Blockade

The ‘Enterprise’ arrives via wormhole at planet Bounty 3 to relieve Commonwealth  space cruiser The ‘Reliant’. At one time the Federation and the Commonwealth were at war with each other but the relationship is now cordial. The ‘Enterprise’ has had a bruising encounter with Tarons, a warlike privateering race who operate a protection racket in exchange for Dilithium crystals. The ‘Enterprise’ has been ordered not to submit to Tarons but to defend themselves. The ‘Reliant’s’ skipper is alarmed since they have to return through the wormhole and encounter the Tarons. Meanwhile peace keeping duties are taken over by the ‘Enterprise’. A suspected war criminal is entertained on the ‘Reliant’ which causes some friction with the skipper of the ‘Enterprise’ until the skipper of the ‘Reliant’ explains that a certain amount of politicking is necessary to preserve the peace with limited resources. A subsequent battle with the Tarons sees the less advanced ‘Reliant’ with a skeleton crew act as a foil so that the ‘Enterprise’ can escape. During the battle the ‘Reliant’ is destroyed but the survival pod escapes and lands on Bounty 3. The fate of the skipper of the ‘Reliant’ is uncertain. The skipper of the ‘Enterprise’ is denied permission to search for the other skipper but takes unpaid leave to track him down. The Tarons and those hostile to the peacekeepers are searching for the skipper of the ‘Reliant’ as well. A cat and mouse game ensues to see who get to the skipper of the ‘Reliant’ first.

The search is inconclusive and the skipper returns to duty weary of the vanity and posturing of Starfleet.

 

Meanwhile the skipper of the ‘Reliant’ it is revealed much later on has arrived in a civilisation that has encountered a dark age.

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Star Trek: Agenda

Star Trek AGENDA

Posted in The Original Series | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Voyager but by default…

I’m new to the process of fan fiction – don’t know anything about it!

I wrote two episodes of Voyager while the show was still on, and actually submitted one, got a lovely rejection letter with a Voyager image on it. I have it proudly framed.

I was thinking about those stories the other day.  I suspect that someone aware of the Trek canon might get a kick out of them.  They’re still in the form of episodes, not novels or stories.   I apologize if they’re a little difficult to read because of that, but I honestly think that if you’re able to handle the format, there’s a couple of nice twists in them that should bring a smile to your face.   Plus one of the episodes highlights Neelix, a character on Voyager whom I always felt was given short shrift.

On an unrelated note, a bit of trivia: I went to college with Robert Picardo. (The Doctor)

Full disclosure, Voyager is not my favorite series.  But it was the only one on at the time I was writing, and so dictated my selection.   I’ll tell you what my favorite series was if you write back.

Any feedback at all (even if you’re not interested in reading the stories) would be great!

Sincerely,

Brandy Rabin

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Transcendant

spacegate

this one started as a dare…

STAR TREK:

TRANSCENDANT

Prologue

Captain W’Lard S’tark stood at attention and waited for Admiral Karsh to notice him. The Admiral was staring off into space in the slightly glazed way a person had when he was interfacing. He also had a subtle gray cast to his normally blue skin. That wasn’t what he really looked like, it merely meant that while he was aware of S’tark’s presence, he was not yet fully interfaced.

The whole thing was going on inside S’tark’s head anyway.

The Admiral twitched, his color brightened and he smiled at his new Captain.

Congratulations Captain, I have the honor of introducing you to your new command.”

Thank you, Sir.”

The admiral gestured and they suddenly seemed to be standing in empty space. There, floating in front of them was the ship. S’tark had seen a lot of ships in the 90 years he’d served in Starfleet. This one, he could tell, was special. The long oval saucer tapered down fore and aft into a sharp rim which ran along both sides of the ship. Along the sides, the rim flattened out and then swept down forming a graceful roll that suggested the tubes of the old warp nacelles without actually being something quite that clunky. Along the bottom of the hull a section bulged downward along the back third of the hull in a way that once again merely suggested the secondary hull of the traditional Starfleet vessel without fully becoming so.

She’s beautiful, Sir.”

Yes, she is. But she’s more than that. She’s special. Walk with me.”

They walked along the side of the ship until they got to the front of the hull where it began its downward slope. The Admiral gestured upward in an ‘after you’ fashion. Captain S’tark turned and walked through space about ten meters above the hull. Looking down, he watched as the name and number of the ship came into view. His breath caught in his throat in a way his Human ancestors would have recognized, even as his Klingon ancestors recognized the fire coursing through his veins. She was a special ship all right.

ENTERPRISE NCC 1701-T.

A new Enterprise.” His voice was hushed.

That’s right. A new Enterprise, a new class of ships and a new mission.”

Where?”

For the first time in 300 years, out there.” Karsh’s hand pointed out -beyond Federation Space.

1

 

S’tark sat on the bridge watching the countdown to the jump. The numbers flicking downward to zero floated in the middle of the room where anyone who wanted to could see them. And everyone wanted to see them. It was the one part of the voyage that never seemed to get old no matter how many times they’d done it. It had taken a couple of days to get out here far enough away from any stars to be able to use the new ‘Barclay Drive.’ Odd name that, Barclay Drive. Didn’t tell you a thing about the drive -only the inventor, except, so far as he knew, no one in the physics community had that name.

 

Sutok.”

 

His first officer looked away from the countdown. “Yes, Sir?”

 

Why’s it called the Barclay Drive? Doesn’t make any sense.”

 

Well, Sir.” He paused. The numbers ran down to zero. For a second everything seemed to stretch and then snap back together. The crew went back to interfacing as the sensor data poured in. “Its named for the first brush we had with the technology. The Enterprise D encountered an advanced race, known as the Cytherians, who took over one of the engineering officers, Reginald Barclay. Under their control he rebuilt the warp nacelles to create a subspace inversion drive that brought the Enterprise across several thousand light years to their home system in about thirty seconds. Unfortunately they couldn’t duplicate the process later, no sensor logs were kept and it was beyond the science of the time. But Research has been plugging away at it ever since.”

 

I see. Thanks. What does our sensor data show?”

 

Sutok’s eyes closed for a second. “This sector has 17 star systems of interest. 15 of them are life bearing, 5 with civilizations that are on the brink of developing a workable FTL drive. One system has ruins that point to a previous civilization. And…” He trailed off.

 

Yes?”

 

One system holds a very powerful T-field. Its organically generated and points to the presence of a strongly telepathic hive mind.”

 

T-field? That could be bad. What kind of attitude does it have?”

 

Checking.” Sutok stared into space a second longer. “Highly organized and extremely aggressive. The evidence points to dangerously malevolent race. We will definitely want to log a warning to avoid that system.”

 

Done. Anything else?”

 

Yes…” Sutok paused again. S’tark hadn’t expected this. Sutok wasn’t pure Vulcan, nobody was pure anything in the Outer Colonies, but he was close and usually displayed the quiet efficiency they were known for. “There are two fresh warp trails leading into that system. And a third warp signature headed in that direction now.”

 

Can that ship handle what’s there?”

 

Doubtful. Here’s a picture.”

 

An image of the ship flicked into being above the center of the bridge. Once again the five crew on duty looked up. And gasped.

2

 

Sutok, there are no records of any Starfleet ships coming this far out, are there?”

 

Captain, considering that it would have taken a Constitution class vessel about 80 years to cover the 50,000 light years between the Old Federation and here, its almost impossible. Besides, Starfleet never built brown star ships.”

 

You’re right. Still…”

 

Still, it does look like a Constitution class star ship. However, sensor data shows some significant design differences. Obviously another race hit on this design independently. It uses antimatter and natural Dilithium crystals. Its maximum speed is about Warp 8. To answer your original question, Sir, they don’t have a chance.”

 

All right, then let’s warn them. Tirej, put us along side that ship.”

 

The navigator nodded. Once again, the ship seemed to stretch and snap. Distantly S’tark heard the warp engines come to life as the ship matched course and speed with the alien.

 

S’tark closed is eyes and reached out. He felt the computer interface snap into contact and, through it, he felt the communicator reach out to the alien ship.

 

This is Captain W’lard S’tark of the USS Enterprise. I would like to speak to your captain, please.”

 

He opened his eyes and saw the alien captain look back at him from above the projection table. He looked like a dog.

 

This is Captain Tirf of the Outhunter. What do you have to say?”

 

Captain, our sensors show that you are following a warp trail leading to this star.” He sent a command and the computer projected the trail and the system it ended at. “I want to warn you that if you enter that system you will be be destroyed.”

 

The alien’s lips pulled back to show some very sharp teeth. “Are you threatening me S’tark?”

 

No. But our sensors show a very powerful and dangerous race lives there. They are extremely aggressive and will not hesitate to attack and destroy you. Our sensors also show that your ship can’t withstand such an attack.”

 

The lips dropped back to cover the fangs. “Can you give me details?”

 

Yes, would you feel comfortable coming over to my ship where we can discuss this at length?”

 

I would. I will beam over with two of my officers in a few minutes.”

 

Thank you, I will be waiting.” He stood up. “I’m going to the Reception Deck.”

 

Captain, may I suggest you stop by Sickbay first? They may turn aggressive.”

 

I don’t think they will, Sutok.”

 

Regulations insist, Sir.”

 

S’tark sighed. “Of course, of course.”

 

He walked over to the wall. A section of it rippled slightly and he stepped thru. For a second he felt a slight stretch and snap and then he was stepping out of the wall and into Sickbay.

 

Doctor,” he said to the empty room, “I need a defense upgrade.”

 

A second later a human looking person flickered into being. “Defense? Do you need lethal ability or just stun?”

 

Stun and shield, Doctor. I am meeting our guests on the Reception Deck. Also, I want you to keep them under continuous scan and be ready to return them to their ship if necessary.”

 

Yes, Sir. Your nanites have been upgraded. Good luck, Sir.”

 

Thanks.” The Doctor flickered out and S’tark walk back over to the wall. A second later he was standing on the Reception Deck watching three golden pillars coalesce into recognizable shapes.

 

Reception had been designed to put visitors at ease. The short cut grass, the blue sky and the low trees and hedges gave one the feeling of being outside in a garden. It didn’t seem to help his current visitors.

 

He watched quietly as they conferred with each other and consulted the whirring boxes they waved around. He recognized them, of course even as the nanites gently guided their sensor beams around him. After waiting another minute to allow them to adjust, he shut off the cloak and stepped out from behind the hedge.

 

Good afternoon, Gentles.” He paused a minute as they played the sensor boxes over him. It was standard procedure, as far as possible let the other race feel they were in control, this would make them comfortable and prevent misunderstandings.

 

Would you care to sit down?” He sent a command to the computer and some benches appeared nearby.

 

The visitors jumped a bit and he cursed his lack of forethought, he should have provided the benches in advance.

 

After a minute, they gingerly sat down.

 

So? What are the details you want to discuss?” Tirf asked.

 

S’tark waited a second. “Do you have any experience with T-field races?”

 

What?”

 

Races that seem to be able to do things just by thinking about them.”

 

We’ve heard stories, we generally discount them.” Tirf replied. One of his companions glanced nervously at the bench they were sitting on.

 

That’s not surprising. They are pretty rare. T-fields are funny things. They are generated organically by some races and can be very powerful and dangerous to races that don’t have adequate defenses. The system you are approaching has such a race.”

 

And you are convinced they are aggressive?”

 

T-fields also show the basic attitude of the generator. The organ that creates them is closely linked to brain, so that’s not surprising. We can detect those fields and the basic mind-set of the generators at long distances. Also, the two warp trails you are following enter that system, but nothing leaves it.”

 

So, what do you want us to do?”

 

Avoid the system. There’s nothing else you can do. Log the warning, if you contact other races, pass on the warning. If you do that, you should be safe. Races like this don’t develop space travel. You stay out of range, and they can’t hurt you.”

 

And that’s all? What about our other ships? What happens to them?”

 

Its already happened. They are most likely destroyed. You can’t help them, I can’t help them. I’m sorry.”

 

And what are you going to do?”

 

Me? I’ve done it. I’ve warned you. What else should I do?”

 

You can face them, right? You’re not going to stop them?”

 

To stop them, we would have to stay here. Our worlds lie about 50,000 light years away. We’re just passing through on a survey mission. The only thing we could do would be to destroy them. And we won’t do that.”

 

Why not? If they are that terrible…”

 

Hundreds of years ago, we faced a terrible race. And they didn’t stay in their home system. They had assimilated or destroyed thousands of races. They called themselves the Borg. Eventually we had to destroy them. But the races they assimilated died out. They couldn’t function on their own anymore. We’ve never forgiven ourselves for that. We’re not going to do that again.”

 

He looked up at Tirf. “Take my advice. Stay away from that star system. Warn everyone else off. Its all you can do.”

 

Tirf stared at him a second with his ears pricked up. Then he half lowered them and shook his head. “I believe you. But we were sent out to find our pack mates. We can’t go back with the news that a strange ship we had never seen before told us what you have told us. It won’t work. Our duty is to know what happened to them, not to guess, not to be told. I’m sorry.” He stood up.

 

S’tark rose too. “So am I. You’re very brave Captain. But bravery isn’t going to be enough. I wish you the best.”

 

Thank you.” Tirf opened a box and spoke into it. “Outhunter, three to transport.” There was a loud humming noise and they dissolved into shinning pillars that faded away.

 

S’tark stared after them for a minute and then walked back to the wall and snapped to the bridge.

3

 

Sutok looked up as he walked in. “I take it they are going ahead with their mission?”

 

Yes, he started throwing around words like ‘duty.’” S’tark made it sound like a swear word.

 

Well, that is true-”

 

I KNOW ITS- ” He stopped and raised his hand for a minute. “True. I’m sorry Sutok. Its just… They’re gonna die out there. And their people won’t know. And they’ll send somebody else and they will die. All because of ‘duty.’”

 

So, what are you planning to do?”

 

Me? Nothing, I’m going to sit right here and- hold on. B’Nai, focus our scanners on them. I want to see what happens.”

 

He closed his eyes and interfaced. “Chaq’d, Tirej?”

 

Yes, Sir?” The Navigator replied.

 

Yes, Sir?” The Engineer replied.

 

I want to be ready to jump on a moments’ notice. And I want to come out of that jump with full shields at maximum extension. I want that to include T-Shields.”

 

Will we be surrounding a second ship, Sir?”

 

Yes.”He paused. “Oh and I want a tractor beam on that ship.”

 

You’ll have it, Sir. Those Dogs are too good to let die like that.”

 

S’tark opened his eyes wondering how the news, complete with a nickname, had managed to work its way all the way to Engineering. It wasn’t surprising, of course, rumors were the only known things capable of Warp 10.

 

The ship floated above the projection table, and he noticed all five of the bridge crew had their eyes open and were watching it. He looked around at them, Sutok in the First Officer/Science Officer chair. Tirej on Navigation/Helm/Weapons, Shea on Enhanced Matter/Computers and B’Nai on Sensors/Security. They and he all sat in ordinary looking chairs surrounding a low table, he remembered his mother once seeing a picture of the Bridge and asking him what he was doing sitting in a lounge.

 

Ah, they’re not foolish.” Sutok’s satisfied voice grabbed his attention.

 

What?”

 

They’ve dropped a message buoy about 2 light years away from the system. Whatever happens, the next ship will be warned.”

 

Goody for ‘the next ship.’” He muttered sourly.

 

They’ve been hit!” B’Nai had her eyes closed, monitoring her sensors directly.

 

A second later he could see it. The Outhunter seemed to shudder and suddenly turn and plunge straight into the system. As it did, an energy beam shot out from the aft end and vaporized the buoy.

 

S’tark closed his eyes. “Now!”

 

He felt the ship stretch and snap. And suddenly he could feel the pressure of the alien T-field clamp down on the ship’s shields. A second later the ship shuddered again.

 

The Outhunter is firing on us!”

 

Tirej, engage inner shields. B’Nai, pick up two security people and meet me in Sickbay for full upgrades.”

 

We’re going over there?”

 

Yes, we will have to take the Outhunter before we can get it out of here. They must still be working under the last compulsions that were implanted. If we let them go now, they’d just turn around and plunge back in.”

 

Yes Sir.” She stood up calling off a couple names.

 

Minutes later they were standing in front of the Sickbay wall listening while he gave them their instructions.

 

I am going directly to the Bridge. I am going to try to stun the Bridge crew before they can do anything drastic like start the self-destruct sequence. B’Nai, I want you to go to the engine room and take it for the same reason. Talor, you will drop into the secondary hull at the opposite end from B’Nai and work your way toward her, knocking out any resistance. K’Vork, you will start at the back end of the saucer and and work toward me. If at any point you hit resistance that looks like it will slow you down, do not hesitate to snap back here and return to ship behind the resistance point. Do not waste time on individual crewman, our objective is to pacify the ship so that it can be pulled out of range of this system.”

 

What happens then, Sir?” B’Nai asked.

 

That depends on what happens when they wake up. Let’s go.”

 

S’tark faced his section of the wall and watched it ripple. A second later, he saw the bridge crew at battle stations attempting to fire on the Enterprise As he stepped through onto the bridge, Tirf turned and looked at him, his teeth pulled well back over his fangs. S’tark hoped for a second that his appearance would freeze them, but it didn’t. In a single move, everyone of them pulled out their weapons and fired.

 

S’tark threw up his hands as the light from the beams temporarily blinded him, then his shields opaqued and he could see again. Already the crew had stopped firing and were charging. Raising his hand, he triggered his stun array. A wall of blue fire shot away from his body across the bridge. Every single crewman it touched collapsed. Keying his sensors, he glanced around long enough to confirm they were still alive and raced for the doors at the back of the bridge. He barely had time to notice the color as he fired an anti barrier beam and vaporized a hole he could dive through. They had been red.

