrating then stopped.

 

“If Q didn’t cause it,” Dr. Crusher said to Picard, “did he stop it?”

 

“I did indeed, my dear doctor,” Q shouted across the bridge. “Mon capitaine, the wave has passed us by.”

 

Picard chose to ignore Q for the moment. “Data, report.”

 

“Captain, it appears Q is correct: the energy wave has in fact passed us,” Data replied. “Sensors indicate the wave — with Earth at its epicenter — is spreading rapidly throughout the system.”

 

“HOW rapidly?”

 

“Checking…Captain, according to long-range sensors, the wave is passing the orbit of Neptune. It should be within the Kuiper Belt in 9.2 seconds–”

 

“Kuiper Belt???” Riker interjected. “Data. Double-check the long-range sensors.”

 

“Commander. Long-range sensors not only verify the previous readings but show the phenomena approaching the limits of our sensor range rapidly,” Data said, his fingers flying across his operations control panel. “The phenomena has now passed the limit of our sensors.”

 

“How fast is that thing going, Data?” Riker asked. The android ran the computations a hundred times through his positronic brain in under six seconds.

 

“At the rate the speed of the wave is increasing, my estimate is it will reach Alpha Centauri in 12 minutes, 48.6 seconds,” Data answered.

 

“Twelve minutes???”

 

“Twelve minutes, 44.81 seconds–”

 

“You have NO idea what you’re dealing with,” Q shouted, abruptly.

 

“If YOU know what it is we’re dealing with, Q, now is the time to share your information,” Picard said, evenly and firmly as he walked up to Q, stopping when their noses were less than an inch apart. “And now is the time to inform me of any involvement you have in this endeavor.”

 

Q finally smiled for the first time since he arrived on the bridge, although Picard saw the nervousness in the being’s eyes. “Very well, mon capitaine. I’m learning about this thing in linear time, the same as you–”

 

“The time for games is over, Q,” Picard replied, maintaining his tone of voice and not breaking eye contact. “Is this your doing?”

 

“I SAVED you and this ship, Picard. Yes, I know more than you do because I am Q, Picard but…as loathe as I am to admit this…I don’t know much more than you.”

 

Picard raised an eyebrow. “Really.”

 

“Really, Jean-Luc. Now that I’m not preoccupied with keeping the Enterprise from becoming affected by the wave, information is coming to me in, how would you say it? Bits and pieces? How DO you humans manage without knowing everything at once?”

 

“We manage,” Riker said dryly. “Are you telling us this thing made you less Q?”

 

“Number TWO — Jean-Luc will always be numero uno in my heart” he said as Riker rolled his eyes, ” — I am no LESS Q than I was before this event. But I did not cause this.”

 

“Then by all means, tell us how you learned of it in advance, to ‘save’ us from its effects,” Picard said.

 

“Very well. I was conversing with Q, discussing matters far above your puny minds when a disturbance in reality manifested itself. What exactly it was, where it came from, who or what was behind it, not even we in the continuum could tell. Q, of course, wanted to continue her discussion but I thought of YOU, Jean-Luc and of your crew and realized if I didn’t intervene you would cease to exist along with the rest of your reality.”

 

Q looked around the bridge briefly, taking in the skepticism of the crew members, particularly that of their captain.

 

Picard kept eye contact with Q for a few more seconds before turning to Troi. “Counselor.”

 

“I sense no deception in him, Captain.”

 

“He’s Q,” Riker said. “He could be fooling you, Deanna. He could be fooling us ALL.”

 

“And yet I’m not,” Q replied with a sigh. “From here on out. I’ll tell you everything I…learn.”

 

“That goes without saying,” Picard said.

 

Captain’s Log, Supplemental: I have ordered the Enterprise to maintain its position while we attempt to determine if the wave has thrust us into an alternate reality, or changed the reality we know. So far, neither Mr. Data nor my other science specialists can come up with an adequate explanation of this event.

 

Q claims to be voluntarily and completely sharing information he continues to learn about this phenomenon. I had good reason to be skeptical of Q’s insistence that he was not the cause of it and of his offer for help. However, his abilities provide him, and ourselves, the best source of information on the phenomena. Over the objections of my first officer and likely the rest of my crew, I have chosen not just to take Q at his word but to trust him.

 

Observation Lounge

 

Adjacent to the main bridge, the lounge’s numerous large windows provide a spectacular view of  wherever in space or time the Enterprise is. The lounge’s conference table also serves as a briefing room hosting the regular meetings of the ship’s senior officers.

 

As Picard walked into the room, he took note of the countless stars outside those windows, and thought of the family he had just left behind on Earth: his brother Robert, sister-in-law Marie and nephew Rene. The Frenchman briefly indulged himself with a feeling of gratitude for reconciling with his estranged brother. Before he could ponder his family’s fate, Picard’s focus was brought back to the present when he saw Q’s sullen countenance.

 

After the last of the senior staff, Dr. Crusher, sat at the table, Picard asked Q for a frank and honest appraisal of the current situation from his standpoint.

 

“I know your ‘phenomenon’ has affected the time stream and the universe itself,” Q said. “Multiple timelines and realities merging with ours. This ship and those in it are the last known vestiges of the former reality.”

 

“‘Former’?” LaForge said. “You’re saying the reality we knew…what? Changed? Vanished?”

 

“Altered, by something that both happened hours ago and in the distant past.”

 

“And that means what?” Riker asked pointedly.

 

“I cannot yet determine how your reality was altered: that will take some time. I’m having some…difficulty contacting the Continuum at the moment.”

 

“What does THAT mean?” Riker said as he suddenly was unnerved by the thought that Q was powerless against this temporal event.

 

Q looked at Riker without any of his usual arrogance and just a hint of uncertainty that unsettled the commander more. “I am reasonably certain I could return to the Continuum immediately. I am…less certain I could return to you, or go back and forth at will.”

 

“Because of the event?” LaForge asked.

 

“Yes. The event seems to have settled, but I cannot say with absolute certainty that there will be no more ripples from its point of impact.”

 

Picard turned to face Q. “Are you preventing it from affecting our own reality?”

 

“Yes. Nothing has changed here on the Enterprise.”

 

“If you left, would we be affected by the anomaly?”

 

“Possibly. This anomaly is beyond me. It’s as if something has arrived into reality as we know it from outside. For something THAT powerful to affect reality as it is, to cut off access to the Continuum…”

 

Q’s voice trailed off. Picard noted the confusion and shock in the expressions of his officers. Picard couldn’t read minds like he could expressions, but resolved to maintain his demeanor of control. His best people didn’t need to know his own discomfort at Q’s reactions to the anomaly, nor his growing alarm over being unable to reverse its effects.

 

“Deanna,” he said to Troi. “What would you say is the mood of the crew?”

 

She pondered her response. “Professional, ready, even eager to perform their duties, keeping their minds on their jobs,” she said. “I sense most of the crew assume that this will pass and we will return to our own reality.”

 

“And the mood in here, of the staff?”

 

“The staff’s mood is largely the same as that of the crew, although there’s some anxiety over the nature of the anomaly, even whether the ship will be able to return to the reality we knew.”

 

“It’s like we got blindsided by this thing and we’re learning about it after it ran away,” Riker said. “I don’t think we’ve had much time to think about what might happen, what might have happened. All we have is Q’s word–”

 

“I assure you, Commander, I am being as truthful with you as I can be,” Q interjected. “I am NOT playing games with you. This phenomenon is largely a mystery to me. Even now, I have learned only bits of information about it, and I am freely sharing it with you as I receive it.”

 

“Number One,” Picard said, looking at his first officer and shaking his head. “Mr. Data, what else have you been able to learn about the anomaly itself?”

 

“There is a large amount of reside from the temporal wave throughout the system. Imagine a tidal wave from an ocean hitting the beachside of an island or part of a continent; the wave recedes, but its aftereffects are seen in the objects affected by the water itself.”

 

“Wrecked beaches?” Riker asked.

 

“A more proper analogy, Commander, is ‘wet beaches’. In this case, the ‘wetness’ is equally dispersed. There are no drenched areas. The temporal aftereffects are equally spread out. Its origin seems to be Earth, but the phenomenon is spreading in all directions at an equal speed and leaving an equal amount of–”

 

“Data,” LaForge interjected. “No offense, but my head’s spinning.”

 

“All of us are spinning, Geordi,” Beverly Crusher said. “I look at Wesley, and at each of you, and see the anxiety in your expressions. Your training, and my own, are helping us stay focused. The last thing we need is to wander off mentally, or emotionally.”

 

“Agreed, Doctor,” Worf said, “but the prospect that reality as we have known it has been irreversibly changed is…quite disconcerting. Even more so than being at the mercy of YOU, Q.”

 

Q understood the distrust in Worf’s, and Riker’s, demeanors. The other senior officers weren’t as hostile to Q, but Q cared about the reaction of only one human in the room. And Picard, to Q’s surprise, appeared more receptive to Q’s assistance than at any previous time.

 

The captain looked around the room at the people he considered to be his family, and told himself they’d all find a way out of this situation. “Our readings indicate the phenomenon originated from Earth,” he said. “It’s logical, then, to assume that any point, or points, of divergence would have occurred there at some point in our past. Q, do you have any sense of when this divergence might have occurred?”