 

The rest of the ship was pacified in just a few minutes. Most of the crewman not needed for flying the ship into the system had already collapsed. Apparently the creatures weren’t interested in controlling any more victims than they needed to.

4

 

Thank you again, Captain S’tark, for coming to our rescue.” Tirf was sitting in his own Sickbay being examined by his own doctor. S’tark had already had a quiet medical scan done of the ship and knew everyone was OK, but it seemed better for them psychologically if he didn’t interfere with their procedure.

 

Don’t mention it. I had hoped you wouldn’t go there, but I couldn’t just run off and leave you. I know what it means to have to do your duty.”

 

Yes, and I think we can consider our duty done. We have first-hand knowledge of what happened to our pack mates. And we will definitely log this system. I believe a two light year buffer zone will be enough?”

 

Yes, I think so. Most T-Field species have a hard time reaching beyond there.”

 

Are you going to do anything about them now?”

 

S’tark shook his head. “Just because we have a technological edge and have been around the block a few times doesn’t make us gods. We don’t have the right to go around passing judgment on races or imposing our will on them. Mistakes have been made before-”

 

Just then he felt a crushing, burning sensation in his head. For just an instant, he had an overwhelming urge to order the Enterprise straight into the system. Then, with an almost audible clang, the T-Shields went up. He blinked tears out of his eyes and turned to see Tirf collapsed to the floor. After a second, he got up and leaned on the bed.

 

What was that?”

 

That was our friends reaching over twice the distance we thought they could. Come on Tirf, I think we need to rethink our strategy.” He walked toward the wall watching as the jump point began to ripple.

 

They used a collimated T-Energy beam. Considering the strength of the beam at this point, and the length of time they were able to maintain it against our shields, I estimate their effective range against unprotected ships on the order of ten to fifteen light years. Their continued activity will render interstellar travel in this sector virtually impossible. Also, there are two inhabited worlds within their range. Those worlds could be, and probably are, attacked at will.” Sutok sat down.

 

Recommendations?”

 

Sutok stood back up. “Sir, we have to do something about them. This isn’t a matter of the Prime Directive, that doesn’t apply to races with interstellar capability and these creatures do have that in a way. As do our friends…” He trailed off.

 

Tirf looked up from where he’d been staring at the table. “We are called the Dire.” He turned back to staring at the table.

 

Thank you. The Dire also have interstellar capability. Sir.” He sat back down.

 

Anyone else?”

 

Why are you asking?” Tirf was standing. “You are the Captain. You make the decisions. You take the responsibility. Their job is to follow orders.”

 

S’tark nodded. “Yes, you are right. But these are also my senior officers, I respect their experience and opinions. So I listen to them before I make my decision.”

 

He looked around the room. No one else stood up. “And I have. We can’t leave something this powerful and this malignant alone. And no one else can handle it. We are going in.”

 

What about us?”

 

We will escort your ship out beyond their effective range first, of course.” Tirf’s ears drooped. “I would appreciate it, Captain, if you would accompany us on this mission, once your ship is safely on its way. Your people will need a first-hand report on what happened.”

 

Tirf’s ears rose. “I would be honored.”

5

 

You are not all just one race on this ship.” Tirf was standing quietly behind him on the bridge watching the Outhunter accelerate toward home.

 

S’tark smiled. “I’m not even all one race myself.”

 

I don’t understand.”

 

Where I live, about a hundred and fifty races have been living together for centuries. And in the Outer Colonies, most of us are mixed blood. I’m about half Klingon and about one third Human. The rest of me is a mix of Vulcan, Cardassian and who knows what else. B’Nai is mostly Bajoran and Cardassian, but has a little Jem-Hadar thrown in. Sutok looks Vulcan, but also as a bit of Andorian in him. The only one that’s actually pure blooded is Shea, he’s full Human, but he was born on Earth and spent almost twenty years working his way out to the Colonies.” He got up and motioned Tirf ahead of him toward the wall. “There’s no sense sitting here. We’re taking our time going back to that system. We want a better read on just how strong they are. I thought I’d show you our living quarters.”

 

A few minutes later, they were sitting on another bench beneath a tree looking at a cluster of small domes.

 

These are you living quarters?”

 

Yes, we’ve learned that this is easier on everyone psychologically, and we can afford the room, this ship doesn’t require much of a crew.”

 

I guess not.” Tirf fell silent again.

 

Something on your mind?”

 

I’m remembering your explanation of T-Field races. You said they seemed to be able to do things just by thinking of them.”

 

Right.”

 

When we first beamed aboard your ship, we couldn’t see you, and then you just appeared. And when you invited us to sit down, the benches just appeared. Are YOU a T-Field race?”

 

S’tark grinned and shook his head. “No, we’re not. We’ve just developed a way of interfacing with the ship that is less obvious to the outsider. And we use a lot of enhanced matter.” Tirf looked blank. “That’s a mix of matter and force fields. Except for the hull, the main deck and the engine room, most of the ship is enhanced matter. We pretty much change it to suit our needs.” He saw Tirf’s ears starting to droop again. “Think of it this way. You have replicators on your ship, I saw them.”

 

Yes?”

 

Think of the entire Enterprise interior as a combination replicator and holodeck, with a few extra bells and whistles thrown in.”

 

What’s a holodeck?”

 

They started registering the T Beam (as everyone was calling it) about ten light years out. From then on, the strength steadily increased as they neared and then entered the system. And then suddenly, it stopped. From then on, nothing happened til they reached to second planet out and dropped into low orbit.

 

Well, they’ve been certainly busy.” Shea had knack for understatement, especially under stress, but S’tark felt he’d out done himself. All around them were ships. They were all dark and cold.

 

Derelicts?”

 

Definitely, Sir. They were all parked in a stable orbit and then left.”

 

Are the- “ he paused, “-bodies still aboard?”

 

Sutok blinked for a second. “No, Sir. We detect only traces of biological matter and it is highly degraded. It looks as though they all landed.”

 

What does the planet look like?”

 

No signs of material civilization, of course, but we are picking up a lot of activity in the oceans. Some kind of cephalopod, I believe.”

 

The Kraken.”

 

S’tark turned toward Shea. “What?”

 

Kraken. A mythical sea monster, probably based on the giant squid, it was supposed to be able to pull entire ships down under the sea.” He shrugged. “It seems appropriate.”

 

Could be. Let’s try to contact them.”

 

The ship rocked suddenly.

 

Or maybe they are contacting us. Show us what’s going on.”

 

A second later, the area above the table came to life. The ships weren’t floating dead anymore. They were all alive and moving. Right toward the Enterprise.

6

 

Shields! Shields!” Tirf cried, forgetting he wasn’t on the Outhunter.

 

Don’t worry, we have something a little better than that. Tirej, engage the graviton matrix.”

 

Yes Sir.”

 

Now, watch.”

 

The ships started firing, but as they watched; the beams, bolts, torpedoes and other varieties of weapons seemed to veer off into empty space.

 

What’s happening?”

 

We’ve projected a set of gravity wells around the ship. Everything that enters them gets diverted. A truly good operator can divert a phaser beam right back to the ship that fired it.” Just then a beam whipped around them and crashed into an oncoming vessel. “Tirej considers himself a truly good operator.”

 

Oh, so there’s no danger?” Tirf seemed almost disappointed.

 

Oh yes, there’s danger. Our defenses can get overloaded, in fact I think that’s what they’re trying to do. Tirej!”

 

Yes, Sir?”

 

Fire a resonant pulse and then pull us out to synchronous orbit.”

 

Yes-”

 

Wait, hold that. They’re hailing us, voice only.”

 

GIVE US OUR PREY!”

 

The voice sounded like something you heard in nightmares.

 

Your ‘prey’ is an intelligent life form. You have no right to attack it.”

 

GIVE US OUR PREY OR DIE!”

 

No.”

 

What came through next was best described as an incoherent hysterical scream.

 

Sir,we’re getting that T-Beam again. Maximum concentration.”

 

That’s fine. That won’t do them any good.”

 

Why not?” Tirf asked.

 

Energy levels. Organic T-field generators are powered by metabolism. They can be subtle, but all the creatures on that planet can’t match the output of an anti-matter generator.”

 

Oh, of course.” His ears seemed to droop again.

 

S’tark turned back to the display. “OK Tirej, fire that pulse. Sutok, is there anything on either of this planet’s moons worth worrying about?”

 

No Sir. Both are completely airless.”

 

OK, Tirej as soon as we’ve moved to synchronous orbit, I want you target the outer moon and be ready to fire on my command.”

 

Yes Sir. How much power?”

 

Enough to vaporize it.”

 

Yes Sir. Moon targeted. Also firing resonance pulse now.”

 

On display.”

 

Looking up, they saw the crowd of ships dropping away from them. Suddenly the lights flickered and a wave seemed to pass through the fleet. It was as if space it self rippled. Behind it, the ships were nothing but clouds of debris. As they watched the wave spread out across the planet and then disappeared around it. Seconds later, it reappeared moving the opposite way and collided with itself. The cloud of debris fountained upward, spreading out into a vast mushroom of steel shards before gradually dissipating.

 

OK, lets talk to them now.”

 

That might be hard to do. They were communicating through one of the ships.”

 

Hmm. OK, hook the communications to the our T-Shield. We’ll modulate that.”

 

Will they hear it?”

 

Hear it? It’ll sound like a voice out of heaven.”

 

Kraken! Your toys have been taken away from you. You don’t get to take any more prey. As long as you stay in your system and leave everyone alone, you can live. If we ever hear of you taking ships, this is what will happen to your world.” He turned to Tirej and nodded.

 

A second later, the outer moon blew apart.

 

Anytime you think of seizing ships, look up in the sky and remember.”

 

He waited. At first there was silence and then they heard what sounded like an hysterical sob.

 

He took a deep breath and sat down. “OK, get us out of here.”

 

You think that’ll work?”

 

Yeah, at least, I hope it will. Here,” he focused for a second and a small black box appeared in his hand. He handed it to Tirf. “Keep this. If they do try anything, push that button. We’ll come back.”

 

Tirf stared at him, his ears flattened, “What ARE you?” he ask in a hushed whisper. After staring at them for a second longer, he turned and bolted for the wall. S’tark barely had time to energize a jump point before he reached it.

 

S’tark looked around at the crew in confusion. They looked back helplessly. Shaking his head, he took off after him.

7

 

He found Tirf back on the Reception Deck, sitting on a bench looking at the wall. Walking up behind him, he paused. “Mind if I sit down.”

 

No. Its your ship. What can I say?”

 

Something’s bothering you. Tirf, have we offended you?”

 

Have you offended me? Do I have the right to be offended by anything you do?”

 

I don’t understand.”

 

Tirf took a deep breath. “I had been planning on taking you to my home world. It was going to be glorious. The first contact with an advanced star faring race. I was going to show you to my world and show my world to you. My career would have been guaranteed. Now…”

 

Now? Tirf, we would be honored to visit your world.”

 

And what would happen? I’m not sure if my people would run screaming from you or fall down and start worshiping you! I’m not sure if I should run screaming from you or fall down and start worshiping you! What ARE you?”

 

I’m just another star ship captain. I’m not anything to run from and I’m certainly not anything to worship.”

 

Are you so sure? I remember when you boarded my ship. I saw blaster fire just splash off of you. And then I saw a wave of energy come flying out of your hand and stun my crew. From what I’m told, you took my ship with only four people. Then you flew straight into a system that’s been sucking in and destroying ships for centuries. You destroyed an entire fleet-”

 

A fleet that was being badly handled.” S’tark broke in.

 

Tirf waved that away. “Without a single shot even touching your hull. Then you blew up a moon and threatened to blow up the planet!” He paused for breath. “Tell me. Were you bluffing?”

 

No, I wasn’t bluffing.”

 

And you laid down the law. What about what you said earlier about not having the authority to impose your will on other species?”

 

S’tark sighed. “You’re right. I did ‘lay down the law’ as you put it. But what else could I do?”

 

Tirf looked at the ground. “I don’t know. Probably nothing, I guess.” He looked up at S’tark. “I just don’t feel comfortable around your people, frankly I don’t feel comfortable with the idea of your people being near my home world, or even knowing where that is. I suppose its too late for that though, isn’t it?”

 

Yes.” S’tark replied quietly, “Its too late, we do know where your home world is.”

 

You won’t go there without an invitation though, will you?”

 

No, we won’t.” S’tark looked at the sky and chuckled softly. “Its ironic, I’ve been reading the logs of the previous captains and every once in a while they would run into some alien that was really overwhelming. Sometimes they helped, sometimes they just irritated the heck out the captain and his crew. But there was always a sense of relief when they moved on. I don’t think we ever thought we’d be the overwhelming aliens. We just wanted to be friends.”

 

I know. That’s why we do this, isn’t it? We want to make new friends. But friends need to have things in common. What do we have in common? I fly from star to star. You fly from sector to sector. You blithely talk about crossing 50,000 light years in the blink of an eye. My ship would take more than a life time to make the same trip. Its as if I were to try to find a common ground with a man who paddled around a lake in a dugout canoe.”

 

Interestingly, we don’t do that.”

 

What?”

 

The Prime Directive. You heard us refer to it before. It states that if an alien race has not yet developed interstellar travel, we are to leave it strictly alone. We can’t interfere even to save lives.” He grinned ruefully. “Of course, that doesn’t mean it didn’t happen, but usually the results proved that it shouldn’t have been broken -not even for the best of intentions.”

 

He took a deep breath. “You see, we figured out a long time ago that while we might be smart and we might be strong, we’re not wise. If we were wise, we would be able to find that common ground. We would be able to sit on a bench like this with you and the man in the dugout canoe and talk without being overwhelming. Without scaring people, or giving them advice that seems like a good idea, only to have it blow up later.” He shook his head.

 

Maybe that Prime Directive of yours needs to be updated.” Tirf said quietly. “I can see where that would make things a lot easier on the rest of us.”

 

You may be right. I’m sorry. I hope we’ve done more good than harm here.” He stood up. “We’ve rendezvoused with the Outhunter.” He held out his hand.

 

Tirf looked at it for a moment and then extended his own. “Interesting, here’s what we do.” He extended his nose, after a second S’tark extended his as well and they touched noses.

 

Goodbye Captain S’tark, and thank you again, for saving my ship and my crew.” Tirf turned and walked toward the wall, as he approached, he tapped his communicator and dissolved into a pillar of light.

Epilogue

 

S’tark sat there staring at place where Tirf had beamed out. He wondered what Kirk or Picard or even Jai would have done. It had felt good to go in and clean up the Kraken, but somehow he got the feeling that thing’s weren’t going to be the same.

 

Sutok’s call broke into his thoughts. “Sir, the Outhunter has left.”

 

All right, start planning our next jump, I’ll be right there.”

 

We have another ship approaching. Its hailing us.”

 

He sighed. “Oh boy. What’s their technological level?”

 

A little closer to ours, Sir. Or maybe, I should say, we’re a little closer to theirs. This one looks ahead of us.”

 

I see. All right, I’m opening hailing frequencies.”

 

He concentrated for a second and interfaced with the com system.

 

This Captain W’lard S’tark of the USS Enterprise, we come in peace.”

 

This is Janya, I also come in peace. I have a passenger who would like to come aboard your ship and speak to you. Would you be so good as to lower your shields?”

 

Is that necessary?”

 

There was a chuckle. “Yes, Captain, its necessary.”

 

Very well, lowering shields.” He carefully raised the shields around the Reception Deck and then lowered the outer shields. A second later an older human looking man appeared. S’tark gestured to the bench and he sat down where Tirf had just been.

 

Good day, Gentle. May I ask who you are and what brings you here?”

 

The man smiled. “I am a representative of one of those ‘overwhelming aliens’ your captains dealt with in the past.”

 

Oh? Have you been listening in on my conversations?”

 

No, I can hardly do that. However, Captain Tirf has just finished writing up his log entries. He quotes you extensively.”

 

S’tark grimaced. “I’m sure.”

 

Don’t worry. He puts you in a very positive light.”

 

I hope that isn’t what you came here for.”

 

Oh no, I actually came to see if I could get a ride with you back to your Federation. I need to present my ‘credentials,’ I believe you call them that, to your ruling Council.”

 

Your are an ambassador?”

 

Yes. We’ve been observing your ships and believe the time has come to open diplomatic relations.”

 

Really. Don’t tell me all of this was some kind of test. I won’t appreciate it.”

 

No. We don’t do that. Though some explorers got a little ahead of themselves in the past. They were reprimanded.”

 

Like Q?”

 

The man snorted. “No, not like Q. The best thing that ever happened to the galaxy was when that psychopath and his gang finally got what was coming to them.”

 

Gang?”

 

Come now, you don’t believe he was able to pull off those swindles of his without help, do you?”

 

Oh. So… he wasn’t…?”’

 

No. He ‘wasn’t.’ What he was, was a prime example of what happens when someone like us.” He gestured to include both of them. “Takes his bag of tricks out into the galaxy at large and uses them to bully innocent people who don’t have the technological wherewithal to stand up for themselves. Stopping the less scrupulous members of your own Greater Federation from doing something like that is going to be one of your Star Fleet’s prime jobs going forward.”

 

Why?”

 

What do you mean, ‘why’? Its the right thing to do.”

 

Oh, I agree with you, but why should we worry about what happens to races that can’t stand up for themselves?”

 

The Ambassador stared at him in shock. S’tark held his eyes and, after a minute, the Ambassador shook his head and grinned. “I admit it, you got me. That’s a good question. The simple fact is that all of us, including you, only hold about ten percent of the inhabited galaxy. If we go around irritating and bullying the rest of the galaxy, eventually they will rise up and give us what we have coming. And all the technology in the universe won’t stop them. It never does.”

 

That’s why we took our time before we contacted you. When you started launching your new ships, we detected it all over the Galaxy. So we knew we had a new neighbor. The question was, what kind of neighbor did we have? Would we get to send a diplomat, or would we have to send a fleet? We needed to know now, while you were still relatively weak. Once your technology got to be common, it would be too late.”

 

And they decided they could send you.”

Yes, much to their relief.”

 

And do we have things in common?”

 

Yes, we do. For one, we have the whole galaxy to run around in. There are some places out in the globular clusters I could show you…” He smiled for a second. “We also have a Prime Directive. What it says is that we leave races alone until they have the ability to navigate unaided across the whole galaxy and have near complete environmental control. At that point, we can talk. Before that, it just doesn’t work, as you have found out. At any rate.” He stood up and held out his hand. “Welcome to the club.”

 

THE END

if you enjoyed this, look for “Karlos Allen” on Amazon for my original Science Fiction.

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Ghost Ship

Ghost Ship

by Michael Bennett

The slender, fair-skinned woman forced herself to take regular breaths as she stood silently by her cabin door. She pulled back her shoulder length, black hair and pressed her ear against the bulkhead trim of the doorway. She remembered that the more solid the material, the better sound would travel through it. Hearing no footfalls or voices, she poised a finger over the button that would open the door. A sudden fearful shudder passed through her as she pondered what she was about to attempt. Summoning all her resolve, Doctor Elizabeth Parrington swallowed hard and depressed the button. Though she had heard the sound thousands of times, she was startled by the hiss the door made as it slid open. Clutching a black pouch as if it was a matter of life or death, she cautiously peered around the edge of the doorway in both directions. The hallway was empty.

She stepped out of the room and moved quickly toward the interdeck causeway at the end of the corridor. The causeway was a closet-sized nook that contained a triangular shaped ladder to allow emergency access between the decks of the starship in case the turbolifts were not working. Just as she reached the ladder, she heard the sound of a lift coming to a stop in a nearby turboshaft. Slinging the strap of the bag over her shoulder, she grasped the side rails of the ladder and slid downward as quickly as the ship’s artificial gravity would allow. As the view of the deck disappeared, the lift doors hissed open and she heard several boots thumping against the deck. Another surge of panic swept over her as she wondered if she had been seen.

All at once pain intruded to snap her back to her situation. The friction of her hands sliding on the rails burned as she descended, but she refused to release her grip. She knew that if she let go, the fall would result in broken bones at the very least. I’ve got to make it down to the Rec Deck, she thought. Only a dozen meters to go. I can do this!

The Rec Deck was what all the crew called her destination. It housed a gym with accompanying workout rooms and a small bowling alley, but it was not devoted exclusively to recreation, as its name implied. The Rec Deck was also the location for storage facilities and much of the air treatment system for the ship. A large arboretum with walking trails had become her favorite part since she had joined the crew thirteen months before. Elizabeth had been surprised to learn that a light cruiser could have such a facility. She thought that only the newer, and larger, heavy cruisers would contain such a luxurious feature. She had spent many off-duty hours along its paths enjoying her hobby of cultivating exotic plants. The walking trails were designed to give respite from the confinement of the U.S.S. Suffolk to the space-weary members of the crew of three hundred and seventy. Some young couples took advantage of the relative privacy of the trails for occasional amorous meetings. With the ship under Red Alert status, as it was now, she did not expect to run into anyone on the Rec Deck. Her plan depended on it.

After sliding as far as she could stand the pain, she found her footing on one of the rungs and began stepping down as quickly as she could. Her hands were burning so much that gripping the railing was becoming almost unbearable. As she continued her descent, she noticed the blood stains she was leaving on the ladder. I wish I had my med kit, but this buoy capsule is all I could fit in the bag, she thought. It doesn’t matter, though. There’s no time to stop and tend to my hands.

The events of the past day raced through Elizabeth’s mind. First there had been the cosmic storm that had blanked out the ship sensors. Then there was the encounter with the strange spatial anomaly and the weird form of space sickness it had caused among the crew. It had taken about an hour for the symptoms to appear among the crew. As a psychiatrist, she had seen forms of space sickness before, but this variety was unique. Every affected crewmember showed symptoms of extreme paranoia. They all were convinced that some type of unseen alien invasion of the Federation was underway.

Doctor Parrington had been in sick bay with three lab technicians and Doctor Wilson, the senior medical officer, when the ship hit the anomaly. They were in the middle of an experiment testing the effects of rare forms of radiation on organic tissue and were garbed in special anti-radiation suits. Evidently the suits protected them from the effects of the anomaly, as well. When they left the lab and saw the condition of the crew, they immediately returned and began researching to find an antidote. A short time later the captain ordered the crew to destroy a merchant freighter.

After several hours of work, they believed they were finally onto a cure, so they brought in an infected crewman for treatment. The drug that Wilson had synthesized seemed to work, but in the meantime Captain Schiver had found out what they were doing. He must have thought they were part of the alien plot because security troopers had shown up to put them under arrest. Doctor Wilson and the technicians had heroically delayed them so Elizabeth could escape with the data files and a buoy capsule. With all communications being controlled from the Bridge, they realized there would not be a way for her to make a transmission from the ship to alert Star Fleet about what had happened. Their only recourse was to put the data into a space buoy and jettison it from the ship.

As Elizabeth made her way through the passages on the Rec Deck, Doctor Wilson’s last words before she fled Sick Bay kept coming to mind, “Elizabeth, you must find a way to jettison that buoy and hope Star Fleet gets the message. There’s no telling what Captain Schiver and the crew might do with the Suffolk.” They knew that even a light cruiser could wreck havoc on other freighters and even unsuspecting planetary systems.

She finally reached the Recreation Deck and stepped quietly from the inter-deck alcove. Holding her breath for a moment, she listened for sounds of any crew members who might be present, but the only thing she heard was the usual rhythmic hum of the ship. So far, so good, she thought as she exhaled with relief. She wiped the perspiration from her forehead and brushed back her hair using the back of one of her chafed hands. Looking down the hallway from her position in the causeway, she spied her objective about twenty meters away. She glanced around as she walked quickly toward a gray, double-width door. When she had almost reached the door, a voice called out from far down the corridor. “Doctor Parrington, stop! There’s no place to go. Don’t make us shoot!”

She instinctively froze in her tracks. What should I do? I wasn’t trained for this kind of thing. But, I have to get into that room! She made up her mind instantly. Without turning to face the oncoming security team, she sprang forward. The doors slid open quickly to reveal a shadowy room beyond. Elizabeth leaped headlong through the doorway, arms and satchel outstretched. At that instant, the high-pitched whine of a phaser sounded behind her. She hit the floor and did a shoulder roll, turning and rising into a squatting position. A second phaser blast hit the edge of the doorframe and scattered sparks over the floor just as the doors slid closed. She heard boots pounding louder beyond the closed doors as she spied the control panel on the wall. The doctor sprang up quickly and punched the button to engage the locking mechanism. She knew it would not hold for long against their determined effort, but she hoped it would last long enough to give her the time to accomplish what she had come there to do.

Turning back around, she caught her breath as her eyes quickly scanned the room. The lights had come to full intensity and she could see several tables with stacks of folded uniforms on them. Large carts held disheveled piles of colorful, but crumpled, shirts, pants, and skirts. She also took in the large laundry machines lining both side walls, but she focused on her objective at the far end of the room. Swerving rapidly around the tables, she rushed forward until she reached a small red hatch imprinted with the words “Emergency Disposal.” A loud voice came from the hallway shouting something about an override control. She opened the crimson hatch and drew back the flap of the pouch she was carrying. From the bag she pulled out a black cylindrical container and placed it into the disposal chamber. Then she pressed a button on the container. Power on, she said to herself. Her fingers flew over the buttons on the cylinder’s keypad as she set a time delay for its transmitter. She finished with the settings and closed the hatch. Next she quickly examined the disposal control panel and found the command sequence needed to jettison the buoy. A few key presses later and she was rewarded for her effort by the sound of air rushing out of the disposal chamber into the vacuum beyond. Through a small window she could see the buoy tumbling end over end out of the chamber. She watched as the outer door of the disposal chute closed and the buoy disappeared into blackness beyond the ship. The task completed, she let out a sigh of relief and all at once seemed to lose her vigor. Reaching for one of the neatly pressed uniforms, she sank to the floor and coddled her bleeding hands in the soft fabric.

Moments later the double doors slid open and two red-faced security guards thrust their way into the laundry room. Seeing that she was unarmed and slouched on the floor against the wall, they lowered their hand phasers and approached. A young lieutenant followed them into the room. “Doctor,” he said with a condescending tone, “you’ve led us on a merry chase, but now the jig is up. My men will accompany you to a more suitable location.” Then to the two guards he barked, “Take her to the brig!”

* * * * *

Captain Rick McManus clicked a button on the right arm of his command chair. “Addendum to the Captain’s log. We continue to search for the U.S.S. Suffolk and the freighter that disappeared in this sector five days ago. So far we have found no trace of either vessel. The search of the area where the Suffolk last reported is complete, so we are proceeding to the sector where the freighter’s transponder signal was lost.”

The captain thumbed the button again to end the log entry and a yeoman approached with a report for his inspection. After glancing at the document, he initialed the tablet screen with a stylus and handed it back to her. Looking at the young brunette to whom he had handed the tablet, his steel gray eyes narrowed slightly as he tried to remember her name. “Yeoman Jackson, isn’t it?”

“Jones, sir,” she replied, flashing a cute smile. “I came onboard at Starbase Seven.” She turned away and headed toward the turbolift, tossing her long hair to the side in the process. McManus looked back toward the front of the bridge in time to notice the gazes of the helmsman and navigator following her every movement. He cleared his throat loudly as he ran his hand through his brown hair lined with streaks of gray and the two young men snapped around quickly to attend to their consoles.

I’m old enough to be her father, McManus thought, And I may have to act like her father to keep these wolves away from her.

The turbolift doors swished open and the yeoman started to exit the bridge, but quickly stepped aside to allow a tall, sandy-haired officer to exit the lift. Seeing the yeoman step back to allow him to pass, Alex Hampton quickly moved to block the doors from closing and motioned for her to enter the elevator. “After you, Miss.”

She was somewhat amused at the old fashioned manner of this officer, but when she saw his sleeves’ double braid that indicated his rank of commander, her smile disappeared and she stepped briskly past him into the lift. “Thank you, Sir,” she replied. He lowered his head in a slight bow and then stepped onto the Bridge, allowing the silvery doors to slide shut. Hampton moved to a vacant station where he settled into a chair and began calling up various status reports for examination. Satisfied with what he saw, he rose and stepped down into the central area of the bridge next to the captain’s chair.

“Find everything to your liking, Commander Hampton?” McManus asked.

“Things are ship-shape on the Yorktown, Sar,” Hampton drawled in reply.

McManus swiveled to face the officer and said with a wry grin, “Well of course everything is ship-shape, Commander. The U.S.S. Yorktown has a top-notch first officer who sees to these things. You’re a credit to your Citadel training on Earth.”

Hampton’s business-like expression betrayed a slight smile as he turned his eyes from the main view screen to his captain. Just as quickly, the smile disappeared and he pleaded in a hushed tone, “Please, Sar, that ceremony at Starbase Seven was bad enough.”

McManus studied his XO as he recalled the ceremony. “Well,” he lowered his voice in reply as he leaned closer, “you were the one who salvaged that near hopeless mission on Kratulla Three. It wasn’t my fault they decided to give you a commendation.”

Alex Hampton had served as first officer on one of the older Texas-class light cruisers for two years before being transferred to McManus’s newer ship. As XO of the Yorktown, he had honed his abilities on one of Star Fleet’s latest model capital ships through the second half of the war with the Kzintis and the months since. At just over six feet, two inches in height and thirty-eight years of age, he presented the image of a finely trimmed command-grade officer. He was personable and well-liked by the crew, but was all business when it came to ship readiness. The recent Kratulla mission brought to light his command ability under desperate conditions and Star Fleet Command had taken note. All he needed was a vacant captaincy and he would have a starship command of his own. He’s the right age for it, McManus thought. Thirty-eight. He has the best part of his career ahead of him. He’ll have plenty of missions to command, plenty of ways to make a difference.

“Cap’n, you’ve received lots of commendations and honors. How did you learn to put up with it?”

McManus shifted in the chair and thought quickly about his own twenty-plus years in the space service. Yes, he had received his share of awards and commendations. He had served as the only captain of the Yorktown for the several years since its inaugural launch as one of Star Fleet’s newest Constitution-class heavy cruisers. He had previously served or commanded on a variety of other ships and had experienced an array of the various types of missions that Star Fleet officers were familiar with. His certainly had been a full career.

“Oh, I don’t know, Alex,” he finally replied. “I guess when someone has been around as long as I have, you just get used to it.” He paused for a moment and then looked up at Hampton. “You’ll have to learn to get used to it, too. One day one of these chairs will be yours.”

With that, he rose and stepped aside. “As a matter of fact, why don’t you take a turn at it right now?” He lightheartedly motioned for Hampton to take his place in the chair. “I’m going to get something to eat and then drop in to see Doc Ainger.”

* * * * *

Dazzling yellow and orange glimmers of light shimmered all around the old cruiser, but no one could see it, no sensors could record it. Time and space had no meaning. From sentient being down to the smallest microbe, every living thing on board the starship existed in suspended animation. There were no thoughts of the past or present, no awareness of being, no knowledge of existence. The crew was like flesh and blood mannequins. Even the ship’s instruments seemed frozen in time, functioning, yet doing nothing. The ship seemed to be hanging in nothingness, a dimension void of time or space.

* * * * *

“Will there be anything else, Rick? I haven’t seen much of you since our stop at Starbase Seven.”

McManus shook his head negatively and then tipped the small cup to his lips to swallow the last of its contents. “Thanks for the tea, Niles,” he said as he set the cup on the table. “That was different from any of the other kinds of tea you’ve had me try.” Niles Ainger always seemed to surprise McManus with some variation of liquid refreshment.

The gaunt, older man seated on the opposite side of the small table in Sick bay sat with a stiff, upright posture. He wore a half-sleeved blue tunic with the Yorktown’s familiar triangular insignia enclosing the round symbol of the Star Fleet Medical Corps. Setting his cup gently on the table he said, “Arcturian tea is not quite the same as British white tea from my homeland, but quite refreshing, nonetheless.”

McManus studied his friend for a moment. Ainger’s thinning pure white hair betrayed his age as did the deep lines in his face. Too thin, McManus thought. Still, at his age, he’s in pretty good shape. “Niles, what’s your evaluation of the crew? How are they doing?”

“I should have realized this was not a social call,” Ainger replied. He made a casual wave with his hand. “Oh, they’re as fit as a fiddle. Perhaps a little stressed, but with what we’ve been through, aren’t we all?” Ainger rose from his chair, clasped his hands behind his back, and began to slowly pace back and forth across his office. “What with that business of the Aurora colony’s disappearance earlier this year, our assignment to search for survivors, and now this mysterious disappearance of the Suffolk and another ship, well, it may have taken its toll. Some of the crew had relatives and friends at Aurora you know.” The doctor stopped and studied his captain for a moment. “This isn’t about the crew, though, is it, old boy?”

McManus glanced up from looking at the intricate design on the antique teacup. “The Aurora colony disappeared without a trace,” he answered. “There was no sign of a battle. Star Fleet has no idea what happened. The only thing I know for sure is that I was scheduled to command an exploration mission and Aurora put an end to all of that!” McManus slammed a fist down on the table that rattled the teacups. Realizing he had let his pent up frustration get the best of him, he offered, “Sorry,” apologetically.

Ainger’s grey, piercing eyes studied him for a moment. “That’s quite all right. No harm done. Rick, do you think that exploration mission was to have been your last hurrah?” the doctor probed.

The captain’s eyes shot quickly toward the doctor. “I spent my career working my way up through the ranks and sacrificed having a family for a career in Star Fleet. I finally got the commission every command officer wants: the captaincy of a brand new starship. Then the assignment came along that every captain dreams about: a five year mission to explore the new frontier toward the galactic core.” McManus was silent for a moment, and then said forlornly, “All of that is on hold now because of Aurora. It will be years before those exploration assignments are given out again and I won’t be in a captain’s chair then.”

The doctor waited a moment before he responded. “Surely you’re not serious. Come now, Rick. Here I am almost twenty years your senior and out here amongst the stars healing the sick and curing diseases.”

“It’s different with you! You’re a doctor. I’m a captain. They don’t keep old men in command positions on starships. I’m seeing my best days now. This is the time when I should be out there exploring where no one has gone before. Who knows how many years it might be before they give the green light for those missions? I’ll be too old to captain a starship by then, at least according to Star Fleet Command.”

“There are plenty of officers with white hair, Rick. Now see here, I’ve been in Star Fleet Medical for well over thirty years. My word, I was working my way around starship infirmaries when the Federation Council issued that infernal Border Declaration.”

McManus shot a warning glance at Ainger. “Careful, Niles. That’s Federation policy.”

“So it is,” Ainger replied with a resigned tone. “Be that as it may, one thing I’ve learned about Star Fleet Command is that they put great value on men of experience. You and I have served together on three different ships and I know that you are one of the most experienced commanders in the fleet.” Ainger saw that his words were offering little assurance to the captain. “Perhaps I should have served something more robust than Arcturian tea,” he offered with a slight smile.

“I tried that once, Niles, and it just made things worse. Remember the shore leave after that skirmish with the Kzinti cruiser several years back? After I recovered from passing out in that bar, I decided then and there to avoid that kind of stuff.” McManus stopped beside a wall monitor that showed the view outside the ship and stared into its inky depth. “I enlisted just before the war with the Klingons because I wanted to make a difference. That’s what I’ve wanted my entire career. Everything is stagnant now. I’ve achieved all of my personal goals except for one. I want to command a long term exploration mission and have that ‘last hurrah’ as you put it. Make new discoveries, contact new species, test new technologies. But I won’t be involved in any of that now.”