 

All eyes were on Q, as if he were God, or god-like. He hadn’t begun to explain the turmoil going on throughout reality; what he, as Q, barely understood would be incomprehensible to mere human minds. I don’t have the heart to tell them everything they knew has likely been rewritten, he thought. What a curious human emotion. Am I being rewritten as well?

 

“If only he had been this quiet all along,” Riker quipped.

 

“Number One,” Picard chided Riker. “Q, answer the question.”

 

“I actually may have a workable answer,” Q replied. “Your early 21st century, perhaps within the first decade. I suspect your answers are to be found there, and not here.”

 

“Well, that narrows it down,” LaForge said. “Start at 2001 and ten years max.”

 

“Enough,” Picard said sharply. “Our focus must be on what we CAN do, ‘we’ including Q.”

 

The captain briefly took in the reactions of his staff beginning with Riker, who looked at Q with a mixture of distrust and skepticism.

 

Worf glared at Q as if the Klingon would throw him out the airlock if Picard wasn’t there. Picard heard Dr. Crusher’s voice in his mind as he caught her look towards him: ‘I trust you, Jean-Luc, but you better be making the right call here’. Troi slightly shook her head while LaForge appeared incredulous.

 

Picard then looked at Data, whose usual mannerisms wouldn’t lend themselves to emotional expression. “Mr. Data? Do you have an opinion?”

 

Data glanced at Q before he addressed Picard. “Captain, under the circumstances, I agree with your rationale. Q’s abilities are invaluable both in discerning the cause of the anomaly and in determining potential points of divergence.”

 

“I see there is some…skepticism regarding Q’s involvement,” Picard said, looking around the table. “As Captain, this is my decision and, as long as Q works with us and acts appropriately, my decision is final. Now, our primary focus should be on determining how the timeline was changed, and how to restore it. Opinions.”

 

“‘When’ are we, for starters,” Dr. Crusher said.

 

“Astronomical charts indicate the current date to be Stardate 44012.5,” Data replied. “The time differential is consistent with our current position within the Sol system relative to the time frame between our departure from Earth and the present at impulse.”

 

“What about the system itself, Mr. Data?” Picard asked.

 

“The location of each object within the system, including its sun, is as would be expected, Captain. So is the location of the system relative to the parts of the Alpha and Beta quadrants we are able to directly observe.”

 

“So we’re not in a parallel universe?” LaForge asked.

 

“Appearances can be deceiving, Commander,” Data said. “You are familiar with the Palmer Theory?”

 

“‘There are very minute, but distinct, differences in the vibrational frequencies of atoms between objects from separate dimensions’,” LaForge said. “It doesn’t matter if one object is a living being and the other inert. What matters is they don’t come from the same dimension.”

 

“You’d need a sample of some kind to use for comparison to our ‘reality’,” Riker said. “We could scan for a random meteorite and beam it aboard for our sample.”

 

“Captain, Commander,” Worf said. “There is another matter: the Prime Directive.”

 

“Yes,” Q said. “Worf is right. I don’t believe you want the Enterprise to be seen here.”

 

Picard pondered Q’s response. He called him Worf and didn’t use an insult. What all has changed? “The Prime Directive certainly can apply to other universes, Q,” Picard said. “More uncertain is how it applies in an hypothetical instance where the prime timeline has been changed. The hypothesis has been debated, of course, on an academic and informal level, but has yet to be seriously considered by Starfleet itself.”

 

“Because if the timeline were changed, those within it wouldn’t notice,” Troi said. “Captain, as the highest-known ranking Starfleet officer, it appears you’re in the position to decide.”

 

Picard briefly looked out the observation room’s windows at the familiar, yet changed, stars and planets. “‘It is not in the stars to hold our destiny but in ourselves’,” he said.

 

“Shakespeare never commanded a starship,” Q said.

 

“He most certainly did not,” replied Picard. “Nor did Shakespeare have to determine where reality went wrong and how to restore it.”

 

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Blatant Recruitment

Been a Star Trek fan since 1999 (having missed the original runs of TNG and DS9) I caught the tail end of Voyager and watched Enterprise live, in the meantime the TNG and DS9 DVDs were released, I bought the lot and have seen everything now ever since (Including the Animated Series!)

Back in 2003/4 I ran a multi-ship/adventure RPG based in 2376. As I grew older and life got in the way it kinda fell apart, but after a significant life experience I’ve concentrated on what really is important in my life and Star Trek is an integral part of that.

To that end I restarted a fresh RPG Simulation. Now don’t fret, this isn’t a card game, or a computer game. It’s more of a collaborative story telling experience. You create a character and take a role aboard ship, and contribute to our story telling experience accordingly. We’re totally open to whatever you want to write about and we all write together. With stand alone episodes, mythology episodes, singular written episodes and collaborative ones, all adding to our rich tapestry together.

I’ve found writing together to be a richly rewarding experience, and I’m sure you will to. Check us out over on
http://trekrpg.proboards.com Big Grin

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Exile and Exhilaration

Y’lad

By Yosef Gernstein

A young Vulcan woman ambled on to a transport in an entanglement of captivating thought. She reviewed in her mind the decision that she had made that led her to this exile from her own planet and resignation from Starfleet, despite how logical and necessary the decision was. You see, this exile was fomented by a being currently living inside her womb. The fetus was a quarter human and spurious to boot. She did not have the political influence the baby’s grandfather had, and what more, marrying the baby’s father was out of the question. The baby’s father was a captain in Starfleet and the moment of conception was initiated when the male Vulcan was in desperate need of aid. She did not give any malcontent towards the man. At the mentioned incident, he was going through an accelerated period of growth and had waves of multiple years of Panfar coinciding at the same coinciding point. “Yes, it was the only thing to do,” she consented. And, like that, the transport had gone to Warp over two hours ago and her visage was so transfixed over the topic of what she did in the Matura system, on the Genesis planet, and how her extension of goodwill had placed her in this fickle situation that the journey seemed only to be two minutes. After disembarking on the Vulcan colony of Hayessod, she surveyed the area and began to make speculations in consideration to if this place would make an auspicious, hospitable home for a child and his young, unwed Vulcan mother. Saavik’s home-provider, whom she had never previously met in person, motioned to her from the transport ramp. Slikhah was the realtor’s name. Like most inhabitants of Hayessod, Slikhah was either a relocated citizen of Vulcan who had committed an act of what Vulcan prime society considered perverse or a descendant of one. It is similar to the colonization of the continent of Australia on Earth from the British Empire. Slikhah was the only other person that knew that Saavik was pregnant. Slikhah was excited about the prospect of having the mother of the son of the illustrious Starfleet Captain Spock as a tenant. She spoke wildly of it once the two were secluded in the house over cups of Plomeek tea. “How I dislike this,” Saavik thought, “The standard of social etiquette would be considered improprietous on Vulcan.” She, of course, said nothing to Slikhah over the matter. Saavik was very reserved when she explained Carol Marcus’ invention of the Genesis effect and how it revived Spock. Also without embarrassment when providing the account of the need for osculation to provide his adolescent absolution. Slikhah declared it to be among the greatest stories she had ever heard, and uncontested  in regards to those that were true. Saavik attested that, despite its verbose appeal as an appeasing anecdote, the result of the story was disastrous to the life she once lived. She left behind her family, the ability to be seen on her home planet, and her career in Starfleet. She did not grieve, for it is not the Vulcan way, but she did weigh the means of what she did for Spock to evaluate this end that a human would find inconceivably tragic. Saavik made quick work of unloading her personal items from the transport. The majority of what was there were meditation robes and Bolian candles. Her uniform she sent to her cousin, T’vrell, who was planning on joining Starfleet in two years. Her crockery was lightweight synthetic alloys that looked exactly like Vulcan porcelain. A replicator she had sent away for was delivered to her house a week later. Before then, she ate almost every meal with Slikhah. Her citizenship in Hayessod was pending so she had no credits that she could use to buy foodstuffs, but every once in a while, a young man would comment on the woman’s pulchritude and offer to share a meal with her. This activity was unheard of on Vulcan. On Vulcan marriages are prearranged almost at birth and the males would marry preclusive to their first bout of Panfar. Sometimes there would be more than one male promised to a woman and the two would fight to the death. “This break in Vulcan tradition may prove advantageous to overcoming this situation,” she thought, “If I am able to wed one of these suitors before my pregnancy is perceptible, then I may be able to return to Vulcan allowing me to imposture that he is the baby’s father.” The time of circadian respite was close at hand and she experienced dreams of absolute tranquility and a concept residual of evolution and not entirely destroyed by mental discipline, a “feeling of hope.” Saavik, like most Vulcans, was a pragmatist. She evaluated the time that pregnancy would become perceptible and found she had acceptable time to appraise the compatibility of the suitor’s personality and his integrity. She found irony in that statement. Scour a planet for a man who has integrity where the planet is designed for Vulcans bereft of it?… Amusing.  What more, find a man whose integrity is flexible enough to feign paternity yet is principled?… Almost contradictory. Another thought came to Saavik’s mind. She did not have the luxury of picking a man of reputable bloodline. The best she could do to vindicate her and her unborn child’s lives was find a descendant of a Vulcan who had committed an offence. Driven by this new objective to salvage her life and make plush the life of her unborn child, Saavik frequented the bazaars in hopes of finding those quixotic men who took favor to her. Some were eliminated immediately. Some disavowed the favor that Vulcans held towards construing all matters life presented them with an invariable lens of pure logic.  Others held objection to keeping religious feasts and fasts. One even was guilty of espionage racketeering for the Romulan Empire. And, of course, there were some that lacked fiver and intellectual zeal, or as we humans would say, just plain dumb. Luckily for Saavik, Vulcans have a less impending gestation than humans, so she had time to be a little choosy. Gripping her leisurely swelling abdomen, she made a choice. She had found a second generation inhabitant of the planet who had cousins on Vulcan. His name was M’shikhah. His appearance was striking and his wit was improved comparatively and improvable. He stood about 1.85 meters and was well built weighing about 83 kilograms. Saavik confided in him her misfortune and he consented to marry her and move to Vulcan if there was a way to gain citizenship. Saavik had prepared for both eventualities. Both not finding a mate and finding a way back to Vulcan. As a cunning Starfleet officer, she made sure that she could never be found. This would foment contempt in human society for our emotions would surely characterize this as a betrayal and cause us to question and worry, but Vulcans would more likely applaud the effort to keep from disgracing the family. She knew exactly what to do. She consulted Ambassador Sarek, Spock’s father, and told him of her plan. He spoke with M’shikhah and found that he would be a tasteful surrogate father to his grandchild. Sarek devised the action and all three of the named men in this story were present at the time of the child’s birth. He was named Y’Lad and you now know the withheld story of Saavik.