After a momentary silence, the doctor switched topics and asked, “How is Commander Hampton doing?”

McManus broke away from staring at the stars on the monitor. “Alex is one of the best officers I’ve ever had, and that includes Bob Mallory. Alex has real promise. Just between you and me, it won’t be long before he is given a command just like Bob was. Hampton was considered for the Suffolk spot six months ago, but he wasn’t ready yet.” He paused and then with a sigh of resignation continued, “Maybe I’ve been too good of an instructor. Mallory learned the ropes and got himself promoted to a command chair. Next it will be Hampton. Who knows? Perhaps a teaching position at the academy won’t be so bad after all.” Seeing the surprised look on the doctor’s face, he added, “I haven’t had the chance to tell you yet, Niles, but Commodore Fleming mentioned it to me back at Starbase Seven. He said there would be a vacancy on the faculty in a couple of months.”

“Well, don’t give up hope just…”

Suddenly the intercom interrupted the doctor with its familiar whistle and Commander Hampton’s voice followed. “Cap’n McManus, sensors have picked up something you’ll want to see.”

“Thanks for the tea and the pep talk, doctor,” McManus called out as he quickly disappeared through the doorway.

* * * * *

“Holding position at 300,000 kilometers, as ordered,” Hampton reported as he rose to vacate the command chair when Captain McManus entered the bridge from the lift. “Transponder signal confirms that the other ship is the Suffolk.”

McManus had left orders to close to tactical range if the Suffolk was spotted and Lieutenant Tourquise, the helmsman, had done so. The captain settled into his chair and scrutinized the other ship on the main viewing screen. Though outwardly similar to the Yorktown, the Suffolk was slightly smaller. The Suffolk was one of the last of the earlier model Constellation-class starships still in use by Star Fleet. Most of the others had already been retired from mainline duty to continue service in various planetary guard defense fleets or were being refitted to bring them up to the Constitution class standards. Fleet Command had not made up its collective mind as to the fate of the Suffolk, so it was still being used for patrol duty until it could be replaced by a newer ship.

“Lieutenant Jhot, sensor report,” McManus ordered.

Seddi Jhot, the pale complexioned, dark haired Cygnan at the science station continued peering into her viewer as she made her report. “It was very strange, Captain. We had just left the first section of the new search area when sensors picked up the Suffolk behind us. It was not there when we were looking for it before.”

“No answer to our hails, Sir,” chimed in Lieutenant Adams from the communications station. “There is a lot of local interference. Long range communication is impossible. Short range is extremely limited.”

McManus took a quick glance around the bridge and saw everyone attentive to their duties. His gaze ended with his XO. As if knowing the captain was looking his direction, Hampton turned from his console and gave McManus a quick wink signaling that all departments were ready and standing by.

Confident in his ship and crew, McManus turned toward the helmsman and ordered, “Mister Tourquise, close with the Suffolk. Let’s find out where they’ve been.”

* * * * *

Duty and honor. Invaders! A captain’s duty is to protect the lives of his crew. Star Fleet infiltrated! Captain Carl Schiver tried to concentrate, but a wisp of confusion seemed to prevent him from focusing. It was as if there was something he needed to remember, but it was just beyond his grasp. Seated on the bridge of the U.S.S. Suffolk, he fought to shake off the bewilderment and tried to concentrate on the mission. What is the mission now? Everything has changed since the invasion. That’s it! We have a new mission. Invaders! Protect the Federation!

Star Fleet had been infiltrated. He could not remember how he learned this, but he knew it to be true. His thoughts raced back to their encounter with the freighter. All communication with Star Fleet had gone dead. The small merchant ship had been under control of the alien invaders. He had given the order to attack and they had obliterated it. Then the science officer had reported that the ship chronometers were not matching with signals from Star Fleet benchmark satellites. They interpreted that as a telltale sign of alien intervention through the use of the space anomaly.

And now they were suddenly and unexpectedly facing another Star Fleet vessel that seemed to have appeared out of nowhere. Schiver had immediately ordered the crew to battle stations and was considering his alternatives as he awaited the identification confirmation of the other ship. A few moments later the science officer interrupted Schiver’s thoughts, “It’s the Yorktown, Sir.”

“Comm, are they hailing us?” Schiver asked.

“Yes, Sir,” was the reply. “but there is a lot of interference.”

Schiver thought quickly. They’re jamming our communications with HQ. Schiver reflected on the situation suddenly came to a stark realization. “Bridge crew, listen up. That ship is being controlled by the alien invaders. It’s obvious they don’t know that we aren’t also under alien control or they would’ve come in with phasers blasting. We can use that to our advantage, but we’ve got to hit them hard before they realize what’s happened. Helmsman, prepare to move us forward slowly. Weapons, stand by to fire phasers. Do not arm the photon torpedoes. They might detect the power drain.”

As the helmsman and weapons officer completed their preparations, the first officer asked, “Won’t they be ready for us, Sir? That’s Captain McManus’s ship. He hasn’t been surprised too many times or he wouldn’t be where he is today.”

Schiver turned to the XO and smirked, “No, he hasn’t, but I have an ace in the hole. An old friend of mine, Alex Hampton, is his first officer and if anyone goes by the book, Alex does. That’s exactly what I’m counting on.” Schiver then turned to the communications officer and ordered, “Comm, raise the Yorktown.”

* * * * *

Ensign Leslie Adams slowly shook her head as she continued her attempts to hail the Suffolk. “I don’t understand, Captain. They must be receiving our messages in spite of the interference. They should have responded by now.” Adams was a young ensign not long out of the Academy. McManus was confident she knew the technical side of her job, but he wasn’t so sure of her ability in a crisis situation.

“Shields, Sir?” Hampton asked.

“Roger that; raise shields,” McManus responded. Alex knows his operations procedures. With that, Hampton punched the controls to bring up the invisible protective energy shields around the ship.

Jhot spoke up. “Sir, sensors are returning unusual readings about the Suffolk.”

McManus turned toward the science station. “Let’s hear it, Lieutenant.”

Jhot looked up from her console. “Parts of the hull’s molecular structure are in flux.” The puzzled look on the captain’s face demanded more explanation. “I cannot explain it, Sir. I have never seen anything like it before, but the sensor readings are confirmed. Some of the molecules of the Suffolk’s hull are phasing in and out.”

“Phasing in and out of what, Lieutenant?” the captain asked.

Peering at a monitor, she answered, “It is as if molecules are momentarily disappearing and then reappearing.”

“What would cause something like that?” McManus asked.

“Unknown, Sir. I am cross-referencing with the main computer.” She keyed several buttons that set the ship’s computer into a search of its massive database.

“They are responding to our hail, Captain,” announced Adams. “Audio only and very garbled. I’ll try to clean it up and put it on speakers.”

The speakers crackled with static. “This is Captain Carl Schiver of the U.S.S. Suffolk. Go ahead Yorktown.” Even though the voice was audible, the static refused to go away.

McManus leaned forward in his command chair and asked, “Is the Suffolk in distress, Captain Schiver?” The speaker gushed a massive blast of static and Adams quickly compensated.

“Not exactly, Yorktown,” replied Schiver. “We have experienced something unusual.” There was a pause filled with more static. Schiver continued talking, but the static rendered his words incomprehensible. “… has been contained, but there has been some damage. Things are taking a little longer to…” More static drowned out his remaining words.

So something had happened to put the Suffolk in this condition, McManus thought. The missing freighter may have had the same thing happen to it. He leaned back in his chair and leisurely crossed his legs as he replied in a more relaxed tone, “Captain Schiver, we’ve been looking for your ship. This is Rick McManus, captain of the Yorktown. I haven’t had the pleasure of meeting you, but my XO certainly knows you.”

As the Yorktown had traveled from Starbase Seven, Hampton had relayed to McManus how he and Schiver had been in some of the same classes at Star Fleet Academy. It was evident to McManus that there had been more to their acquaintanceship than simply attending some classes together, but he didn’t probe any deeper about it.

Schiver’s voice had dropped out again because of the static, but soon he responded. “We’re glad you’re here, Captain McManus. Though we haven’t met in person … static … feel as if I know you from reports I’ve read of your past … tell your XO to watch out for those manta sharks.”

McManus glanced toward his XO and saw that Hampton was smiling. No doubt the two had shared some adventure in the distant past with the deadly animals.

Schiver’s voice sounded from the speaker again. “Captain Mc … static … have a request.”

“Go ahead Captain Schiver. What can we do for you?”

“We experienced multiple malfunctions because of a cosmic storm … static … caught us by surprise. We’ve even kept our shields up in case … don’t want to get caught with my pants down again. Several crew … affected … undermanned in sick bay and engineering. Could you beam … medical team and an engineering team to help … get things under control?”

“Just a moment, Captain,” McManus said. He motioned for Adams to cut the transmission and then turned to the science officer. “Would the phasing that the sensors detected affect the safety of our people going over there?”

“In my opinion, no,” Jhot replied. “It is occurring only in small amounts and seems to be limited to the hull. Life sign readings from the Suffolk show normal.”

McManus trusted the judgment of his science officer. She had been a tremendous asset to the Yorktown for the two years since her transfer to his command. Coming aboard as a lieutenant in the science section, she had proven her ability time and again, finally earning a promotion to lieutenant commander and head of the science department. He had come to value her insight and advice, but had always thought it ironic that she was such a good scientist, considering her planet’s social background. He had never talked to her about it, but guessed that her upbringing as the niece and ward of the Cygnan ambassador at the consulate on Vulcan and then later at the embassy on Earth had influenced her a great deal. She was quite fluent in English and took her proficiency at chess very seriously.

By this time the Yorktown and the Suffolk were facing one another across a distance of a hundred thousand kilometers. McManus gave Hampton the go ahead to summon the required personnel to the transporter rooms, then signaled Adams to resume the voice link with the Suffolk. “That is agreeable, Captain. If you will hold station, we will come within transporter range for the transfer.”

The speaker crackled again. “Affirmative, Yorktown. We will be standing by for your signal … static … will lower a shield when you’re ready.”

The moments seemed to pass slowly as the Yorktown moved into position in front of the Suffolk. Adams announced that the transporter rooms had signaled that the away teams were ready to beam out, so McManus directed the engineering officer to execute the transport operation. The Yorktown’s forward energy shield had to be lowered first. Transporters could disassemble matter into energy, beam it several thousand kilometers, and reassemble it into its original matter pattern, but not if an energy shield blocked the process. During a situation that demanded caution, a starship’s shields were kept energized and transporter operations were not possible. The engineering officer reported that the forward shield had been lowered and they were awaiting the Suffolk to lower a shield.

“Signaling them to lower their shield,” Adams announced.

Seconds passed without any response from the Suffolk and McManus began to grow annoyed, but Hampton was the first to speak. “Why haven’t they lowered their shield? Did they receive our message?”

Jhot reminded everyone, “Captain Schiver did say that things were taking them a bit longer to do because of the damage they had taken.”

“Captain,” Adams said, “I have located the source of the subspace interference. It’s the other ship.”

Before McManus had time to process the information, six bright beams erupted from the phaser emitters of the Suffolk. The phaser beams played across the Yorktown, causing the ship to convulse as though it was being hit by a quick succession of punches. Emergency klaxons all over the ship erupted at once. McManus was almost thrown from his seat, but managed to keep his wits as he instinctively shouted orders. “Helm, hard to port and initiate evasive maneuvers! Engineer, raise that shield!” The bridge personnel quickly snapped to work in spite of being jolted by the attack. “I want damage reports and I want to know what in blazes is going on!”

The ship suddenly lurched and the bridge engineer called out, “They’re trying to tractor us, Sir!”

“Negative tractor! Whatever it takes!” McManus snapped back.

A moment later and they broke free of the Suffolk’s tractor beam with another lurch. As they began moving farther away from the pursuing Suffolk, the damage reports began streaming in to the bridge. Commander Hampton quickly evaluated the information and issued orders to damage control teams throughout the ship. Emergency medical teams were directed to take care of the casualties from the attack. The primary saucer section of the ship had met with moderate damage, but the cylindrical secondary hull that sported the two warp nacelles had been hit hard in several places. Power levels were down slightly. One transporter room and both tractor beams were out of commission. The biggest blow, however, was to the weapon systems. Five of the Yorktown’s six phaser emitters and three of the four photon torpedo launchers had been damaged. Top priority for repairs was given to the ship’s phasers. McManus examined the tactical display superimposed on the view screen and saw that they had successfully turned to bear a full strength shield toward the other starship and they were slowly increasing their distance from it. McManus quickly realized that this meant that the Suffolk had probably diverted some of its power from propulsion to load its two torpedo launchers.

The Suffolk’s phasers shot out again and the Yorktown’s starboard aft shield flared brightly as it received the concentrated phaser fire.

“That shield is all but gone, Cap’n,” Hampton relayed.

“Helm, turn to port and accelerate with all available power,” McManus ordered.

Several moments passed during which Hampton announced that two phasers had been repaired. The Yorktown continued increasing the distance between it and the pursuing Suffolk. Tourquise also managed to turn the ship enough to orient one of the port shields toward the Suffolk just before they received a third attack, this time with fewer phasers, but including photon torpedoes from both of the Suffolk’s launchers. Fortunately for the Yorktown, both the torpedoes missed due to the Yorktown’s erratic maneuvering.

“Port aft shield down to sixty percent, Sar,” Hampton announced. “No damage to the ship. Both the starboard and port phaser banks are operational now.”

“They’re out of our firing arcs,” McManus retorted, “but we still have more power than they do. Helm, match our speed to keep them from getting any closer. Weapons, start arming the one good photon launcher. Engineer, channel all available excess power into that damaged port shield and readjust it with the rear shield to bring it up to full strength. Adams, try to raise the Suffolk. We need some answers!”

The Suffolk again fired its phasers and further reduced the strength of the Yorktown’s shield, but the increased range and evasive maneuvers were having their effect to minimize the damage. The weapons officer reported that the photon torpedo was fully armed and one of the forward phasers was now ready for firing.

The speakers suddenly crackled to life. “So you think you can take over this sector?” Schiver exclaimed. The Yorktowns bridge crew traded confused glances with one another. “Well, this is one ship … static … get your body-stealing hands on! We’ll drive you back … anomaly to wherever it was you came from!”

McManus erupted. “Schiver! What in blazes is going on? Why did you attack my ship?” Static was the only response.

The Yorktown shuddered again as it absorbed another phaser attack in the weakened rear port shield, but this time one of the two photon torpedoes from the Suffolk hit as well. McManus looked toward the engineering station. “Another attack like that and they’ll punch through, Captain,” the engineer warned.

“Understood,” McManus replied. “Helmsman, use every scrap of power to increase our range. When we are far enough ahead so we can turn to fight, I want to come about and cease evasive maneuvers. We will fire everything we have as we pass. That old cruiser doesn’t have as much shielding as we have. We should be able to gain the upper hand and then find out why they attacked us.”

The Yorktown surged ahead and left the Suffolk far behind, then it banked hard to come about. Both ships rushed forward toward one another and moments later phaser beams and photon torpedoes flashed from each starship at almost point blank range. The forward shields of both ships flared brightly as they struggled to handle the energy unleashed against them. Suddenly there was an unexpected eruption of light around the Suffolk and it completely disappeared. Jhot blinked incredulously at the sensor readings on her panel. Then, just as suddenly as it had disappeared, the Suffolk reappeared. It was now located fifty thousand kilometers behind the port side of the Yorktown and maintaining the same heading it had before it disappeared.

Everyone on the Yorktown’s bridge was in wonderment at what had just happened, but Commander Hampton quickly recognized the danger of their tactical situation. “We’ve got to get them off our rear port shield!” he exclaimed. “It can’t take another attack.”

The quick eye of McManus saw the heading of the Suffolk and he ordered, “Helm, tight turn to port! Bring us in behind them.”

“They’re also turning, Sir, trying to get behind us,” responded Tourquise. The two ships had begun scribing large circular paths in space, but the Yorktown’s course was more compact than that of the other ship with the result that it was gradually spiraling in behind the Suffolk. McManus was puzzled by this because both ships had similar maneuverability. This isn’t a technical matter, he thought. Their crew is not performing. We’ve outclassed their moves every time.

“Damage report,” McManus quipped.

“Portside forward shield down to eight percent,” Hampton replied. “One other phaser is out, but damage control teams are trying to get it back online. Transporter repaired. They must be targeting our weapons to keep hitting them the way they’ve been shooting.”

“How about the Suffolk?” McManus directed toward Jhot.

“Their forward shield is down to less than twenty percent,” she answered. “They have only taken minimal damage.”

McManus frowned at hearing the damage report for the Suffolk. He turned to the weapons officer and asked, “Lieutenant, explain. We should have done a lot more damage than that.”

Lieutenant John Morgan, the weapons officer, seemed bewildered. “I can’t explain it, Sir. Our firing scanners were dead on target. We hit them with all our operable phasers and the torpedo. Their forward shield should be completely gone and they should have substantial damage.”

McManus did not like mysteries and they were beginning to pile up. He noticed that Lieutenant Jhot was ready with a report so he turned toward her and said curtly, “Go.”

“Two things,” she said calmly. “First, there is nothing wrong with our targeting scanners. I double checked them. Second, when the flash and subsequent displacement of the Suffolk occurred, it momentarily disappeared from our space-time continuum.”

Just then the helmsman notified the captain that they had succeeded in getting behind the Suffolk and had matched its speed and course. McManus ordered the weapons officer to alert the phaser crews to stand ready. The tactical display showed that all of their operable weapons could be brought to bear on the Suffolk. Though they were farther away than he would have liked to have been, at fifty thousand kilometers he gave the order to fire everything at the Suffolk. With the Yorktown now behind it, the Suffolk had no weapons in arc to fire back.