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USS Constellation

Zorana Dahe’el felt the slight shudder as the shuttlecraft’s landing struts touched down in the shuttle bay of the Intrepid-class star-ship, the USS Constellation. With a skeleton crew of recent Starfleet graduates, under the command of Captain Natalie Philips, the Constellation would fly to the space station Deep Space 12, where it would rendezvous with most of the ranking officers and its official captain, Nathanial Mikai. From there, none of the newly commissioned graduates really know what their mission was or where it would take them. None of them had anything more than a training mission to judge by.

Hefting the bag containing her personal belongings to her shoulder, Zorana exited the shuttlecraft behind the other five junior officers, four of them ensigns, three in operations gold, one in science division green, and a junior lieutenant in science green, most likely a counselor, since the Constellation would pick up its chief medical officer at DS12. On the collar of Zorana’s gold uniform were two pips, one solid, one hollow, designating her a junior grade lieutenant as well, the first security officer in Starfleet history to graduate with that distinction. “For exemplary conduct under extraordinary circumstances,” the graduation committee had said. What they meant was, “For surviving on a Class L planet for a year and determining a method of negating naturally occurring fields preventing shuttle landing and emergency transport.” Still, they wouldn’t put that on a diploma. Besides senior Starfleet personnel, only Gabriel Niers, the only other cadet to survive the crash that had landed them on the planet, knew the full story. He too had been given a commendation and the rank of junior lieutenant when he graduated, a year before Zorana. With their commendation came a warning, never to discuss that planet or their time there with anyone.

At the foot of the shuttle ramp stood two officers, a lieutenant in science green and a lieutenant commander in operations gold. The science officer looked to be Vulcan, while the other, Zorana saw with some trepidation, was Bajoran. Each had a small shoulder bag, from which they took PADDs that they handed to the disembarking graduates. The Bajoran was chatting easily with the three ensigns, while the Vulcan conferred dispassionately with the junior lieutenant, Aari Leht, Zorana thought her name was. When Zorana approached, the Bajoran stiffened slightly, as if involuntarily, her conversation trailing off.

“Junior lieutenant Zorana Dahe’el reporting for assignment,” she said formally, feeling as though her neck and brow ridges were itching under the Bajoran’s cold gaze.

“Zorana Dahe’el,” the Vulcan repeated, checking the PADDs in his shoulder bag. “I do not have your assignment. Lieutenant Commander?”

Checking through her bag, the Bajoran pulled out a PADD and passed it, not to Zorana, but to the Vulcan. “Here it is, Lieutenant Turen.”

Lieutenant Turen handed the PADD to Zorana. “This will give your assigned quarters and duties for this voyage to Deep Space 12. Once we reach the station, Captain Mikai will determine duties and postings for the remainder of our mission. Dismissed.”

With a stiff salute toward both officers, Zorana headed toward the turbolift. Once the doors slid shut, she glanced at the PADD. “Junior Lieutenant Zorana Dahe’el,” it read. “Chief security officer and bridge tactical officer, flight to DS12. Quarters: Deck 5, section 2, number 57.” Tucking the PADD into her bag, she said, “Deck 5.” The turbolift whirred upward with an acknowledging chirp. When the lift stopped and the doors slid open, she stepped out into the corridor. Though she had studied the plan of the Constellation diligently as soon as she learned she would be assigned to the Intrepid-Class ship, it still took her a few minutes to find her quarters.

When the door slid open, Zorana entered the room and glanced around her. The quarters seemed larger than they should have been for a junior grade lieutenant, though everything seemed large after spending a year in a repurposed shuttlecraft. “Computer,” she said, “Access environmental controls for this room.” When the computer gave its acknowledging chirp, she continued, “Make the following adjustments: Raise ambient temperature by 4 degrees. Raise ambient humidity by 6%. Lower ambient lighting by 10%.” The computer gave another chirp and replied in its automated voice, “Adjustments made.”

“Save these adjustments and make them the default for these quarters,” Zorana instructed, turning toward her shoulder bag as the computer chirped. She had little in the way of personal possessions, nowhere near enough to relieve the stark quarters. She set a few antique books, bound in the manner of ancient earth texts, on her desk. She hung a painting of Earth on one wall. An antique samurai sword found its place on a ledge. Finally, she lifted a slim flute case from her bag and set it on the desk. Lying on that desk was a comm badge, which Zorana picked up and fastened to her chest. As she turned, she caught a glimpse of herself in a mirror upon one of the walls. She had avoided mirrors as far back as she could remember. The last time she had seen her own face clearly was when she was twelve years old. With a mixture of curiosity and trepidation, she turned back toward the mirror. What she saw was a tall woman, maybe twenty-two years of age. The first things she noticed were the neck and brow ridges, distinctive of the Cardassians, though hers were slightly less prominent than theirs. Her skin had a greyish tone, though more warm in tone than that of the Cardassians. Her hair was so black it appeared blue under the dim light. Reaching out trembling hands, she took the mirror from the wall and took it to the replicator. “Computer, recycle,” she said, her voice shaking. With a high-pitched hum, the replicator disintegrated the mirror in a discharge of energy that was reabsorbed by the replicator unit.

 

Under a night sky shrouded by thick clouds, Zorana looked back toward the still smoking shuttlecraft and shivered, only partly from the cold of the night. The burning trail of the shuttle’s crash made a fading scar across the clouds. Adjusting the straps of the bags she carried, she struggled up an embankment into the dense forest, heading toward a flickering light in the distance. About ten minutes later, she emerged in a small clearing, a fire burning in its center. A cadet in a battered uniform, one arm in a makeshift sling, sat close to the fire. At Zorana’s approach, he glanced up. “Were you able to salvage anything?”           

            “A few tricorders, the emergency medical kit, enough field rations for several months, and a blanket,” she replied, not meeting his gaze. Gabriel Niers had been one of the cadets who had made her time in the Academy miserable.

            “One blanket?” Niers asked.

Zorana tossed it over to him. “The others burned. I took care of the fire before I tried to salvage anything.” He caught it with his good hand. “Do you want me to repair the broken bones in your arm? The emergency med kit was undamaged.”

“Better not. Save it for a real emergency,” Niers replied, not looking up. “The communicators are still not functioning?”

“Worse than that,” she said. “I got the communicator back online, but the field we encountered is preventing the communications from leaving the atmosphere. The only thing I received on the transmitter was our distress call reflecting back off of the field.”

“Perfect,” Niers grumbled, pulling the blanket around his shoulders with his one good arm. “So you are saying we may be stuck here indefinitely?”

“If we cannot find a way to get communications through the field, yes. Though, it is possible that our initial distress signal got through to someone, in which case we could be rescued in a matter of days.” Zorana huddled closer to the fire, trying to suppress the shivers that wracked her body. “Hopefully they will be able to find us by a scan for life forms.”

“Unless the field reflects that back too,” Niers grumbled.

“At least this is a Class L planet,” Zorana said. “That means we won’t be in danger of being attacked by any hostile animals or natives. And we do have the tricorders. They’ll help us find edible plants.” Realizing that she was close to babbling, she became silent. Niers was at the top of his class, being groomed for command, according to Academy gossip. He would know all about Class L planets. Unfortunately for her, his father had died in the Dominion War, at the hands of Cardassians.