Destructive energy from the Yorktown tore into the Suffolk’s rear shield. “Hits, Sir!” Morgan exclaimed as he watched his monitor. Then in a more subdued tone he reported, “Their rear shield is down to sixty-one percent.”

“What?” McManus barked. “That shield should be completely gone!”

Jhot spoke up. “Perhaps the phasing effect is causing our weapons to be less effective.”

McManus rubbed his chin in thought. “Possibly. Helm, close to twenty thousand kilometers.”

“What if they pull that disappearing act again and show up behind us?” Hampton asked.

“We’ll deal with it if it happens. Right now we have them where we want them and we have to press our advantage.” The Yorktown was now right behind the other ship. “If we can maintain this position long enough, we should have time to repair another photon launcher and punch through their rear shield with a devastating strike.”

The Suffolk tried to turn to bring the Yorktown into one of its firing arcs, but Tourquise handled every attempt with ease. Soon another photon launcher was repaired and a torpedo was being armed. Another phaser was patched up, too, bringing them back to almost full phaser combat strength. As soon as the second torpedo was fully armed, McManus ordered both of them to be loaded to overload strength. He knew that they would fall behind the Suffolk because of the energy required by the overloading process, but it was a small price to pay compared to the possibility of bringing down a shield and gaining access by transporter. Just as the torpedoes completed their overload arming process he ordered everything to be fired.

The Suffolk’s rear shield fought the onslaught of firepower as it brightened, but then it faded quickly as it was overwhelmed. Just as Jhot was about to report minor damage spread throughout the other ship, the Suffolk was again enveloped in a blinding flash of light and vanished. It reappeared a moment later fifty thousand kilometers away, slightly ahead this time and off the Yorktown’s starboard bow.

McManus thought hard as he took it all in. The first time the Suffolk had pulled its disappearing trick, it wound up in a slightly better tactical position. This time, however, it was no better off. He wondered if Schiver had full control over whatever technology was allowing this to occur, if that was indeed what was causing the displacements. “Mister Tourquise, stay behind them. Keep our good starboard shield facing them.” McManus also wondered about the timing of the repositioning. Why didn’t he pull that trick out of the bag before we fired? Why wait until afterward? These were questions he knew were unanswerable at the moment. In addition, there was the nagging problem with the weapons. Why weren’t our weapons hitting with their usual effectiveness? Even though those photon launchers had been built by the lowest bidder on a Federation contract, he thought they were missing even more than random chance should allow at those close ranges. The phasers had also been much more ineffective. The five phasers they fired and the one good photon that hit should have dealt a major blow to the Suffolk. Instead, there it was, out in front of them, with only minor damage. Bad luck? He didn’t think so. Jhot has to be right, he decided. The hull phasing of the Suffolk was rendering the Yorktown’s weapons less effective. They would have to take that into consideration for all future attacks.

Because of the power diverted to overload the photon torpedoes, the Yorktown fell behind as the Suffolk sped away, initiating a turn to bring it back toward the pursuing ship. “If he’s got his wits about him, he’ll try to get on our weak port side before he attacks again,” McManus said. “Mister Tourquise, maneuver to keep him in front of us. If we can target through his bow, he’ll be vulnerable. He hasn’t had time to repair that shield. Mister Morgan, be ready to fire everything we have available on my order.”

As the Suffolk completed its turn, the Yorktown raced ahead to meet it. True to form, the other ship attempted to cross over to the Yorktown’s port side to get at its weakened shields, but Tourquise maneuvered the Yorktown to keep it at bay. Both captains realized the best shot they would get occurred just as the ships drew to a range of ten thousand kilometers. Two photon torpedoes and three phaser beams spat out from the Suffolk and four phasers lashed back from the Yorktown, its photons not having had adequate time to fully charge for firing. Both of the Suffolk’s torpedoes found their mark and, combined with the phaser energy, impacted the starboard front quarter shield of the Yorktown causing some short circuits in one of the research lab areas of the ship. The Yorktown’s phasers produced almost the same result on the Suffolk, but through its forward port shield. The Suffolk’s helmsman had been successful in keeping the Yorktown’s weapons from targeting through their weakened forward shield. Once again there was a bright flash around the Suffolk and the ship was gone. The bridge crew on the Yorktown watched expectantly for the other ship’s reappearance, but the seconds ticked by without its return. Seconds turned into minutes and still the Suffolk did not materialize.

“Now this is peculiar,” Hampton drawled.

Just when McManus thought he might have had a handle on the situation, something else unexpected had happened. Everything about this incident had been unusual, but he had to agree with his XO that the Suffolk not reappearing was stranger still. “Lieutenant Jhot, did they go to warp?”

“No, Sir. Sensors detect no trace of an ion trail. This disappearance seemed exactly like the two previous events.”

“All stop,” ordered McManus. “Keep a sharp lookout for them to reappear. Jhot, I want a long range sensor scan for any sign of the Suffolk.

More time passed during which Lieutenant Jhot’s long range scan yielded nothing new. After half an hour and no sign of the Suffolk, McManus ordered the Red Alert to be downgraded to Yellow Alert and for the ship to resume its search of the area. By that time all the weapon systems had been patched up well enough to be operable again, the shields had been restored to full strength, and damage control teams were beginning to do more extensive repairs instead of the rushed work they had been forced to do in the heat of battle.

Ensign Adams used the lull in the action to give the captain a casualty report from Sick bay. McManus paused for reflection upon hearing Adam’s report. He had been totally focused on the engagement with the Suffolk, but now the human cost demanded his attention. Seventeen had been wounded, but fortunately none seriously. A few suffered broken bones, several more had burns and bruises. Doctor Ainger had everything under control and was doing his usual excellent work in Sick bay. Adams also reported that the subspace radio interference had cleared up now that the Suffolk was gone.

* * * * *

Spacecraft wreckage was detected three hours later and the Yorktown altered course to examine it. The remnants of the missing freighter and part of a cargo container floated a few hundred meters apart in space, but more importantly, a log buoy emitting a very weak locator signal was discovered. The buoy was brought onboard the Yorktown and turned out not to be from the missing freighter, but was the one set adrift by Elizabeth Parrington from the Suffolk. The chief engineer was given the job of examining its contents and discovered that the buoy contained medical files, so he summoned Doctor Ainger. After both of them had gone through the files, they reported to the captain. He called a senior staff meeting in the briefing room, leaving Commander Hampton in command on the bridge.

Niles Ainger had met Elizabeth Parrington once at a medical conference and had been impressed with her ability and contagious enthusiasm. The buoy revealed that the Suffolk had encountered a freak interspatial anomaly in the middle of a cosmic storm. Within a short time of that incident, the crew began experiencing extreme paranoid behavior. Some of the medical staff was able to synthesize a test dosage of a drug to counteract the paranoia, but they were herded into the brig before being able to use it. Parrington was able to evade capture until she could eject the buoy from the ship. After the briefing was finished, McManus had questions.

“Niles, what do you think of their antidote? Will it work? And how can we disseminate it to their crew?”

“From the data she included, it seems as if it should work,” Doctor Ainger replied. “It would depress the nervous system and render the crew compliant. We can synthesize as much of it as we need, and it would be a simple matter of getting them to breathe it to make it work. It is a nonpolar compound and would vaporize quickly.”

“What about the automatic defenses in the life support system to prevent harmful gases from being circulated through the ventilators?” the captain asked.

“Oh, the internal sensors won’t recognize this as a harmful gas,” the doctor responded. “Anyone can breathe it with no ill effects.”

McManus had asked Lieutenant Jhot to analyze the data from the displacement events that occurred to the Suffolk, and she matter-of-factly explained that large amounts of energy discharge against the Suffolk were the cause. There was a high probability of a displacement occurring whenever large amounts of weapons energy was unleashed against the Suffolk, but the specific results seemed to be randomized to some extent. The first two displacements were very short, but the last one was triggered by the greater amount of energy that the Yorktown had used in its last attack. She concluded that there was no way to predict how long it would be until the Suffolk would reappear.

The captain had also assigned Ensign Adams to work with the chief communications officer to find a way to clear the static that had caused so much trouble. With Jhot’s data about the interphasic shifting, they were able to fine tune the equipment to compensate. This accomplishment had the added bonus of being useful to the transporter chief. He used the same modifications to make sure the transporters would be able to beam people to the Suffolk with no trouble.

McManus quickly settled upon a plan and rehearsed it with the staff. “If and when the Suffolk reappears, we will do just enough damage to punch through a shield, even if that means several repeated attacks with limited numbers of weapons. I do not want to trigger another displacement. If there are any shields not brought back up to full strength, we will aim for one of those. When a shield is penetrated, two engineers will beam over with as many squads of Marines as possible, gain access to the air circulation system in a sparsely crewed part of the ship, and dispense the drug in aerosol form through the ventilation system. After the crew is neutralized, we’ll take control of the ship.”

Alex Hampton was continuing to listen to the briefing from the bridge and thumbed the transmit switch. “Sar, I’d like to volunteer to go in place of one of the engineers. I served two years as XO of a ship like the Suffolk. I know exactly where we can flush the gas into the ventilators on deck eight. I know the layout. I was trained as an engineer. And Carl Shiver is an old friend.”

McManus didn’t want to send his protégé on a mission like this, but he couldn’t deny the logic of it. “Okay, Alex. Call Lieutenant Commander Stiles to the bridge to take your place while you coordinate with Marine Major Kranz. Pick an engineer to assist you.” Then to everyone in the briefing room, the captain said, “Our challenge is two-fold: to limit the weapons energy we discharge on the Suffolk, and to withstand point-blank attacks from them while we wait for the boarding parties to get control of the ship. Dismissed.”

After dismissing the meeting so the department heads could begin preparing for the task ahead, McManus went to his quarters. From there, he had Ensign Adams open a secure subspace channel to the sector headquarters. In the ensuing fifteen minutes he relayed to the HQ Commodore a summary of what had taken place and his proposal for further action. The commodore listened intently and, after asking a few questions, gave approval for McManus to go ahead with his plan. All Star Fleet Command would be able to do would be to transmit alerts to all shipping companies in the sector and order them to stay clear of the area. The commodore made clear that there would be no additional ships dispatched to render assistance to the Yorktown. The only ships in range were either days away or too small to be of any help against a ship the size of the Suffolk. More importantly, the Suffolk had become a threat to Federation interests and it had to be neutralized. Star Fleet wanted the crew and the ship back, but if that was not possible, McManus was to use any means necessary to eliminate the threat.

Upon arrival back on the bridge, McManus waited until all departments and sections had reported that they were ready for action and then made a ship-wide announcement. “This is the Captain. Our mission has changed from one of investigation to one of search and rescue. What each one of us does will affect not only our ship and crew, but the crew of the Suffolk as well. You have all been briefed by your section chiefs and department heads. You know that what the crew of the Suffolk has done was out of their control. They are still Star Fleet personnel. Now I must tell you what you have not yet been told. Our orders are to rescue them if possible, but our overriding directive is to neutralize the threat that the Suffolk poses to shipping and Federation installations. I don’t need to tell you what that might mean. Captain McManus, out.”

* * * * *

Over the next fourteen hours and two shift changes, the Yorktown plied the area as it searched once again for the Suffolk. The Alpha watch was ensconced at their stations on the bridge when Lieutenant Jhot unexpectedly announced, “I am detecting a ship entering the area.”

“The Suffolk?” McManus asked hopefully as he sat up from a casual position in his command chair.

“No, Sir,” Lieutenant Jhot replied. “It is a freighter.”

Commander Hampton called to the comm officer, “Lieutenant, hail that freighter and wave it off. Tell them this is a restricted area. Lieutenant Jhot, identify the transponder signal.”

“Yes, Sir,” Adams replied, and then went about the task of sending the dispatch to the freighter. “Unidentified freighter, this is the U.S.S. Yorktown. You are entering a restricted area at your peril. Reverse course immediately. Respond.” Once recorded, the message would be sent repeatedly until the freighter responded, but the freighter did not answer.

It took Jhot just a few moments to identify the freighter. “It is a small freighter named Woven Wreath. It is owned by the Stellar Shipping Corporation. It has a crew of twenty and its master goes by the name, Trave Jex.”

“Get him onscreen. I want face-to-face,” McManus ordered. He was clearly irritated by the freighter’s lack of acknowledgement of the warning being sent. “Helmsman, intercept that ship and take up a position directly in front of it.” I don’t need another complication to this scenario, he thought.

The view of space on the main screen was replaced by a view of the control center of the freighter. In the background of the dimly lighted room could be seen stained cups and soiled napkins on control panels. From the looks of the equipment, the freighter had not had an overhaul in a long time. Everything appeared to be unkempt, outdated, and messy. It’s just like a small, credit-strapped company to try to run things on a shoestring budget, McManus thought as he took in the display on the view screen.

A somewhat stocky man in his fifties entered the picture and sat down. He had an ashy complexion and sported a thick, dark mustache. He was wearing a brown, dingy jacket over casual clothes and, to top it off, had a platinum earring in his right ear lobe. Searching the control panel in front of him, he finally found the button he was searching for. “Federation Commander, this is Trave Jex of the Woven Wreath at your service!” he said with a piney voice and a broad smile that looked like it had all the sincerity of a Denuvian bat. “What can I do for you?”

McManus paused to quell his anger before he spoke. “Mister Jex, this is Captain Rick McManus of the U.S.S. Yorktown. I’m not going to ask why you didn’t acknowledge our hails. I’m simply going to tell you to turn around at once and leave this sector of space. Your ship is in great peril.”

Jex’s shoulders bobbled up and down as he chuckled. “Why, Captain? Are you conducting some kind of war game here? Don’t worry. We’ll be out of your way very soon.”

Shaking his head, Hampton muttered, “How long has he been at this?”

McManus was seething inside. He had rarely seen a civilian act this way toward Star Fleet authority. “Mister Jex, I don’t know if you are incompetent, or if you have some reason for what you are doing, but you had better turn your ship around now!”

Jex chuckled again. “Now look here, Captain. There were no warnings about any Star Fleet wargame battles in this sector when I filed my flight plan. You have no right to stop my ship. I am duly licensed…”

McManus cut him off in mid-sentence. “Jex, this is no game. This is a real situation and your ship is in the middle of it. I’m telling you for the last time to turn around and leave the area.”

Jex appeared to be stunned for a moment, but then his smile returned. “Captain, come now. Our sensors may not be as efficient as yours, but they would still be able to tell us if there were other ships anywhere near here. And that includes storms and space monsters. Now if you’ll just move your ship out of our path, we’ll be on our way and Stellar Shipping won’t have to report you to your superiors.”

Commander Hampton couldn’t take any more. “That cuts it! He’s gone too far!”

“Jex …” McManus began, but was cut short by Lieutenant Jhot.

“Captain, long range sensors just detected another ship.”

“It must be the Suffolk,” McManus replied. “What are they doing, Lieutenant?”

Jhot peered into the viewer at her station. “It is just sitting out there, Sir. No motion at all.”

McManus sent a nod to Hampton and the XO gave a wink in return as he rose and moved to the turbolift. The captain swiveled back toward the main view screen. Jex was still there, looking coy. “Jex, check your sensors now. Even that antiquated equipment of yours should be able to detect the other ship that just showed up.”

Jex turned and checked his sensor monitor. “Okay, I see the other ship. So what? Computer says it’s an old one. Is it some derelict you put out there for target practice?”

“Mister Jex, that ship you see out there is a threat to my ship as well as yours. I suggest that you turn around and make top speed to leave this area at once. If you don’t, I will personally see to it that you lose your master’s license and that you never set foot on even a garbage scow again.”

Jex’s jovial demeanor quickly disappeared and was replaced with an agitated look. “Okay, Captain, we’ll turn around. Your superiors will hear about this, though. I have perishable cargo and this is going to cost me a lot of credits.”

The view screen shimmered and replaced the freighter’s bridge with the image of the freighter in open space. McManus watched as the Woven Wreath slowly turned and began moving away in the direction from which it had come. After several minutes Lieutenant Jhot announced, “Captain, the Suffolk is moving, and it is headed this way.”

* * * * *

Carl Schiver was struggling to figure out what had happened. One moment they were in a pitched battle with the alien-controlled Yorktown, and the next moment they were alone and unmoving in a completely different location of space. Twice during the battle there had been a bright flash and, from his point of view, the Yorktown had displaced to a new position. He surmised that these aliens had some strange kind of new technology, but were having difficulty using it because in neither case had it put the Yorktown in a more advantageous tactical position. The third incident, though, moved his ship completely out of the area of the battle. They were now at the coordinates where the anomaly had first occurred, far from where they had been just a moment before.

His ship had taken a beating in the engagement with the Yorktown. The other ship was newer, bigger, and more powerful, yet it seemed to have trouble scoring much damage with its weapons. Another proof that the aliens aren’t used to human technology, Schiver thought. Still, though, it had almost been enough. Several of the shields were brought down to extremely weakened levels, but there had been little damage to the Suffolk itself. Schiver ordered repairs to be made to bring the shields back up to combat strength. He also assigned the science officer to assist the comm officer to try and find a way to punch through the interference that still blocked their contact with Star Fleet headquarters.

The repairs, combined with using almost all the ship’s available power, soon brought almost all of the Suffolk’s shields up to full strength. The communication situation was insurmountable, though. Schiver was about to order the helmsman to plot a course toward the sector base when a report from the science officer now back at the sensor station caused him to change his mind. A freighter had entered the area and was being escorted by the Yorktown. That freighter must be carrying something of vital importance to the invaders, he thought. He knew his duty. He would have to delay the delivery of his report to Star Fleet Command. That freighter must be destroyed. He ordered the crew to battle stations. No one questioned his orders. The crew blindly followed him deeper into the delusion.

* * * * *

Down on Deck Seven, Doctors Wilson and Parrington and three medical technicians were sitting in the brig wondering what was going on. A large doorway rimmed with bright force field emanators opened into the corridor, but there might as well have been a wall made of solid corundum. In addition, outside the doorway stood a Marine guard to add a final layer of security.

Doctor Wilson and the med techs were just recovering from the heavy stun beams they had taken in sick bay to give Elizabeth time to escape with the buoy. She had avoided being stunned by going peacefully with the security team that had captured her in the ship’s laundry.

Wilson was in his late forties, but was in excellent physical condition. Elizabeth knew he religiously attended some kind of class in the gym, but she had never asked which one. Still, the stun kept him from moving very freely. Sitting in one corner at the back of the room, he rubbed his knees and elbows trying to get his blood circulating more. Elizabeth moved from the other corner to sit beside him.

“I only wish there was something we could do, my dear,” Wilson said lowly, stretching his arms out in front of him.

“Maybe there is,” she replied in a whisper. Turning to one of the med techs, she said softly, “Tony, move between the guard and me.”

The tech nodded in acknowledgment and slowly got up. He began a series of long stretches, completely natural to do after awakening from a phaser stun. Alternating bending down to touch his feet with stepping forward and stretching his rear leg, he slowly moved to block the view of the guard from Dr. Parrington if the guard should turn around. The guard, hearing the movement in the brig, glanced back to see what they were doing and smirked.

“Hmph!” he grunted. “Now you aliens know what a phaser stun can do.” With that, he turned back to face the other side of the hallway.

With Tony blocking the guard’s view in case he should turn around again, Elizabeth slowly moved her tunic up slightly in the front and partially pulled a narrow plastic vial up so Doctor Wilson could see it. Then she replaced it and pulled the tunic back down.

“It’s some of the antidote,” she murmured. “I took one of the samples you made as I was leaving sick bay.”

“Good girl!” Wilson said softly, leaning forward with his eyes widened. Then he slumped back looking glum again. “What good is it, though? There’s a force field between us and that guard. Even if there wasn’t, how would we get him to drink it?”

Doctor Parrington’s face contorted into a frown as she concentrated on the problem. After a few moments she said under her breath, “Maybe he wouldn’t have to drink it, at least, all of it. Would a few drops work?”

Now it was Wilson’s turn to frown as he thought. “I don’t know, but I think it would be worth a try. If we can get out of here…”

“Hey, what’re you two yapping about back there?” demanded the guard. He had evidently heard something and turned to see the two doctors clustered in the back corner of the cell. “You, Doctor Parrington, move back over to the other corner,” he ordered.

She slowly moved back to the other side of the cell wondering how she could get the guard to swallow some of the antidote.

* * * * *

“Signaling Red Alert,” Ensign Adams said as the warning lights that were scattered around the walls began flashing their ruby color. The well trained crewmembers throughout the Yorktown hustled to their battle station assignments. “Lieutenant Commander Stiles reports the emergency bridge crew is standing by.”

“The freighter has raised its shields and is turning to move away,” Jhot reported.

“Let’s get underway,” the captain said. “Mister Tourquise, move to close with the Suffolk. Mister Morgan, ready with phasers.”

The Yorktown surged ahead directly toward the Suffolk and the other ship reciprocated. As the ships narrowed the distance between them to 200,000 kilometers, Jhot reported that the Suffolk had both its photon torpedoes hot and ready. The sensors also indicated that all the Suffolk’s shields were energized, but its number three shield covering its starboard-aft section was still weakened from their previous encounter. Captain McManus ordered the helmsman to maneuver the ship into a position so they could fire against the Suffolk’s damaged shield.

Lieutenant Tourquise directed the Yorktown to begin a short swing to port so it would be sure to come up on the Suffolk’s starboard side. The Suffolk did not attempt to outmaneuver the Yorktown’s move, but simply slowed down as if to meet it. McManus ordered reserve power to be ready to reinforce their own number two shield as they approached. As power was diverted to weapons and to reinforce the number two shield, the Yorktown slowed to match the speed of the other starship. Tourquise counted down the distance in tens of thousands of kilometers as he began veering the Yorktown back toward the Suffolk. Their battle plan seemed to be working flawlessly when suddenly the Suffolk darted forward with an extra burst of speed.

“They didn’t even fire at us,” exclaimed the weapons officer.

“Main and starboard phaser banks, fire!” McManus ordered.

Four energy beams shot out toward the Suffolk. Still no return fire came back.

For a moment McManus was puzzled, but then he realized what Schiver was doing. “He’s ignoring us and heading straight for the freighter! Helm, reduce speed, hard turn to port. Once on track, accelerate with all available power. We have to catch them.”

Tourquise operated his console flawlessly and the cruiser responded, but it had fallen behind. By reducing speed and turning to the limit of the Yorktown’s capability, they were hot on the heels of the other ship, but still fifty-five thousand kilometers behind. By turning left instead of right, however, they were still in line with the damaged shield they needed to hit. In the meantime Jhot notified the captain that their phaser shots had done damage to the Suffolk’s number three shield to reduce it to eleven percent effectiveness, but not enough to bring it down completely.

The Suffolk had been using precious power to hold its photon torpedoes, but it was still managing to shave the distance with the slow-moving freighter. Just as the oncoming Yorktown began to draw close, the Suffolk came within firing range of the freighter and let loose both of its photon torpedoes and fire four phasers. Vex returned fire with his two phasers, but both shots missed.

“Damage to the freighter?” McManus asked.

“Its rear shield has completely collapsed and it has taken substantial internal damage,” she said. “Its weapons have been knocked out along with almost all of its ship systems and a large part of its engine power. Its hull was breached in multiple locations. Another blow like that and the freighter could be destroyed.”

“Within firing aspect of their number three shield … now,” Tourquise reported.

“Port phaser bank, fire,” McManus ordered.

“Both hits!” Lieutenant Morgan exclaimed.

“Their shield is down,” Jhot relayed.

After Jhot’s confirmation of the Suffolk’s shield status, Ensign Adams pressed a sequence of buttons on her communication console and said, “Transporter rooms, initiate operation ‘Catlett Station’. I repeat, ‘Catlett Station’ is a go.”

The captain swiveled left toward the shield and weapons control post and said, “Mister Morgan, if you will, please.”

Morgan pressed a button on the console, checked a readout, and stated, “Shield number 6 has been lowered. Transport is commencing.” In the Yorktown’s transporter chambers thirteen battle-ready Marines, an engineering lieutenant, and Commander Hampton dissolved into sparkling columns of light.

* * * * *

Fifteen figures and two metal cylinders shimmered into existence in a large, dimly lighted room.

“Verify location,” Hampton whispered to the engineer beside him.

As the engineer used his tricorder to get a fix on their exact position, a Marine officer gave a hand signal and ten of the Marines quickly spread out to secure the area.

Looking at the tricorder screen and adjusting the controls, the engineer responded softly, “We’re on the Suffolk on Deck Eight in the recreation area. No other life signs beside those of our group.”

The Marine officer’s communicator chirped. He flipped it open to hear one of his men report that the area was secured. “Area secure, Sir,” he said with a nod to Commander Hampton and awaited the next order.

* * * * *

Back in the Suffolk’s brig the two doctors were still mulling over the situation in opposite corners of the room. The guard had interrupted the stretching of the three med techs and ordered them to sit down when the ship lurched from being hit by the Yorktown’s phasers.

Suddenly Doctor Wilson called out, “Guard! Guard! She has something!” Rising to his feet, he began frantically pointing toward Elizabeth. “I saw it! Something in her belt.”

The guard had turned to face the doctor as he frantically waved toward the female doctor. “What are you talking about?” he asked with disgust.

Wilson turned to cast a glance at the guard, then back to Elizabeth. “The stun must’ve done it. I’m free! The alien influence is gone. She has something! She showed it to me.” Wilson crossed the room and reached for Elizabeth. Tony jumped to his feet and began to move toward the two doctors.

The guard hesitated. What was he to do? Well, I have a phaser, he thought. “Technician, step back!” he barked as he pulled his phaser from his weapons belt with one hand while he reached for the force field controls with the other.

Wilson struggled briefly with Elizabeth and managed to pull the vial from her. “Here it is!” he shouted as he held it up and turned toward the guard. “I’ve got it!” he yelled, waving it back and forth.

“You try anything, and I mean any thing, and I’ll blast all of you with a stun setting that’ll make you think the last one was a hypospray,” the guard stated. The techs gave slight nods. Elizabeth still stood in the corner with a look of surprise. Wilson stood in the middle of the brig holding the container up for the guard to see.

The guard pressed a button on a wall panel and the force field emanators went dark. With the phaser raised in his right hand, he stepped into the brig. As he did so, Wilson moved toward him holding the vial in both hands as if presenting a peace offering. The guard reached out for it and too late noticed that the top had been removed. Wilson suddenly squeezed the sides of the flask and squirted a stream of the liquid at the guard’s face. The Marine instinctively threw up his free hand to protect his face and, during that moment, his vision was partially blocked. The doctor’s left leg flew up in a blur, knocking the guard’s right hand, the one holding the phaser, up into the air. The phaser discharged harmlessly into the ceiling as the techs charged out from where they had been seated. Before they could even reach the guard, Doctor Wilson had used some form of martial move to flatten him on the floor. Instead of recovering and quickly regaining his stance as his preparation had taught him to do, the Marine merely coughed and rolled slowly onto his back.

By this time, Elizabeth had moved forward to Doctor Wilson’s side. Seeing the guard unresponsive, she said to Wilson, “So that’s what you spend your time doing in the gym?”

He shot a quick smile at her as he motioned for one of the techs to get the phaser. “Never thought I’d ever need to use it,” he said. Looking down at the Marine whose eyes were still fluttering he observed, “He probably inhaled some of the droplets through his nose. He should be coming to soon.”

As if on cue, the guard blinked several times as he sat up. He shook his head hard, as if trying to clear his thoughts. Looking up, he saw the five people standing around him. “What happened?”

* * * * *

“Okay, to get where we need to be, we’ll go through the gym through a door over there,” Commander Hampton said as he pointed toward a side wall. “There will be a shower room on the right and an emergency transport room further ahead. There will also be a double door to the left that leads into the main corridor. We’ll need one man at that door and four more to check those other two rooms.”

The officer signaled for the other Marines to return and immediately sent a squad through the hallway door to secure the corridor beyond. He assigned another squad to move into the next room. In a matter of moments the five soldiers had entered the gym and, finding no one inside, proceeded to split up to secure the entrances to the room. That being done, the rest of the group picked up the metal containers and moved into the gym.

With one of the Marines in front, they moved through the gym until they came to the emergency transporter room. Hampton, the engineer, the Marine officer, and two other Marines entered the transporter room while the rest took up defensive positions in the gym.

“Okay, the air circulation equipment is beyond that door,” Hampton said, pointing toward a door in a corner at the back of the room. “It’ll be locked. We don’t have the time to cut through it with phaser torches, so we’ll have to blow it.”

“Right!” the Marine officer replied. He gave a nod to the other two Marines and they rushed forward to the door. They each attached palm-sized boxes against the top and bottom of the door, glanced at one another, and simultaneously pressed a button on each box. Then they stepped back a couple of meters to the side of the doorway and each shielded his face. Seconds later a small explosion blew the door away and an alarm began blaring.

“Let’s work fast,” Hampton exclaimed to the engineer as he picked up one of the metal cylinders. The lieutenant picked up the other and they headed through the jagged doorway. Once inside, they had to take time to locate two valves that the tanks could be connected to. It was large room and was filled with equipment and machinery, so it took time to find the valves. In the meantime, the sounds of phaser blasts and shock grenades could be heard from beyond the gym in the main hallway. It had not taken the Suffolk’s Marines long to pinpoint their incursion and show up to investigate.

After finding the valves that would serve their purpose, Hampton had no trouble attaching the coupling that would force the gas from his cylinder into the air circulation system. The lieutenant, however, was having trouble with the other one a few meters away. Evidently when the old Constellation-class starship was being upgraded, someone had missed changing a valve on this piece of equipment.

Hampton moved over to see if he could help. “Are there any more connection valves in here?” he asked the engineer. He shook his head negatively as he rifled through a kit he had brought with him. Pulling various tools and fittings from the bag, he was feverously searching for a way to attach his cylinder to the antiquated valve. Suddenly the lights in the room dimmed and the deckplating vibrated. Both men glanced at one another. The Suffolk had just fired its phasers and they had no idea whether the target was the freighter or the Yorktown.

* * * * *

“All reinforcement to the number one shield,” captain McManus ordered calmly. “Helm, rotation maneuver sixty-five degrees to starboard.”

“Aye, aye’s” rang out in response.

“Number six shield down to sixty-seven percent,” Lieutenant Jhot reported. “Their photon launchers still have not finished loading. Sensors show they have partially repaired their number three shield. We cannot transport any more Marines onto their ship unless we bring that shield down again.”

“Very well,” McManus replied. “Mister Morgan, fire port and forward phaser banks.”

“Aye, Sir,” the weapons officer replied as he touched the controls to fire the weapons.

Jhot was continuing to observe her monitor for the outcome of the attack and announced that the Suffolk’s shield had gone down once again with no further damage to the ship. The forward shield of the Yorktown’s was lowered and more Marines were beamed over.

After the transport was confirmed, McManus asked Adams, “Any word yet from Commander Hampton?”

“No, Sir,” she replied. Worried looks were exchanged around the bridge.

The reaction of the bridge crew did not go unnoticed by McManus. He announced in a calming tone, “Stay focused on your duties, ladies and gentlemen.”

“Sir, another twenty seconds and their photons will be ready to fire,” Morgan reported.

McManus leaned slightly to one side of his command chair and leisurely crossed his legs as he responded, “Acknowledged. All available reserve power to reinforce shield number one. As long as they are firing at us, they are not firing at that freighter.”

Though badly damaged, the freighter was continuing to slowly move away from the two heavy cruisers. It had also managed to turn an undamaged shield toward the Suffolk. Perhaps this Jex character is not as much of an idiot as he had us believing, McManus thought.

* * * * *

Over on the Suffolk a new squad of Marines had materialized at the same beam-in location as the first group. The Marine officer quickly ordered them to move back through the circular corridor behind them and work their way around behind the Suffolk’s troops.

As the squad moved the other direction, their point man came in sight of a lone Suffolk Marine who was evidently guarding the flank for his group. He spotted the squad and began firing his phaser in their direction, forcing them through a side door. One of them remained at the doorway, exchanging fire with him while the other four moved further into the room. They had entered a large arboretum that was filled with all sorts of plants, many very large. Several pathways branched through the undergrowth, but lines of sight down the paths were limited to a few meters at best. They split into two teams and began working their way through the labyrinth until they found another door at the far end of the room.

Two other squads from the Yorktown had been sent on hit-and-run raids to try and knock out the two photon torpedo launchers. One squad was successful, destroying a main power junction for one photon launcher and then beaming back out to the Yorktown. The other squad encountered stiff resistance. Two of the men in that squad were killed and the other three were stunned and captured.

The four Yorktown Marines in the arboretum finally converged at the other doorway and placed charges to blow the door. When the explosion occurred, two of them rushed through the smoking opening and were stunned down almost immediately by multiple phaser shots. The lone rearguard trooper from the Suffolk’s Marines had been reinforced. One of the two remaining Yorktown Marines called back to Major Kranz and informed him that they could not outflank the position, but that they would use their field of fire to prevent the Suffolk Marines from advancing.

There was a shout from around the corner and the whine of more phaser fire. The two Yorktown Marines glanced at one another. Had their comrades blasted their way through on the other side? That was impossible. A shock grenade went off and then there was silence. One of the men peered through the blown out doorway and saw two Suffolk men lying on the floor several meters away. Then someone in a medical technician’s jumpsuit stepped out into the open. “Don’t fire!” he shouted. “Come on out. All their men are down.”

The Marine eyed the insignia on the tech’s uniform and saw that it was for the Suffolk. “Who are you?” he demanded, still remaining protected by the bulkhead.

His communicator bleeped and he heard the Major say, “Area is secure. Advance to guard the prisoners. Kranz out.”

Giving a nod to his partner, they stepped into the hall and walked cautiously toward the technician.

The lab tech’s hands were empty and he was shifting around nervously as the two Marines approached him, their phasers leveled at his midsection. With a broad, but uneasy grin, he said, “Hi, I’m Tony.” Then they saw the Marines from the Suffolk, spread around unconscious on the floor. Two more lab techs were standing nearby along with two doctors.

“Thanks for the help,” one of the Marines said to the doctors. “We’ll take charge of these men now.”

About the time the shooting stopped, Hampton and the engineer had managed to connect the second gas cylinder and were ready to start the procedure. Just then another mild jolt sent a tremor through the room signaling that the Suffolk had again fired its weapons. Hampton gave a nod to his crewmate and then watched as he operated the control mechanisms. The gas began pumping into the air conditioning system. Hampton left him to watch over the equipment while he joined the Marines in the main corridor. He wanted to see the effect the gas was having on the Suffolk Marines they had captured. As he entered the corridor, he saw Major Kranz speaking with a man and woman whose uniform shirts identified them as medical staff of the Suffolk.

“What goes on here?” Hampton asked as he joined the group.

“This is Doctor Wilson, CMO of the Suffolk, and Doctor Parrington,” the Major said. “They and these three med techs were unaffected by what happened to the rest of the crew. They were being held in the brig, but managed to escape. They heard the intercom announce boarders on Deck Eight and decided to come and help us. I’m glad they did or we might not have taken control of the deck.”

“Thanks for all your help. I’m Alex Hampton, XO of the Yorktown.”

“It sure is good to see you, Commander,” Doctor Wilson sighed. “Now perhaps we can stop all this nonsense and set things right on this ship.”