 

Anchoring her mind firmly in the present, Zorana picked up the PADD that had been lying beside the comm badge on the desk. It had more details of her assignment than the other, including the records of the security personnel that would be serving under her on the voyage to Deep Space 12. All were ensigns, of course. Enlisted security would join them at the space station. She recognized nearly all the names, and sighed at a few of them. Only a handful of her classmates had not resented her for her advanced rank, and they seemed to resent her for her heritage instead.

Returning the PADD to its place, she left her quarters and headed for the nearest turbolift, meaning to familiarize herself with her station at the bridge before the ship left space dock. In the lift, she was joined by two other temporary bridge officers, Ensign Teisha Moran, she would be stationed at ops, from what Zorana knew of her Academy record, and a Klingon that she did not recognize. From what she knew of Klingons, she was surprised that she had been given security and tactical rather than him. When he saw her, a faint snarl contorted his face. The Klingons had suffered heavy casualties during the Dominion War. On an impulse, she snarled back. Cool composure might have worked in the Academy, but Klingons were Klingons, and they respected no one they saw as weak. To her surprise, a faint glimmer of uncertainty flickered in the Klingon’s eyes. Good. Ensign Moran was pretending not to see the exchange. Most humans Zorana had met were like that. Ignore the half-Cardassian and hope she goes away. Zorana unconsciously clenched her jaw. She wasn’t going anywhere.

 

“I am not going anywhere,” Zorana said firmly, glowering at Niers. He glowered right back at her. More than a month had passed since the crash, and he was beginning to look decidedly less polished each day. It had taken less than a week for him to stop ignoring her whenever he could, less than two weeks for them to come to full-blown shouting matches. They seemed to argue over everything except the Dominion War, including finding food, trying to repair the shuttle, and investigating the strange field that had caused their crash. Surprisingly, even though he technically outranked her, he never brought up the fact.

“If we don’t find better shelter, you will freeze before another week is out,” he said. It was true, much as she hated admitting it. She could not stand the cold half so well as he could, and the nights had driven both of them to huddling together to share the little warmth their bodies held.  

Though they had had this conversation so many times Zorana had lost count, she still protested. “Any chance of rescue we have is near the crash site.”

For the first time in any of these arguments, Niers abandoned his lecturing tone. “They aren’t coming, Dahe’el.” He never used her first name, but she didn’t expect him to. “If they could find us, they would have long before now. We aren’t that far from Federation planets. Dahe’el, we are stranded here, and if you have any interest in surviving, we have to find better shelter.”

Forcing down tears, Zorana nodded. She didn’t need Niers knowing how frightened she was, how much the idea of staying in this desolate place turned her stomach. “Never let them see you cry,” she reminded herself silently. “Never let them see you weak.” Those two sentences were all her mother had left her before vanishing somewhere into deep space.

 

At the bridge, Zorana crossed to her station, noting with slight surprise that the Klingon took the station at the conn. Well, if a half-Cardassian could graduate from the Academy with a commendation, a Klingon could be a conn officer. The first officer’s chair was empty, as was the engineering station. Perhaps their shuttles had not yet arrived, or else they were still in their quarters. Despite herself, she almost let out a groan. The science officer, a slender, redheaded Bajoran male, was giving her a look that should have frozen her in a block of ice.

Turning her back on the Bajoran, Zorana reviewed the screens at her station. From here, she could access the ship’s weapon compliment, shields, and security protocols. Though she was familiar with the layout of the tactical station, she still spent several minutes examining everything. She was half-Cardassian. Where others could not afford to fail, she could not afford to do anything except excel.

Another officer, a human Ensign, hurried from the lift to the Engineering station, hurriedly checking the screens while he tried to straighten his uniform. Zorana recognized him, Martin Haley, a friendly fellow who seemed to have spent his four years at the Academy running a few minutes late for every class. Running late or not, he spared a smile for Ensign Moran, who smiled back warmly. Both were clearly enjoying their temporary positions on the bridge.

“Captain on the bridge,” a sharp voice barked from the direction of the lift. Everyone on the bridge snapped to attention. Two women entered, one of them the Bajoran Lieutenant Commander from the shuttle bay, the other Captain Natalie Philips, from the pips on her collar. She had taught at the Academy in several of Zorana’s classes, mostly battle strategy and history, as well as several classes on hostile species. Zorana remembered the many lectures on the Bajoran occupation and the subsequent Dominion War quite vividly. Bracing herself for the judgement and anger she was used to seeing in nearly every pair of eyes that looked at her, she was shocked by the level gaze, almost Vulcan in its calm assessment, no different from that directed at any of the acting bridge crew.

“Ladies and gentlemen,” she said, in the firm voice that Zorana remembered from her classes, a voice that carried without seeming to be raised above a conversational tone. “In less than three hours, we will depart for the space station Deep Space 12, where this ship will pass to the hands of Captain Mikai. At warp 7, this trip should take two and a half months.” She eyed them all keenly. “It is my duty to observe you all and report your conduct as officers to Captain Mikai upon arrival. You have seventy-nine days to impress me.” Her quick turn made it clear that was all she intended to say. Ensign Haley looked as though he wasn’t sure whether to give a cheer at the short speech or a nervous laugh. Instead, the twist to his mouth made it look almost as if he were going to sick up. He had passed his classes under Captain Philips by the skin of his teeth.

Captain Philips was circling the room, observing each officer at their post. Having nothing left to check, and distaining making a show of busyness, Zorana met her keen, grey-eyed gaze levelly, unaware of how fiercely her own green eyes were shining. Rather than comment on anything on the displays, Captain Philips said, “Report to my ready room in five minutes, Lieutenant.” Somehow, her voice carried no further than a whisper, but seemed not to have altered a hair in volume from her speech. Just like that, the Captain moved on to ops. From what Zorana had observed during her classes, the Captain was always like that. She did what must be done swiftly, without any extra time taken for pleasantries or idle chatter.

Running one last, swift glance over the security roster on the PADD in her hand, Zorana clasped both hands behind her back and strode toward the Captain’s ready room. As always, she felt as though every eye followed her, even though she knew few would dare to stare at her while the Captain was still making her rounds. Unconsciously, she lifted her head a fraction and straightened her shoulders, making her swift walk look like it belonged on someone of far higher rank than Junior Grade Lieutenant.

Captain Philip’s ready room was bare of any decoration or personal items. A desk and chair were its dominant features, with a curved couch and small, glass table on a raised section near the bulkhead. As the door slid shut behind her, Zorana stood just in front of the desk, hands still clasped behind her back. Though the bright lighting put a slight strain on her eyes, as it did nearly everywhere in the ship, she pretended not to notice. As she often did, she summoned that last admonition from her mother. “Never let them see you weak.” She might lose years of ground she’d made with the other cadets if she ever hinted that the temperature of the ship made her wear an extra thermal layer beneath her uniform, or that the lights caused a constant headache to nestle in the back of her skull. Better if they thought her facial ridges and greyish skin were the only Cardassian thing about her.

Though she was early to the ready room, Captain Philips entered less than a minute later, confidently taking the seat behind the desk. Without preamble, she began. “First officer Jysl Eyru is concerned that you are not the best choice for security chief on the trip to DS12. I would like to know why.”

Zorana breathed deeply. She was prepared for this. The same discussion seemed to happen with almost predictable regularity. She had faced officials over desks like this when she applied to Starfleet, when she chose to train for a security position, when she had put her name in for training flights. Officially, discrimination against a species had died with the founding of the Federation. Unofficially, she had to work twice as hard as any other student to be thought of as their equal.

 

“So, I’m curious, Dahe’el,” Niers asked, setting aside a hand-carved wooden plate of what looked like apples, but tasted almost exactly like potatoes. “Where exactly do you come from, and why did you choose Starfleet?”

Months had passed since the crash, each day seeming to lessen the tension between them. Being the only two lifeforms on a planet would do that, apparently. Zorana sighed, putting down her own empty plate. Both plates had been carved by Niers. He was surprisingly handy with a knife. Perhaps some humans put more stock in old ways of doing things than she was used to. She realized she was avoiding even thinking about Niers’ question. “My parents were Maquis,” she said quietly.

“Maquis?” Niers almost laughed. “A Cardassian Maquis? Impossible.”

“They were Maquis,” she continued. “My father was a Starfleet officer, though my mother never knew what his rank was. My mother…” This was the hard part. “My mother thought she was Bajoran, a member of one of the resistance cells during the occupation.” She met Niers’ eyes, watching for his reaction. “She believed it until I was born. My father was off-world on one mission or another, and as soon as I was born, my mother took me and fled. She knew as soon as she saw my face that she wasn’t Bajoran, and never had been. That meant there could only be one answer.” Niers seemed to be wavering between disbelief and amazement. “Have you heard of the Obsidian Order?” At the answering nod, she continued, “Apparently, the Obsidian Order had a few agents that they hid among Bajoran resistance cells during the occupation of Bajor. They would alter their appearance using surgery, alter their memories through treatments of neurochemicals until the agents themselves believed they were Bajoran resistance fighters. All the while, they would subconsciously gather information, impede plans, and lead key targets to their deaths.

“When I was born, my mother knew what she was, but her memories and emotions were still Bajoran. She hated me only a little less than she hated herself. I was left on Earth with a Cardassian name, her story, and two pieces of very Cardassian advice.” Taking a deep breath, she finished, “I chose Starfleet because my father came from there. That’s all.” She had never told anyone else half as much.

 

Unsure why that conversation had chosen this moment to come to her mind, Zorana answered Captain Philips, “I imagine Commander Jysl believes I would be the source of problems among the crew, rather than an aid in addressing them. The Dominion War is fresh in many minds, with the current troubles with the Jem’Hadar.”

“Minor skirmishes,” the Captain said dismissively. Though she agreed, Zorana did not comment. “Though rumor tends to inflate them. Without the Founders, the Jem’Hadar are a nuisance, more than anything.” Her eyes became augers. “They are a nuisance I will not see on my ship.”

“Of course, Captain,” Zorana responded. She understood the unspoken command. Nothing would excuse any delays in their journey or disturbances on Captain Philip’s bridge that arose from a half-Cardassian on the temporary bridge crew.

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Picard’s Choice chapter 1

Earth, the early 21st Century

Washington, D.C., United States of America

Rock Creek Park

 

“I WILL NOT murder an innocent person, Q!”

 

Jean-Luc Picard held a phaser to Kate Todd’s forehead while Leroy Jethro Gibbs pointed a pistol at Picard’s head.

 

Picard, the stoic captain of the starship U.S.S. Enterprise from the future, struggled with all his might to keep his thumb from hitting the trigger. As long as he could help it, Picard would not commit an act that violated everything he believed in as a human being, a Starfleet officer and a representative of his era’s United Federation of Planets.

 

Gibbs, a former United States Marine and current U.S. federal agent, gave Picard his most withering glare. Gibbs also was trying to give the man a bullet through his head but was unable to pull the trigger. He couldn’t even move his body to shield his subordinate, teammate and friend.

 

Kate, a former U.S. Secret Service agent now working under Gibbs at the Naval Criminal Investigative Service, could not move anything below her eyes. She could only look — first at the man who clearly wanted to bring no harm to her, then at the rage in the man who had taught her so much about work and life, and then at a man who somehow was manipulating all this madness.

 

Q, as he called himself, was arrogant, irritating and either insane or, as he claimed, omnipotent. Given his behavior, Kate believed he was all those things — especially as he was floating ten feet in the cool night air — yet he also was contradictory: Q said he was like a god, yet needed Picard to kill Kate to restore the future, and seemed both unapologetic and sorry to demand it.

 

All three of them wanted to put a round through the bastard’s head, but they all were at Q’s mercy, and no matter how hard they fought him, right now they were puppets on his string.

 

Mon capitaine, I’m truly sorry,” Q said. “If there was ANY other way–”

 

“There is,” Gibbs interjected. “Let us go. Let HER go.”

 

“There MUST be another way, Q,” Picard said. “This…barbarism is beneath you.”

 

“The choice is yours, Jean-Luc,” Q replied, abruptly appearing, and peering, over Picard’s shoulder. “Choose carefully. The fate of everyone and everything you know and hold dear depends on it.”

 

Sweat poured down his face as Picard fought to keep from firing the phaser and ending Kate’s life. Picard was in the no-win situation he desperately tried to avoid and there was nothing he could do to change what Q was about to force him to do.

 

As he struggled to keep from pressing the trigger, Picard’s thoughts suddenly went backwards to right before this madness began…

 

The 24th Century

U.S.S. Enterprise, Earth orbit

 

Captain’s Log, Stardate 44032.8: The Enterprise has completed repairs and refitting at Earth Station McKinley. We are preparing to leave Earth orbit, and the solar system, for our next destination, Terra Nova.

 

Officially, the Enterprise is continuing her mission. Personally, after recent events nothing will be the same. However, I have been cleared to return to duty, and the Enterprise is needed more than ever. Starfleet feels I am equally needed as captain, despite the atrocities at Wolf 359 the Borg forced me to commit as Locutus.

 

It will be good to return to my life as captain of the Enterprise. I welcome the opportunity to resume our exploration of new worlds and civilizations. And, to move forward from that which cannot be changed.

 

In his ready room, Picard looked out the window at Earth. He saw western Europe, a large cloud front stretching from Scotland to Denmark, and clear skies everywhere else, including his native France.

 

A glance at his PADD told him it was five minutes after noon in the village of La Barre. He had returned there for the first time in two decades; the short visit had gone a long way in healing his relationship with his brother, Robert.

 

Picard walked over to the replicator. “Tea. Earl Grey. Hot,” he said, and within moments the replicator brewed the tea and produced a cup to contain it. He then took the cup, sipped the tea and looked around his ready room.

 

After briefly checking on his lion fish Livingston, Picard took his cup and walked out of the room onto the main bridge of the Enterprise. He first noticed crewpersons busy at the science, mission operations and engineering stations to his right, and at the operations and flight control stations in front of the large viewscreen to his left.

 

Only his captain’s chair in the middle, along with the first officer and counselor chairs flanking it, were empty. He walked to his chair, put his cup of tea in the holder on the side, and then sat down.

 

“Status report, Mr. Data,” he said to the lieutenant commander sitting at ops station.

 

“Sensors indicate that all systems shipwide are functioning normally,” said the android officer after turning to face his captain. “All personnel are on board as well, sir.”

 

“Where are Commander Riker and Counselor Troi?”

 

Data’s fingers flew across the touch-screen console in front of him. “Both are on the turbolift. They should be on the bridge in 28.23 seconds.”

 

Picard nodded. In the three-plus years he had commanded the Enterprise, Data had proven himself as a top-flight officer. The android had gone to great lengths to learn what it was like to human; Picard thought that Data was much closer to his goal than he realized.

 

The doors to the turbolift behind Picard’s left shoulder, next to the engineering station, opened. Riker and Troi walked out and to their chairs next to Picard’s: the commander to his right, the counselor to his left.

 

“How was Angel Falls, Number One?” Picard asked Riker.

 

“In a word: glorious,” Riker said of the Venezuelan waterfalls. Picard had come to regard the affable, professional and loyal second-in-command as the finest officer he’d served with in Starfleet.

 

“But how does it compare to Janaran Falls?” asked Troi. The half-human, half-Betazoid empath had proven herself both as the ship’s counselor and as a trusted advisor to Picard himself.

 

“Favorably,” Riker said of the famed waterfall on Troi’s home planet of Betazed. “Too bad you couldn’t make it down. You’ll have to ask Dr. Crusher what she thought about it.”

 

“I’m sure she thought it was glorious as well,” Troi replied.

 

Picard stood and turned to address the tall, strong Klingon standing at the operation’s station. “Weapons status, Mr. Worf.”

 

“Phaser arrays are operating normally,” said Lieutenant Worf, the Enterprise’s security officer. “The ship has a full complement of photon torpedoes, all fully functional. Shields are at 100 percent.” Picard could think of no one he trusted the security of his ship and crew to more than the only Klingon officer in Starfleet.

 

“Very good, Mr. Worf,” Picard said as he hit a button on the communications panel on his chair. “Mr. La Forge. Engine status.”

 

“Engines are fully operative, the warp core’s fully functional and the ship’s ready to go at your command, Captain,” La Forge said from Engineering. Blind at birth, the Lieutenant Commander wore a visor that gave him a form of sight. His adaptability, focus and talent placed him among the elite of Starfleet’s chief engineers.

 

“Thank you, Mr. La Forge,” Picard said. “Well then. There is an old Earth saying which goes like this: ‘there is no time like the present’. Mr. Crusher, please set a course to Terra Nova, at impulse power until we reach the Kuiper belt.”

 

Lieutenant Wesley Crusher, sitting at flight control, would pilot the ship out of the solar system and to its next destination. Although he was the son of Chief Medical Officer Beverly Crusher, 18-year-old Wesley had to earn his position on the bridge. Picard made him an acting ensign once he became aware of the young man’s genius and expertise in engineering. Having become a very competent ship’s pilot, Wesley would soon return to Earth to attend the prestigious Starfleet Academy.

 

“Course laid out for Terra Nova, Captain,” Wesley said. “We’ll be at impulse power until we pass Pluto.”

 

“Mr. Crusher, inform Earth Station McKinley of our departure.”

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Phantom Academy Summary

Captain Ruttidge, Commander Ma’ara, and Liutenant Ocktal were amazing Starfleet students at the tops of their respective classes. Now, however, they are lackluster Starfleet officers on the verge of dishonorable discharge. As a last ditch effort to make use of their knowledge, Admiral Binns assigns the three to a new post: Starfleet Remediation Program. Can 3 delinquent officers teach 5 underachieving students how to survive in Starfleet? Admiral Binns believes so. If great students can become not-so-great officers then the opposite is also possible right?

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Quicksand, Epilogue

Quicksand

Epilogue

Repairs on Heisenberg’s impulse drive, deflector dish and structural integrity took three days. The passage of time was eased by a goodwill gesture from the crew of the Klingon freighter, two crates each of bloodwine and Romulan ale. The captain left this gesture out of his log, and mostly turned a blind eye to the fact that the repairs should have taken two days at most.