“That’s why we’re here,” Hampton drawled in reply. “We found your buoy and our Doctor Ainger was able to synthesize a gas based on the data you provided. I’ve just now come from sending it through the environmental controls. We hope it’s clearing heads all over the ship right now. This wouldn’t be happening if it weren’t for you, Doctor.”

Wilson looked surprised. “Oh, it wasn’t me. Elizabeth, here, was the brave one who launched that buoy with the data.”

Hampton saw the blush redden her face and thought it was cute. “Well, ma’am, then thank you very much!”

Her eyelids fluttered as she held one hand in the other, cradling the lacerations she received from her slide down the ladder. “It was a team effort, Sir,” she replied sheepishly.

Two of the Suffolk’s Marines moaned as they slowly regained consciousness from their stuns. They were now breathing the air containing the invisible gas. As they came to, they had similar mind-clearing realizations just as the guard at the brig had experienced. Doctor Wilson quickly reviewed with Hampton how they had escaped and had left the guard secured in the brig with the force field turned back on in case the effect of the drug did not last. Hampton allowed for a little more time for the gas to circulate through the entire ship and then he used the wall intercom to call up to the bridge.

“Cap’n Schiver, this is Alex Hampton. Respond please.”

The gas had reached the bridge and was gradually having a head-clearing effect on the crewmembers there as well. Schiver heard his old friend’s voice from the speakers. “Alex? Alex Hampton? On the ship?”

“May I come to the bridge to talk to you?” Alex asked.

“Uh, why, yes,” Schiver stammered. “By all means, come up to the bridge. I’ll order my men to stand down.”

Hampton heard Schiver make the announcement over the intraship system for all crew members to stand down, so he entered a turbolift with two armed guards. The doors were about to close when Doctor Wilson put his hand over one of them. “Mind if I come along?” he asked. “This won’t be easy for the captain. My being there might help.”

Hampton acknowledged with a nod. “You have a good point, Doctor,” he replied. “Join the party.” Wilson stepped into the lift and the doors slid together.

It was a short trip to the bridge. The Marines and Hampton emerged from the lift into the control center of the Suffolk not knowing exactly what to expect, but found everything to be calm and unthreatening.

“Carl!” the XO said with a broad smile as he stepped forward with Doctor Wilson at his side. The Yorktown Marines remained by the elevator doors, phasers in hand. “I’m here to help.”

Schiver was standing by his command chair and stepped up toward the turbolift to meet Hampton. “It’s good to see you, Alex,” he said. Then he asked rather sheepishly, “Uh, what’s going on?”

Hampton waved his hand and shook his head. “That anomaly you encountered has somehow affected the minds of almost everyone on board. If it weren’t for Doctor Wilson and his staff, we wouldn’t have figured out what was going on. We beamed onto your ship and put a chemical into the air system that helped clear up everyone’s minds, but we’re not sure how long it will last. We need to get your crew over to the Yorktown for our medical staff to check everyone out.”

Schiver slowly nodded his head in agreement as his gaze drifted off. Then he snapped back. “Alex,” he began, then hesitated before continuing. “The Yorktown’s crew, were any, you know…” His voice trailed off as he turned his head away dejectedly.

“It wasn’t your fault, Captain,” Wilson interjected. “None of you were in control.”

Alex took another step forward and said gently, “Carl, we all do our duty. Everyone who signs on knows that. Now we have to finish the mission and leave this area.”

Schiver looked back at Hampton. “What about the Suffolk?” His concern for his ship was obvious.

Hampton smiled again. “You leave the ship to us. Our chief engineer has an idea that just might save this old bucket. First, though, we have to get everyone off. How soon can your crew be ready for beamout?”

“Within a minute, if necessary,” Schiver replied.

Hampton’s smile disappeared. “It’s necessary, Carl.”

Schiver slowly nodded and then stepped to the communication station ordering the comm officer to give the signal for emergency evacuation.

Hampton reached back and pulled the communicator from his belt. Snapping it open and hearing the familiar chirp, he said, “Hampton to Yorktown.” When Ensign Adams responded, he continued, “Everything is under control over here on the Suffolk. No casualties to report. Doctor Ainger’s concoction worked and the crew seems to be back to normal, but we’re not sure for how long. They are preparing for emergency beamout.” Ensign Adams acknowledged and relayed that the Yorktown was ready to receive the Suffolk’s crew.

“Alex, I should stay behind,” Schiver said.

Hampton shook his head. “No, Carl. You need to get over to the Yorktown for treatment.” Then in a more whimsical tone to take the edge off the situation he said, “Just leave her in neutral with the brake off.” When he saw that Schiver did not understand, he remembered that his old classmate had grown up in the Alpha Centauri system and was not familiar with many of the old Earth phrases. “Back in Darlington where I grew up, my uncle had a collection of ancient automobiles you just wouldn’t believe! I spent a lot of time as a boy in his garage fooling around with those old internal combustion cars with manual transmissions.” Transporter beams interrupted his story as Schiver and the rest of the Suffolk’s bridge crew dissolved for their short trip to the Yorktown. A moment later and crewmen from the Yorktown shimmered into existence to take up key positions on the Suffolk.

* * * * *

Ten minutes later, Ensign Adams reported that all of the Suffolk’s crew were accounted for and had reported to the holding areas that had been prepared for them on the Yorktown. The medical staff was treating them as quickly as possible with a stronger derivative of the chemical they had used on the Suffolk in hopes it would stabilize their minds permanently. Security guards reported that the original drug had worn off in a few cases while they were waiting for the stronger doses to be given. Some of the Suffolk crew had to be physically restrained, but the situations were under control. Captain Schiver was the first to receive one of the stronger doses and he had begged Doctor Ainger to clear him so he could go to the bridge. Ainger finally relented and Schiver received McManus’s approval to sit at the XO’s station to observe. McManus privately instructed one of the security guards to remain on the bridge and keep an eye on him.

Hampton and the other members of the skeleton crew remained aboard the Suffolk to secure it and prepare it for towing. After thoroughly searching the ship and powering down all unnecessary systems, the XO signaled the Yorktown that they were ready for the next phase of the operation. McManus took the opportunity to congratulate his first officer on a job well done.

“Thanks Cap’n,” he replied from the Suffolk’s command chair. “She’s ready for towing,” Then he added, “That sure was a weird experience and not one I want to have to repeat again. Firing on Star Fleet personnel is not something I ever thought I’d have to do.”

“Well, they’re all okay now,” McManus replied as he looked toward Schiver with a look of satisfaction. “We saved them all, in large part due to your team’s effort. Now we have another job to do. We need to get the Suffolk back to Starbase Seven. By the way, Alex, how does it feel to be in sole command of a starship?”

Hampton grinned as he glanced around the empty bridge where he was seated in the command chair. “It’s different, that’s for sure. With their crew gone, there’s plenty of room over here. I imagine things are pretty crowded on the Yorktown though, with their three hundred plus our four hundred and thirty.”

McManus returned the grin. “That’s why I’m staying on the bridge over here. Just sit back with your engines on low power and monitor your sensor readings. If you see anything unusual, contact us at once and we’ll break the tractor link. We’ll keep an eye on things over here. Yorktown out.” The captain swiveled toward the engineering station. “Mister Wallace, how about it?”

The chief of engineering, Lieutenant Robert Wallace, had come to the bridge to oversee the towing operation. “We’re ready, Captain.”

“Okay, Chief. We’ll engage the tractor beam and begin a slow tow. Lieutenant Jhot assures us that as long as we keep our power level at a minimum, we will not trigger another interphasic shift.”

A tractor beam from the Yorktown reached out and gently latched onto the Suffolk. McManus gave the order to begin moving and Lieutenant Tourquise responding by coaxing the ship into minimal forward velocity with the Suffolk tagging along behind.

After moving along for a few minutes at very low velocity, McManus said, “Helm, let’s try a little more speed. We might make it to the base by the time I’m ready to retire if we keep going at this rate. Be ready to ease off if anything unusual happens. Jhot, keep your eye on those sensor readouts.”

The Yorktown moved forward with more power and the Suffolk, true to form, remained right behind it. Jhot was monitoring the sensors and reported everything to be proceeding normally.

“Things seem to be progressing well,” McManus observed. “Mister Tourquise, increase speed to warp two-point-five and take us out of this area.”

The warp engines responded, and, attached by the tractor beam, the Suffolk continued to keep pace. Jhot reported that the greater speed was having no adverse effect on the Suffolk.

They zipped along for a few minutes. Then the navigator announced, “Approaching our initial entry point into this sector.”

Seconds later Lieutenant Jhot reported, “I am detecting an increased level of phase shifting in the hull of the Suffolk.” In an uncharacteristic display of emotion, the Cygnan science officer shouted, “Effect increasing exponentially!”

“Full stop!” McManus barked out, but it was too late.

Everyone on the bridge watched the view screen as the other cruiser pulsated with a brightening aura. Then there was a blinding flash. The screen compensated by automatically dimming, but everyone reactively shielded their eyes with their hands just the same. When the screen came back to normal brightness, there was nothing to be seen. The Suffolk was gone.

The silence on the bridge was deafening. No one spoke. Even the sounds of the instruments seemed hushed.

McManus finally recovered from the shock of what they had just witnessed and turned toward the communication station. “Adams. The transporter room. Did they…?” his voice trailed away as he saw her slowly shake her head negatively. “Lieutenant Jhot, scan for survivors,” he said stoically.

Jhot leaned over her station as she operated the ship’s sensors to see if there was anyone who may have ejected in an escape capsule, but the instruments showed nothing. After double checking the readings, she stood erect and turned to face McManus. He was looking expectantly at her along with every other pair of eyes on the bridge. “No lifeboats detected, Sir.”

McManus felt as if he was running out of options. “Keep on the lookout for a reappearance.”

Lieutenant Jhot used all her skill with the sensors to try and detect any telltale sign of the Suffolk, but to no avail. The Yorktown remained on location using its sensors to look for the Suffolk and the missing crew members far beyond the end of the watch for the bridge crew. McManus was observing not only the sensor readouts, but his officers as well. He particularly watched the Cygnan science officer. Though she had tried to adopt as much Vulcan philosophy as possible and merge it with her own Cygnan beliefs, she still was not a Vulcan and did not have their same physical stamina. Even Captain Schiver remained at the XO station doing all he could to help in the search, but he, too, was near exhaustion. McManus finally had to accept the fact that the crew on the bridge was tired and needed rest. Looking to Ensign Adams, he said, “Signal the Beta Watch bridge team and have them report for duty.”

McManus stepped slowly to the front of the bridge and turned to face the others. He sensed they were looking to him for strength. “You did your jobs,” he said to them. “Commander Hampton was doing his duty and doing what he loved. When the Beta Watch arrives, take some time for yourselves, but above all, get some rest.” With that he returned to the captain’s chair to await the replacements. As he sat in contemplation, his found his hands tightly gripping the arms of the chair. Fourteen crew members! he thought. And why did it have to be Alex?

* * * * *

The buzzer to the captain’s quarters sounded. “Come,” McManus said, looking up from the monitor on his desk.

The door slid open and Niles Ainger took a tentative step over the threshold. “May I come in?”

McManus raised his arms over his head to stretch and leaned back in his chair. He had not realized how tired he was until just then. He had put in two full shifts and had not had time to go to the gym for his daily workout. “Sure, come in, Niles. I was just catching up on my log entries. There hasn’t been much free time since all this started.”

The doctor entered carrying a swan-necked, cobalt blue bottle in one hand and a small container in the other. McManus noticed that he had his med kit slung over his shoulder. “You really need more light in here, Rick. Those bloody computer monitors. Everyone thinks room lighting is not important when they are looking at one of those. Do you have two tumblers?”

McManus suspiciously eyed the bottle the doctor was holding. “What do you have there, Niles? Is that a prescription for eye strain?”

Ainger chuckled. “Oh, no. Not this. It is good for other ailments, however.”

McManus got up, crossed the room to a cabinet, and produced two glasses. “Will these do?”

“Oh, yes, they’ll do nicely,” Ainger replied with a smile. He set the bottle and container down on a table and took the glasses from McManus. “Now raise the lighting and have a seat. Just sit back and I will prepare my prescription for relaxation.” He busied himself with pouring a brown liquid from the swan-neck bottle into each glass and then adding another liquid from the other container.

“What’s the stuff in the blue bottle?” McManus asked. “I don’t recognize it.”

“This is Saurian brandy. I it doesn’t quite look it. That’s because I added some freshly brewed Arcturian tea and honey. Now for the final touch.” He seemed to magically produce a lemon and a knife. After slicing the lemon in two, he squeezed the juice from each half into the glasses. He finished by taking out a micro thermal unit from his med kit bag and used it for a few seconds to heat each glass. Before sitting down, he handed one of the glasses to McManus. “We call this a hot toddy. It is guaranteed to bring relaxation.”

McManus warily took the glass from Ainger. Seeing the doctor gently sniff the contents of his glass as he slowly swirled it around, he mimicked the action. “Mmm. Nice aroma,” McManus observed. “Surely that isn’t all we do with it?”

Ainger chuckled. “By no means! You really need to get to Earth more often, Rick.” He raised the glass and said, “Cheers, old boy.” Ainger took a long sip as McManus watched. The captain then brought his glass to his lips to taste it for himself. Just before he could take the sip, though, the door buzzer sounded.

“Come,” McManus called out, lowering the glass.

The door slid back and Lieutenant Jhot stepped into the room. She glanced at Doctor Ainger and then the concoction he had mixed in them.

“Yes, Lieutenant?” the captain asked tiredly.

“Sir,” she began, “I request to return to duty on the bridge. I have been calculating algorithms to retune the sensors to help us detect the Suffolk and would like to test my hypotheses.”

McManus leaned back in his chair. “Lieutenant, it’s obvious that you have not been resting as I ordered.” He thought he noticed a pink hue developing in her cheeks. Using her personal name, he said, “Look Seddie, I know how much this means to you. It means a lot to all of us. Alex was not only a fellow officer, he was our friend. But you can’t keep up this kind of effort. You need to get some sleep. You may have adopted many aspects of Vulcan philosophy, but you are a Cygnan and you need your rest. There hasn’t been any trace of the Suffolk for two days and I’ll wager that you’ve not had a wink of sleep in all that time. We’re going to be ordered to move on with another assignment soon. Command will consider the Suffolk as lost with all hands who were aboard. I need you to be at your best for the next mission.” He suddenly found it difficult to envision a ‘next mission’, but he knew there would be one. There always was.

“But, Sir,” she started to say. Suddenly, though, the comm officer’s voice broke in over the intercom.

“Captain, we have another message coming through from Sector HQ.”

“The commodore is probably wondering when we’re going to report back with the results of our search,” McManus said to the doctor and science officer. “They want a science vessel to replace us and continue the search. I’ve been putting this off as long as possible. This is the second time they’ve tried to contact us. I know what he’s going to say.”

The captain pressed a button in acknowledgement. “Put the message through to my viewer here,” he said into the intercom.

The monitor brightened and the familiar laurel emblem of the Federation filled the blue screen. The captain entered his identification code and the message appeared. McManus quickly took in the words on the monitor. “Just as I thought. We’ve been ordered to break off the search and head to Base Station 31, barring any new data about the Suffolk.”

“Surely they’re not giving up on Alex and our other missing crew members?” Doctor Ainger asked.

“I don’t know. A small research vessel has been assigned to study the residual effects of the anomaly. It should be on station in three weeks.”

Jhot looked shocked. “Do you mean they are not going to even search for Commander, I mean, the Suffolk, Sir?”

He noticed his science officer’s dark eyes were glossed over with moisture. Until now he hadn’t realized how much she cared for Alex. He checked his tone and spoke softly, but firmly, “Seddi, get some rest. That’s an order.”

She blinked hard, preventing the tears from forming, and nodded. Without a word, she turned and left McManus’s quarters. When the door slid shut, Ainger asked, “Do you have time for that drink, Rick?”

“Sure, Niles. Sure. Time is all I have left.”

As Seddi walked down the corridor, a plan formed in her mind. The captain ordered her to rest, but did not specify when she should begin. She quickened her pace and turned toward a turbolift. She had seen the readings of the interphasic shifting in the molecules of the Suffolk’s hull. She knew what to look for. But she had to act quickly. Captain McManus would not tolerate insubordination, even in a situation like this. She could not oversee the actual sensor sweep. No, but she could record the event and use it as proof that Alex and the other crewmen were still out there. Somewhere. She entered the lift and when the doors slid shut, she turned the destination selection handle to Bridge.

* * * * *

A very young Ensign Kyle Rodderick was conducting a sensor sweep of the space ahead of the Yorktown as they prepared to go to high warp speed. This was his first duty assignment at the science station on the bridge. He had joined the crew just before the Yorktown departed Starbase Seven and was not in the regular rotation to man the main sensors. There really had not even been time for his section chief, Lieutenant Commander Jhot, to assign him any real duty at all. Therefore, he was not aware of what had actually happened during the incident with the Suffolk. Besides being drafted for damage control work during the encounters with the Suffolk, all he knew was from sketchy stories and rumors he heard from slightly more senior ensigns he had come to know in the days he had been on board the ship. Even then, he didn’t put much stock in their stories. He knew how it was with ensigns. They always wanted to make themselves look important to new junior ensigns and would say almost anything. He had stood around most of the time with a fire extinguisher and a radiation detector in a part of the ship where nothing had happened. With the search for the Suffolk and the missing crewmen called off, it was time for the regular sensor operators to get some badly needed rest, so he was assigned to the science station for the first time. He wanted to make a good impression, so he carefully examined the results of the most recent sensor sweeps. It wouldn’t do for the ship to run into an asteroid on his first important duty assignment. From his position at the science station, he overheard the watch officer, Lieutenant Commander Stiles, contact the captain to inform him that the ship was ready for departure.