Upon completion of repairs, the Captain Bao called a gathering in the lounge. He gave a brief speech about how proud he was of the way the crew pulled together in a time of crisis. He specifically called out the contributions of the ops team, which had scoured the viral infection from the ship’s computers; the engineering team, which performed with extraordinary grace under pressure to deliver the power Heisenberg needed to outrun the graviton ellipse anomaly; science officer Loh’at, whose expertise gave Heisenberg the means to hide from the anomaly and whose wise counsel later saved both ships; and first officer Sivath, whose hands-on coordination of engine room and deflector control operations saved the ship from impulse reactor meltdown.

Drinks were distributed. Toasts were exchanged. Ale and wine were consumed. Sivath had perhaps a bit too much to drink, but he concealed it well.

The fluid dynamics of crowd mingling, which Sivath would never understand if he lived another two centuries, conspired to throw Sivath and Loh’at together. After an exchange of chilly pleasantries, Sivath decided to attempt a peace offering. “I would like to apologize for the manner in which I terminated our last conversation,” he said, choosing his words very carefully. “I allowed emotional stress to overrule courtesy, which I regret.”

“Wow,” Loh’at said. “That seemed like it was difficult for you.”

“I cannot deny that it was.”

“Were you wrong?”

Sivath was caught off guard by the question. “No,” he answered truthfully.

She laughed, but her mirth was tinged with bitterness. “Wish I had that certainty,” she muttered. “In that case, I can’t see any reason to apologize. I appreciate the thought, but I’m going to keep right on hating you, if that’s OK.”

“No objection,” he said.

They drifted apart then. It was probably the alcohol, but Sivath felt a sadness about this. Luckily, Nim wasn’t around to catch him having feelings.

As soon after that as he could manage, Sivath built up to escape velocity and extricated himself from the social occasion’s gravity well. He rode the turbolift to deck two and walked with deliberate care to his quarters. He had a moment of dizziness and had to stop for a breather outside the door, leaning against the wall with one elbow. He was still forcing the corridor to stop spinning when he heard the something break through the wall.

Sivath looked up, puzzled. He was not disoriented, however; the sound came from within his quarters.

He straightened up. Someone was in his room. He had a pretty good idea of who it would be.

Adopting the most sober manner he could manage, Sivath stepped to the door, which opened for him automatically. He walked slowly through the living area to the threshold of the bedroom, his steps careful and deliberate. The bedroom had been turned upside down; practically every piece of his personal property had been removed from its proper place and spread across the bed or coffee table. The sound he’d heard in the corridor had been the shattering of a ceramic bust of the Blessed Exchequer. Nim stood over the broken idol, casually toeing through the shards in search of something that wasn’t there. She looked up at Sivath as he filled the doorway, but looked neither surprised nor apologetic.

“Lieutenant,” Sivath said calmly. “To what do I owe the pleasure?”

Nim ignored his question. “What was inside?” she asked, giving a piece of the Blessed Exchequer’s chin a nudge with her toe.

“That was a gift from my adopted parents,” Sivath said. “It was the last thing they gave me before leaving me to learn the ways of my people on Vulcan; something to remember them by.”

“Do you think I don’t see through you?” Nim stooped to pick up one of the pieces of the shattered idol, rose again to show it to Sivath. “Do you think I don’t know a hidden compartment when I see one? This isn’t my first day on the job, Commander.”

Sivath folded his arms across his chest. “You have entered my personal quarters without cause. You have disturbed and destroyed my personal effects unlawfully. And you still have no evidence to support this witch hunt you seem hellbent on pursuing. I know very well this isn’t your first day, Lieutenant. You should know better how far outside your authority you have strayed.”

“I don’t know what you’re into,” she admitted. “I don’t know how you’re involved with that Ferengi or why. But you should know that we found evidence of restricted file access from the shuttlebay right before she made her exit. Classified information left this ship aboard that shuttle, and whoever helped her committed treason.” Nim advanced on Sivath. “You might think that you’ve covered your tracks. You might have convinced yourself that you’re safe. But you’re not. You made mistakes; you left traces. And I’ll find them.” She stopped just a handspan away from him, glaring up into his face. “If you’ll excuse me, I have other avenues to explore.”

Sivath uncrossed his arms and stepped aside. Nim slipped past him, crossing the living area. She paused halfway to the door.

“By the way,” she said, glancing back over her shoulder, “when we were in deflector control, you lied to me about the virus. Lying to a telepath is really stupid, you know. Anyway, you had been thinking that you disabled the virus. That implies that you thought you had control of it.”

“I’ve heard enough, Lieutenant,” Sivath said. “It’s time for you to leave now.”

“As I said before, I don’t know yet what you’re into yet and I certainly don’t know how you justify it to yourself. But when you try to go to sleep tonight, I want you to factor something else in. When we were synchronizing tetryon emissions from four separate consoles, you didn’t have control of the virus. It had rebooted your console once and it could have interfered with any of ours at any time. If that had happened, every living person on this ship would be dead. Think about that, won’t you?”

Nim took a step toward the door, which opened to allow her egress. She paused again at the threshold.

“Oh, one last thing. Watch those contractions. They’re a dead giveaway.”

Then she was gone. The door hissed closed, leaving Sivath alone amidst the wreckage of the modest life he had built for himself. He stood there for a long time, unsure of what to do, uncertain of how to feel. He thought that he should sleep, that maybe the way forward would seem clearer in the morning.

Sivath couldn’t sleep yet, though, not with his home in such disorder. “Computer,” he said aloud, looking around at the mess surrounding him. “Broom.”

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Quicksand, Part IV

Quicksand

Part IV

“Somebody explain to me how the hell this happened!”

Captain Bao rested his weight on his knuckles, leaning over the conference table. He was as angry as Sivath had ever seen him. He glared at each of the officers in attendance in turn: Dayr, then Sivath, then Nim. The collegial atmosphere of the ready room was under some strain.

When nobody volunteered to go first, he bellowed, “Well?!”

Sivath decided to step up. “The prisoner’s escape was my fault, sir,” he said. This drew a stunned look from Nim. “After completing our inspection of Hehx’s shuttlecraft and finding evidence that its engine trouble was the result of deliberate sabotage, Lieutenant Commander Dayr told me that it was his intent to finish the repairs. It is his job to fix broken things; I should have instructed him to leave the shuttle inoperable in this case, but I was distracted at that moment by the intrigue of discovering foul play aboard the ship, and left to assist with the arrest. Had I kept my wits about me and considered the matter more carefully, Hehx would have had no means of escape.”

Nim made a tiny sound of disgust at the insignificance of Sivath’s mea culpa. The captain waved dismissively, as well. “I don’t give a damn about the shuttle right now. That idiot Ferengi flew straight into the anomaly, so she’s as good as dead. I want to know how she got out of her cell in the first place.”

Dayr straightened in his chair, clearly eager to contribute to the part of the conversation that wasn’t about anything he’d done wrong. “Virus at work very curious species. Antique design, but sophisticated. Keeps adapting to containment strategies devised by ops. Critical functions like life support, warp core control, weapons, all secure from infection so far, but less restricted systems going haywire right, left. Working hypothesis: electrical grid outage on deck six was not random. Too convenient, must have been targeted strike. Probably EPS overload that caused backup battery failure too. Surgically precise attacks hidden among noise and chaos.”

Bao pinched the bridge of his nose. Sivath knew he found Dayr’s resistance to using the universal translator very tiring. “Alright,” he said with clenched eyelids, “so the virus took out power in the brig. Lieutenant Nim, any explanation for how a little old Ferengi lady took out the trained Starfleet security guard responsible for watching her?”

It was clearly not lost on Nim that even here in the privacy of the ready room, Bao was using her full rank instead of calling her Vera. She squared her shoulders, becoming defensive. “First, I’d like point out that this little old lady is clearly a trained espionage operative. She has unexplained mental conditioning, firearms training, a working understanding of mechanical sabotage and possession of what looks to be a military-grade computer virus. Granny played us all for fools from the moment we picked up her distress beacon.”

“Fine,” Bao conceded.

“When I briefed you earlier,” Nim continued, “I was operating under the assumption that Hehx waited until the lights went out and attacked my guard. He’s awake now though, and he tells me that he was fired upon while holding his own phaser. I’ve double checked his weapon and confirmed that it was only discharged once; the ship registered two shots fired. By itself I’d chalk the discrepancy up to viral japes, but in concert with my boy’s story it suggests that Hehx was already armed when the power went out.” Nim leaned forward, planting her elbows on the table. Her eyes were intense. “Sir, I will stake my career on the certainty that no security officer under me would ever allow a prisoner to smuggle a weapon into a cell. We scanned her top to bottom, she was clean going in. That means somebody on this ship slipped her a weapon somehow.”

Nim didn’t look at Sivath. She didn’t need to; he knew she thought it was him. But Sivath had never handed Hehx a phaser. He made certain his thoughts on this subject were quite clear.

Bao frowned. “I know you’re new here, Nim, and I appreciate that you aren’t having a very good day. But if you’re going to bring me paranoid fantasies involving Starfleet officers serving under me, you had better have some damn compelling evidence to back them up.”

“I’ll get it,” she asserted. “Bet on that.”

“Captain,” Sivath interjected. Both Nim and Bao looked at him. Sivath focused his mind. “I believe I can account for the prisoner’s weapon. I have been working with ops to identify and isolate the systems affected by the virus. One of the infected systems was deck six replicator control. The data logs were partially corrupted, but there was a record of brig cell three’s replicator assembling some complex device. When I left to join this meeting the pattern buffer was still being analyzed to determine the nature of this device, but given Lieutenant Nim’s findings, I believe it is likely that we will learn it was a phaser.”

“There, you see?” Bao said to Nim. Nim’s jaw set. Sivath had just taken her legs out from under her and she knew it. Any further pursuit of a Starfleet conspirator was going to look like cryptozoology now. Bao settled heavily into his chair, the fire having left him. He just looked tired now. “Do we have any indication–anything at all–of what the point of all this was? Of what she wanted?”

The captain’s communicator chirped before anybody could answer. “Bridge to Captain Bao. We need you out here, sir.”

Everyone rose at once and edged awkwardly toward the door.

=/\=

The freighter hailed again. Static filled the main viewscreen. Silhouettes of humanoid figures and short bursts of speech managed form briefly, only to dissolve back into noise.

“. . . en-berg, ‘Ij’a’? . . . HoS ghaj . . . nIS? taQne . . . HvaD.” The image switched back to a magnified view of a distant cargo hauler approaching cautiously.

“Anybody catch that?” Bao asked.

“Sorry, sir,” ops apologized, “the subspace interference is garbling the message, making it difficult for the U-T to parse the language.”

“It’s Klingon,” Loh’at said. “I’m pretty sure they’re asking if we need help.”

“Warn them off,” Bao said quickly. “We don’t want them getting too close to the anomaly.”

While ops dispatched the message, Sivath studied the freighter. “They will not understand us,” he speculated.

“He’s right,” Loh’at agreed. She didn’t sound happy about it, but that might have been because of the imminent danger to the freighter. “Even if they have a Federation Standard speaker on board, the interference is going to be much worse for them. We’re receiving their signal at an angle roughly two radians from the graviton ellipse. They’d perceive us as less than half a rad from the source of the interference. We’re going to be lost in the noise.”

“Can we boost the signal?” Bao asked.

“Only by restoring power,” Sivath said.

“Getting no response, Captain,” ops reported.

“Alright, people, put your heads together. How do we warn this ship to keep its distance? There has to be a way.”

“Captain?” called helm. “The anomaly, sir . . . it’s starting to move again.”

“Confirmed,” Loh’at said. “It’s attracted to the freighter.”

“Damn it.” Bao paced the command area slowly. “These merchants are as good as dead if we don’t do something. Can we push them away with our tractor beam?”

“The Klingon freighter is far beyond our range, sir,” ops said.

“It would also require powering up,” Nim said.

“Is there anything we can do without powering up?” Bao demanded.

A moment of silence. Loh’at broke it. “We should power up,” she said quietly.

“What was that?” Bao asked.

“We should power up,” Loh’at repeated, louder now. “We should power up and run.”

“That’s suicide,” helm protested. “That thing nearly ate us last time.”

Sivath didn’t like their chances in a rematch against the anomaly, but he knew Loh’at was right. “I concur with the Lieutenant, Captain,” he said. Loh’at gave him a look he could not read. He continued, “We have put considerable distance between ourselves and the ellipse since powering down. We have a greater head start than when we first encountered it. If we power up now, we can tow the ellipse away from the freighter, removing the threat to civilian lives.”

“At the cost of our own,” helm said.

“Maybe not,” Loh’at countered. “Right now the ellipse and the freighter are pulling on each other, If we power up and run, we’ll be the larger and nearer mass, but the freighter will still provide some counter-force. It’ll be a drag on the ellipse’s pursuit of us. It might be enough.”

“Might be?” Bao repeated. He sighed. “At this moment the anomaly presents an unacceptable risk to the freighter. It is our duty to put their lives before our own. Lieutenant Loh’at has proposed a course of action. Does anybody have an alternative suggestion?”

Another moment of silence.

“I have a full salvo of photon torpedoes loaded,” Nim said. “But I like her plan better.”

Bao touched his communicator. “Bridge to engineering,” he said.

“Um,” Dayr said, hovering near the door to the captain’s ready room. “Already here, sir.”

“Engineering here,” said a voice on the communicator. “What can I do for–”

“Shut up a second,” Bao snapped. “Dayr, get down there and give us all the power you’ve got. If we want to survive this we need to run hot.” He turned his head to Sivath. “Commander, I want you down there helping him. You two work your voodoo. Go.”

Sivath left the bridge with Dayr. Loh’at watched him go.

=/\=

The engineering team was already buzzing around the warp core when Dayr and Sivath arrived. “Reaction chamber primed?” Dayr barked out, his long legs carrying him along so quickly that Sivath had to jog to keep up.

“Almost, sir. 2.2 million Kelvin and rising,” an engineer called back.

Dayr whirled on Sivath. “Must oversee impulse reactors. Commander, will need high-energy warp plasma to reach maximum impulse while dragging anomaly. Need you to manage intermix ratio.”

“Understood,” Sivath said. He charged ahead to the primary warp core control console; the ensign there moved aside to make room for him. As had been reported, the chamber was almost warmed up. The engineering team had kept the EPDN flowing while the core was shut down, just so that they wouldn’t have to make a cold start when the time came to power back up. Sivath made a mental note to mention that in his log; whoever was responsible for that idea deserved more than a pat on the back. He felt a gentle tremor shake the floor; the anomaly was getting closer again. As he watched, the reaction chamber’s internal temperature ticked over to an ideal 2.5 million Kelvin. “Reaction chamber primed,” he bellowed.

“Impulse reactors coming online,” Dayr called down from the level above. “Start M/AM reaction in eight . . . six . . . four, three, two, one, mark!”

Sivath’s fingers danced over the controls before him, manipulating the injector coils to release streams of matter and antimatter into the dilithium articulation frame. The warp core glowed to life, its gentle hum music to Sivath’s ears. He started with a gentle 20:1 ratio, not wanting to take any chances with an overload on a newly primed core. He called out, “16.41 teradynes.”

“Going to need much more!” Dayr shouted from above.

Sivath was already slowly increasing the antimatter flow. The reaction taking place in the core in front of him became more animated; it thrummed with energy. “172.79 teradynes,” he reported when his ratio reached 10:1 M/AM.

Another tremor, stronger now. “Bridge to engineering,” Bao’s voice intruded.

“Go ahead, Captain,” Sivath answered.

“We definitely have an admirer of the subspace gravimetric disturbance variety. Helm can’t break one quarter impulse yet. At this rate the ellipse will intercept us in seven minutes.”

“Understood, Captain. Stand by.” Sivath shouted up to Dayr, “Ready to equalize intermix ratio, is the EPS routing ready?”

“Ready now!” Dayr called back.

Sivath increased the antimatter flow further. It was a delicate thing to control, as much an art as a science; he had to react in real time to sudden energy spikes or canyons resulting from the chaotic mix of matter and antimatter taking place in the reaction chamber. His eyes weren’t on the graphs ticking along on his console, they were on the assembly itself, on the patterns of light churning within. His ears were tuned to the slightest variances in frequency. He would hear or see something and ease off the injection a fraction of a second before the readout on his console registered the spike. The intermix would stabilize before any warning chimes sounded. It was risky to scale up the reaction this quickly, but Sivath kept on top of every blip and bump.

“One to one!” he called out when he reached M/AM parity. “2691.44 teradynes!” A quake hit, strong enough to force Sivath to grab the edge of the console to steady himself.

Normally plasma this energetic was fed to the warp nacelles; this intermix was sufficient to maintain warp eight. But with the gravimetric interference of the ellipse preventing the formation of a warp bubble, the best use for the plasma was to feed it to the impulse engines. It was well above the maximum charge rating of the impulse engines, but Dayr was monitoring the reactors to keep them from overloading.

“We’re up to half impulse now, but the anomaly is still gaining ground. Can we give it any more beans?”

“Yes, Captain,” Sivath responded, “but at the risk of damage to the impulse drive.”

“Would you say that risk is a greater or lesser concern than getting crushed by a big orange space football?”

“I would evaluate these concerns as approximately equal, sir, given that one undesirable outcome would quickly follow the other. We will push the engines as far as we can.” He looked up to the impulse reactors. “Dayr?”

“Heard him,” Dayr snapped. Another tremor shook the ship. “EPS conduits already too hot. Redirecting coolant to compensate. Don’t think going past 3,000 would be safe.”

Sivath could work with that. He gradually increased the matter and antimatter flows in equal proportion. The plasma flow from the core became increasingly energetic. Sivath could feel the temperature in the core rising. A quake struck, the strongest so far; Sivath had to cling to the console to keep his feet. He called out, “2973.82 teradynes!”

Above, Dayr sounded stressed. “Can’t get heat buildup under control. Coolant close to boiling. Reactors still within operating tolerance for now, but driver coils overheating.” Dayr didn’t need to explain to Sivath what would happen if either impulse engine’s driver coil assembly cracked.

“Take over,” Sivath said to one of the engineers nearby. Now that the intermix ratio was equalized there was no art to maintaining it. He swiftly scaled a ladder to the next level up and found Dayr at the impulse reactor controls. He said, “What have we got to cool it down?”

“Already using reserve coolant,” Dayr grumbled. “Only other fluid available is atmospheric. Don’t want to cook crew.”

“Then we need to radiate the excess heat,” Sivath said. “Perhaps utilizing the phaser array.”

Dayr shook his head. “Emitter tolerances lower than driver coils’. Heisenberg not built for heavy combat.”

“The deflector dish, then,” Sivath countered.

“Hm. Maybe. Will require many hands.” Dayr glanced around. “Don’t have many to spare.”

“I will see to that. Keep putting out fires here.” Sivath slipped back down the ladder and charged out of engineering. The air in the corridor outside hit him in a sudden cool blast; he hadn’t noticed how hot it had been in there. He used his sleeve to dry the sweat from his brow and tugged the zipper on his uniform jacket down to mid-sternum. “Sivath to bridge,” he said with a touch to his communicator. A tremor shook the corridor, causing Sivath to stumble and fall in the midst of his headlong sprint.

“Go ahead,” Bao replied.

Sivath picked himself up off the ground and kept running toward the ship’s fore. “Sir, we cannot push the impulse engines further without overheating. The driver coils cannot handle warp plasma this hot. I believe we can bring the coolant temperature down by radiating heat via the deflector array, but I require assistance to do so.”

“Security will lend a hand,” Bao said. “They’re on their way down now.”

Wonderful. Sivath supposed that working in close proximity to Nim was preferable to being crushed and/or irradiated to death, but only just.

=/\=

The computer displays in deflector control were all flashing nonsense when Sivath entered. Damn, he’d forgotten about the virus. He hurried forward to the primary console and used his override code to render the virus dormant for the moment; he couldn’t afford to have it getting in his way in a situation this dangerous. The system rebooted normally.

Sivath set to work defining the energy profile he intended to project from the main deflector. It wasn’t long before Nim arrived with three other security officers. “How can we help?” Nim asked. Sivath was surprised to find her eager to cooperate, though he supposed he shouldn’t have been given the situation.

He pointed to the consoles on either side of the room. “Ready the subspace accelerators to emit tetryon particles. I will publish an energy profile plan momentarily; it is imperative that each of you follow it to the smallest detail. The smallest irregularity in the energy signature we build could rip the ship in half.”

“Should we evacuate the secondary hull?” one of the security officers asked uncertainly.

“Are you sure we’re the right people for this? Wouldn’t some sci guys be better at this?” asked another.

The room shook violently. Bodies were thrown into each other. It took several seconds after the turbulence passed for everyone to disentangle themselves and get back on their feet. Leaning on his console, Sivath looked around at the faces in the room and said, “Every person on this ship is doing the job they need to be doing to keep us all alive. That includes each of you. No one is evacuating, because if we fail it means death for the entire crew one way or another. You are Starfleet officers. You can do this.”

“You’re damn right we can,” Nim said. She didn’t sound like she appreciated getting a pep talk from Sivath of all people. “At your stations. Step lively.”

Sivath turned back to his work, building the profile parameters for each emitter while the others prepared to execute his plan. He had nearly finished when his console went dark. “What–?” he blurted.

The screen came back on, displaying a progress screen as the system rebooted. Sivath felt a cold dread settle into his stomach. He’d disabled it . . .

“Disabled what?” Nim asked, coming to peer over his shoulder. “What’s wrong?”

Damn it. Sivath reigned in loose thoughts. “This system is not immune to the virus, it seems.”

“How did you disable it?” Nim pressed.

“I thought I’d managed to quarantine deflector control before infection when I was working with ops earlier,” Sivath lied. “Clearly I was mistaken.”

Nim’s eyes narrowed. “We’ll talk about it later,” she said, returning to her own console.

The system was back online. Sivath quickly reviewed his profile to confirm that he hadn’t lost any data. A few more lines of input and he was finished. He started to key them in and was interrupted by another quake. This one was so strong that he thought he left the floor momentarily. Clinging to the console for support, Sivath frantically gave it the last few commands necessary and published the plan to the other consoles. “Deflector control to engineering. We are ready to begin. Start routing coolant through the subspace accelerators.”

“Hurry, Commander. Impulse reactors approaching meltdown, driver coils critical.”

“Begin stage one,” Sivath instructed the security team. “Sound off upon reaching emission-readiness.” He switched his console to monitor the contributions of each accelerator.

“Ready,” Nim reported. The others followed with confirmations over the next few seconds.

“Begin stage two on my mark,” Sivath said. “Three. Two. One. Mark.”

He watched the flow of tetryon particles from each subspace accelerator join together into a coherent beam from the deflector dish. The beam was a huge power draw, leaching energy from the EPDN and superheated coolant alike.

“Do not hesitate, station two,” Sivath warned. “Feed your accelerator more power. We cannot risk imbalance.” He saw the contribution from accelerator two match the others. “Good. Ready to proceed to stage three. It is imperative that we keep the particle feeds aligned in this final stage. Follow my rhythm and increase–”

The tremor that struck was the strongest Sivath had felt at any point since encountering the graviton ellipse. It was getting close. They didn’t have much time.

“Follow my rhythm and increase throughput smoothly by ten percent with each beat!” Sivath yelled over the groans of the ship’s hull. “Three. Two. One. Mark. Thirty percent. Forty. Fifty. Sixty, not too fast three, seventy. Eighty. Ninety. One hundred.” The console before him streamed data almost too quickly to read. The tetryon beam they were projecting was perfectly balanced. “At ease, everyone. You did it.”

Cheers and nervous laughter filled the room. Nim even cracked a relieved smile. Sivath suppressed the feeling of exultation that threatened to overtake him. This was made easier by the fact that his console rebooted again. When it started its power-on routine, he opened the panel on the underside and pulled the power connecter free. He didn’t want the virus tampering with any of their work.

“Engineering to deflector control. Coolant temperature dropping. Reactors and coils cooling off, too fast in fact. Regulating coolant flow to compensate. Good job.”

“Acknowledged, engineering,” Sivath said. He looked to Nim. “We should return to the bridge.”

“Agreed,” Nim said. “You guys–” she started to say, before being interrupted by another quake. “Stay put! Keep an eye on things and call up if you see anything change!” When the shaking stopped, she and Sivath jogged to the turbolift. “Bridge,” Nim said.

“Thank you,” Sivath said as the lift carried them through the ship. “I could not have done that alone.”

Nim regarded him carefully. “Just doing my job, Commander.”

The doors opened onto the bridge. Sivath took his place in the first officer’s chair; Nim, at her tactical console. “How are we doing?”

“Not good,” Bao said. He was leaning forward as much as his chair’s restraining harness permitted. Sivath deployed and fastened his own. “We can’t crack three quarters impulse and the anomaly is still gaining on us. The good news is–” He paused as another tremor rocked the ship, then continued, “–we have confirmation that the civilian freighter got clear. So we can take comfort in that, at least.”

Sivath realized that the captain thought they were going to die. He tapped his communicator. “Bridge to engineering. How goes the cooling?”

“Excellent, Commander! All systems well within tolerable thresholds.”

“May I conclude, then, that it would be possible to scale up the M/AM intermix further?”

“Why not? Luck is for pushing. Stand by.”

On the viewscreen, Sivath watched the ovoid energy field pursue them, growing minutely each second as it crept closer and closer. A quake the likes of which Sivath had never felt in his life hit the ship. He had to clamp his jaws shut to avoid biting through his own tongue. Sivath glared at the anomaly on the screen. Give it up, he willed at it. Give us up.

“Three quarters impulse!” helm shouted ecstatically. “Point eight! Dayr found the turbo button down there!”

Sivath kept glaring at the screen. Let us go. Let us go. Was it his imagination, or had the anomaly stopped growing?

“Engineering to bridge. Temperatures rising again. Cannot sustain reaction level indefinitely. Will maintain as long as possible.”

Give us up. Let us go. We don’t belong to you. Set us free.

“Captain!” Loh’at called out. “The waveform is collapsing!”

All eyes fixated on the screen. The orange blob of energy churned and boiled more violently than before. It seemed to swell suddenly, then it burst. But instead of ejecting energy outward, the effect dissipated almost instantly, vanishing back into subspace in the blink of an eye. A final gravimetric shockwave hit the ship, rattling its humanoid inhabitants down to their bones. Then it was over.

“It’s gone, sir!” Loh’at crowed.

Bao released his belts and jolted to his feet. “Helm, a leisurely full stop if you please. Bridge to engineering: the anomaly has dispersed. Kindly talk the impulse drive down off the ledge.”

Around the bridge, exultant cheers were going up, but it was nothing compared to the blast of celebration that came through the comm when Dayr replied back, “Acknowledged, bridge.”

Sivath released his harness and got unsteadily to his feet. All around him, ecstasy was being expressed and congratulations exchanged. Somebody clapped him on the shoulder. Someone shook his hand. He knew exactly one thing with absolute certainty: he needed to go to bed and sleep.

Continued in Epilogue

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