The captain. Captain Rick McManus. Kyle had heard stories about McManus at the Academy. He was dedicated to Star Fleet and was famous for being a ‘by the book’ kind of commander. Captain McManus. Kyle hadn’t even met the man yet! The captain lived on the bridge or in the senior officers’ area. There hadn’t been time for a ‘meet and greet’ when Rodderick came aboard. And now that he had his first stint on the bridge, the third in command was the watch officer. Oh, well. Maybe if he performed well enough he could work his way into the regular rotation of the bridge staff.

Stiles had just given the order to the navigator to set the ship’s course when a weak blip appeared on one of the sensor readout screens. It was just a telltale signal; virtually insignificant. Confident in his own abilities, Ensign Rodderick was sure that no other science officer would have noticed it. He quickly verified the coordinates and discovered that the source of the blip was astern of the Yorktown. He had been focused on the forward sensors for their jump to warp speed and had only noticed the blip by chance. Still, it was unusual, so he began fine tuning the aft sensors when the signal disappeared as suddenly as it had shown up. Was it his fiddling with the controls that made the blip disappear? Was it instrumentation? He didn’t know. Realizing that he should not report an anomalous reading without verification, Rodderick rechecked the sensor readout, but there was no trace of anything behind the ship.

He decided he had time to check the aft sensor settings. After a few moments at the controls he discovered that they were out of calibration badly. He had never seen anything like that before in his classes at the Academy. It was the most unusual configuration he had ever encountered. Hmpf, he thought. That’s not like Lieutenant Jhot to leave the sensors in that condition. It’s almost as if she had set them that way on purpose. But why would she do that? This must be a mistake. She did look awfully tired. She had shown up on the bridge just an hour into his watch and volunteered to sit at the science station while he took a short break. He thought she had felt sorry for him because of the way she looked at him with those big black eyes. He had never met a Cygnan before, but had heard stories about many of them being empathic. First time on the bridge and his kidneys just had to act up. I knew I shouldn’t have let her spell me so I could go to the head. That was strange. I wonder if this is actually some kind of test? That must be it! She’s testing me to see if I noticed the faulty calibration of the aft sensors. She knew I would be focused on the forward sensors. Well, I’ll prove to her that I know a thing or two. After resetting the aft sensors to their default calibrations, he rechecked them and found everything normal. There was no trace of anything unusual nearby. He considered whether to flag the data from the blip, but thought better of it. His notation would be recorded as well as the bad calibration settings and, since it occurred on his watch, it would go on his record. He certainly didn’t want a blot like that early in his shipboard career, so he purged the data from the computer.

“Ensign Rodderick, what is your status?” asked Stiles.

“All clear, Sir,” Rodderick responded.

Stiles swiveled back to face the front of the bridge. “Helm, warp factor three. Enga…”

The lift doors swished open and Seddi Jhot burst into the bridge and exclaimed, “Wait!”

Stiles broke off his order and said, “Belay that, Helm.” Rising from the command chair, he turned toward Jhot. “Lieutenant, what is it?” Then he noticed the captain coming out of the elevator behind her.

“As you were,” McManus announced to the bridge crew.

Jhot had already rushed to the science station where Rodderick was still seated. She placed her left hand on the back of his chair and turned it slightly. With her eyes locked onto his ever widening eyes, she demanded, “Have you seen any unusual readings?”

The young ensign seemed frozen. He tried to speak, but all he could manage was, “Uh, huh.” And then the captain was standing beside Lieutenant Commander Jhot.

“It’s okay, Ensign,” the captain said. “Just relax and tell us about it.”

Kyle thought the captain had a fatherly look. McManus stood there patiently, giving the young man time to compose himself. “Well, Sir, I mean, Ma’am, there was a ghost mass reading from the aft sensors. You know, one of those readings that appear and then, when you check them, they’re gone. I thought it was strange, so I checked the calibration. What did you do to the settings, Ma’am?”

“Never mind about what I did. Go on,” Seddi gasped.

“Well, Ma’am, I thought you were testing me, you know, to see if I was on the ball and noticed how badly out of alignment the aft sensor settings were, so I reset them.”

“Was there any more trace of that ‘ghost’ mass reading, as you put it?” she asked him.

Rodderick smiled broadly, “No, Ma’am! Those sensors are set correctly now.”

Seddi straightened and turned to the captain. “You see, Sir. My calculations were correct. There was a reading. We can find them!”

McManus rubbed his chin in thought and slowly began to nod. “Commander Hampton on a ghost ship. Hmpf. Very well, Lieutenant. We’ll contact Star Fleet Command and inform them that we have positive proof that the Suffolk and our towing crew are still out there. I’m sure they will grant permission for us to remain on station and continue our search because of the new data we have.” Turning to his left, he said, “Mister Stiles, if you don’t mind, I’ll take the conn for awhile. I’d like you to make preparations with Major Kranz for boarding rescue teams once we find the Suffolk.”

“Of course, Sir,” Stiles replied and then exited the bridge by means of the turbolift.

Turning back to Jhot in a hushed voice, McManus said, “Seddi, I want you to fill in the Ensign on what you did. He might learn a thing or two.” He finished with a wink to her. Then, looking at the young ensign, he asked more loudly, “By the way, son, what’s your name?”

“Kyle Rodderick, Sir,” he replied with a gulp.

“Well, Ensign Rodderick, you did a fine job. Work with Lieutenant Jhot on those sensors and report when you have them recalibrated. We have a ship to find and some fellow crewmen to rescue.”

“Yes, Sir!” Rodderick exclaimed, his emotions suddenly going from fear of lousing up Lieutenant Jhot’s sensor adjustments to elation at being commended by the captain. Not only did he get to meet the captain, but now he would be working on the bridge with Captain McManus in the command chair and also alongside the head of the science section. What a first watch this turned out to be!

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A Death In The Family

A DEATH IN THE FAMILY

The Breen ships decloaked in Earth orbit. Defensive platforms over the Western Hemisphere suffered massive power drains right as the ships appeared. The first salvos were on their way to the surface before Starfleet Command even knew the Breen were there. Emergency shields protected many of the intended targets. Many, but not all. Paris, Moscow, Nairobi and Beijing were spared. Geneva’s system was in an unfortunate maintenance cycle. 300,000 died. Mexico City suffered a near-miss that disturbed the fault line running underneath it. 45,000 died in the resultant quakes before geo-stabilizers could be activated to dissipate the stresses. And in San Francisco a Changeling infiltrator managed to take the security shield completely offline. Half a million perished in the first ten seconds of the attack. It was December 24, 2375. Christmas would not be a merry occasion.

Rear Admiral Owen Paris could barely see through all of the dust and smoke rising up from the ruins of Starfleet Headquarters. Massive sections of the vast complex were nothing more than rubble and fires had far out-stripped the remaining fire suppression systems. He rubbed his face to get some of the dust out of his eyes and his hand came away bloody. It was only a minor head wound and he dismissed it from his mind. He’d gotten lucky. When the attack hit he’d just left the Admiralty and was crossing the open plaza in front of it. Admirals Cox, Vushu and n’Battar hadn’t been nearly as fortunate. They had still been in conference on the top floor of the fifteen story building. What was left of the Admiralty now stood only two stories high. He made his way over to the wreckage and began searching for survivors.

Superintendent Bell, Head of Starfleet Academy, stared at Pike Memorial Hall in horror, unnoticed tears running down her face. The building had taken a direct hit and black, gritty smoke billowed out of the hole in the roof. She knew what that smoke was made of. Some of the cadets who’d chosen to remain on campus during the holiday break had put together a Christmas choral performance for their fellow students. It had been in full swing at the Hall when the attack began, attended by hundreds. In shock, dazed and slightly sickened by the odor of burning meat that hung in the air, she stumbled backwards. Her legs bumped against one of the stone benches that were scattered throughout the Academy gardens and she sat down abruptly. Tearing her eyes away from the soul-searing view in front of her, she looked instead at the gardens for a moment of peace amidst the chaos. She saw a chunk of masonry crushing flowers in a nearby flower bed. “Boothby isn’t going to be too happy about that,’” an incongruous part of her mind thought.

Picard sat in his darkened Ready Room, hands on his knees. He was facing his fish tank but he didn’t see it. He was seeing instead, over and over, the fire from the infiltrated Orbital Defense Platform as it tore ship after ship apart. In his mind’s eye the scene was backlit by the detonations on the Earth’s surface from the Breen bombardment. Again he saw the Choctaw moving in support of Enterprise as they attempted to silence the Platform’s traitorous guns. Again he watched helplessly as Enterprise’s sister ship, mortally wounded, rammed the satellite to finally silence it. Whole families had died in that moment. The Choctaw had only been in the Sol system to drop off dependents in accordance with the War Footing directive. Children had given their lives so that soldiers aboard other ships would live. His black reverie was broken by a chirp from his combadge.

“Picard here.”

“Captain, the preliminary casualty reports are coming in from Starfleet Command.” Riker’s voice sounded strained. “I’m forwarding them to your desk now.” Picard nodded his head dismally, although there was no one to see.

“Very good, Number One,” he replied, turning to his screen. He began to run through the depressing litany until one name caught his eye in passing. He hurriedly scrolled back up and then stopped. He rocked back in his chair, stunned. “Dear God, no!” he whispered.

A FEW HOURS BEFORE…

Superintendent Bell was addressing a mixed group of cadets and faculty on the Academy parade grounds.

“…and Enterprise have all begun beaming down every last person they can spare for S&R. The Rainier, The Cochrane and The Lao Chin have sent every geology expert they have to Mexico City to begin inspection of the geo-stabilizers. They’ll need to make sure the initial quake didn’t damage them as we’re expecting aftershocks for some time to come. Emergency medical facilities have been established in the bays of Tucker Memo-“

“Commodore Bell! Commodore Bell!” The Bolian cadet ran up to her, panting and gasping.

“What is it, Cadet?” Bell asked.

The girl got her breathing under control. “Captain Murat needs you to meet him over by the Mess Hall. North entrance. He said it was important.”

Bell nodded to her. “Ok, Cadet. I’ll have Enterprise beam me over.” Raising her voice, she called out to the assembled crowd, “You have your assignments, people! Get a move on!” Tapping her combadge she said, “Bell to Enterprise, I need a sight-to-sight transport to the north entrance of the Academy Mess Hall.”

A distant voice replied, “Yes, Commodore.”

She dematerialized, only to re-appear a fraction of a second later in the midst of a somber cluster of Fleet personnel. No one spoke as she strode over to Captain Murat. His usually bland Vulcan expression was overlaid with a mask of stone. Before she could speak he pointed towards the crumbled ruin of the entranceway. She looked towards the body half-buried in the doorway. The tears that she’d been holding back through grim necessity suddenly doubled their efforts to burst forth. Her knees wavered momentarily and she felt Murat’s hand on her shoulder, steadying her. She covered her face with her hands in grief.

DEEP SPACE 9, NEAR BAJOR…

The Promenade usually bustled with activity and echoed with voices but as the news came in quiet groups of people huddled around the communication screens on the walls. No one hawked their wares, nobody shopped, no one played the role of gawking tourist. They all just watched the Starfleet News Service broadcast from Earth. In his office Sisko watched along with everyone else. A young, blond Human female was speaking.

“And now we go live to the parade grounds at Starfleet Academy where Admiral Owen Paris is about to make a statement about this morning’s attack.” The camera panned towards a podium set up on a small riser. It was an hour or two before sunset and Paris was bathed in golden light. He was flanked on one side by the UFP flag, on the other by the flag of Earth. Sisko noticed that he had a bandage, like a misplaced eye patch, above one eye.

“At seven forty-five a.m. Pacific time five Breen ships de-cloaked in Earth orbit. With the help of a Changeling infiltrator on board one of our Orbital Defense Platforms they attacked the cities of Earth. Although nearby Starfleet vessels responded immediately, the Breen vessels were able to get off several rounds each. This was due in part to the weapons fire of the subverted ODP, which held our ships off for crucial seconds. The platform was finally destroyed when Captain Setahl of the USS Choctaw sacrificed his ship and crew to remove the threat.” Sisko heard a wail come through his doors from Ops. Flipping the broadcast to ‘Mute’, he went to investigate.

What he saw surprised him. Ezri Dax, one of his most resilient officers, was crumpled into a heap behind the Tactical station sobbing uncontrollably. Kira was trying to comfort her although that wasn’t really one of her strengths.

“What happened to her?” Sisko asked, bewildered.

“I don’t know,” Kira replied, “She was going over the preliminary casualty reports, checking for relatives of station personnel and….” She trailed off, still kneeling next to Dax. Sisko cocked his head slightly and stepped over to Dax’s console. The listing Dax had been looking at was still on the screen, paused. He examined it for a moment, then his eyes widened with surprise. “Boothby,” he breathed. Dax just kept crying in Kira’s arms.

*****************
Sisko was looking up at the hulking Klingon on the Ops viewscreen. Dax stood next to him.

“General Martok, while we’re gone you’ll be in command of all defensive forces in this sector. All offensive operations have been suspended for the next few days to accommodate the volume of temporary leaves requested. I hope you understand, with so many command-level officers absent any Federation vessels you call on are likely being run by junior officers. Although generally competent, few if any of them have reached the level of ‘miracle worker’ yet. Starfleet is going to be relying on the Klingon Defense Force to hold the line.”

Martok nodded sagely at him. “I’m aware of the conditions I’ll be operating under. I promise you, Captain, we’ll still be here when you return.”

Sisko gave one of his famous grins. “Thank you, General. You’ve put my mind at ease.” He started to turn away but Martok wasn’t finished.

“Captain Sisko, if I may.” Sisko paused and looked back at him. “Captain, what is so special about this man that Starfleet would allow so many of their command officers to leave the line in a time of war to attend his funereal? It is my understanding he was just a lowly gardener.”

Sisko glanced at Dax and she gave him a sad smile. “General, he was just a ‘lowly gardener’, as you put it, but the flowers and plants he nurtured walk amongst the stars.”

Martok gave him a long, thoughtful stare. “As you say, Captain. May he find his place amongst the honored dead in Sto-vo-kor.”

“Thank you, General. Sisko out.” When the screen went dark he turned to Dax. “Get O’Brien and meet me aboard the Defiant. I have to say good bye to Jake.”

“Yes, Benjamin.” She headed for the lift. Sisko sighed and picked up the small valise resting on the floor near his feet.

“Major Kira.” She glanced over at him. “The station is yours. We’ll see you in a few days.” She nodded. He took a last look around and went to the lift himself.

CARDASSIAN CENTRAL COMMAND, CARDASSIA PRIME

Gul Damar strode into the meeting room. Weyoun and Gul Dukat were already there waiting for him.

“What do you have for us, Damar?” Dukat sounded slightly bored.

“Our listening posts along the Federation border have been picking up some unusual intel over the last couple of days.”

Weyoun’s eyes narrowed. “Unusual how, Damar?” he asked. Dukat looked more attentive.

“There’s been a high amount of traffic between Starfleet vessels pertaining to someone or something called ‘Boothby’. We’ve caught a few unencoded messages and the question ‘Are you going to the funeral?’ is common to all of them. Also, the Obsidian Order reports that a number of starship captains have left their commands to return to Earth, often taking their second-in-commands with them. Starfleet as a whole has instituted a defensive posture along the entire border of conflict and we haven’t had a single report of an incursion by Federation forces in two days. Interestingly enough, the Klingons have actually increased their reinforcement of the Federation line.”

“Boothby?” Weyoun asked. “That is interesting. I am familiar with the more prominent individuals in Starfleet and Federation circles but I’ve never heard of this ‘Boothby’. What do you make of it, Dukat?”

“Well, after the Breen attack the Earthers are certainly busy arranging funerals about now but I can’t say I’ve encountered anyone named ‘Boothby’ either. What worries me is this shifting of Federation forces, not to mention the increased Klingon presence. And why would Starfleet recall so many top officers all at once? It doesn’t make sense.”

“Perhaps,” Weyoun said slowly, “The Federation was more shaken up by the Breen joining us than we expected. This change in posture could be the first steps towards a negotiated end to the hostilities. I think I might send a message through the Romulans to the Federation President asking if they would like to sue for peace.”

“There is another possibility,” interjected Dukat. “This phrase, ‘Are you going to the funeral?’ could be a code itself. What if they are about to deploy some radical new technology or weapon? It would make sense to recall their top officers in order to train them on its usage. Having the Klingons hold things together while they do this also seems reasonable.” Weyoun and Dumar both looked as though they had bitten into something sour.

“I hate to say it, Dukat,” said Weyoun, “But you could be right.” Addressing Damar, he continued, “You might want to have the Order reach out to their contacts in the Orion Syndicate. See what they can find out about this ‘Boothby’. In the meantime, I will consult with the Founders to find out what, if anything, they may want to do about all of this.” He exited the room.

Damar looked at Dukat. “I hope you’re wrong and this turns out to be nothing in the end.”

“As do I, Dumar, as do I.”

STARFLEET ACADEMY, DECEMBER 27TH, 2375

Earlier in the day there had been a memorial service for Boothby on the parade grounds. That had been the only place large enough to accommodate all of the Starfleet personnel that had attended. Admirals and ensigns, cadets and captains had all taken a few moments to relate anecdotes and stories of Boothby and their encounters with him during their time at the Academy. For the actual funeral, though, attendance had been restricted to those of commanders’ rank and above because it was being held in the Academy gardens. Command didn’t want hordes of people disrespectfully trampling Boothby’s flowers. Even so, there had to be at least a hundred people at the Grand Pavilion for the actual service. A grave had been dug in the meadow that encircled the Pavilion and Boothby’s casket, a wooden one, rested beside it. The meadow itself was ringed with trees, most of which Boothby had planted.

Riker looked around at the assembled funeral party. “Quite an impressive turnout,” he thought. From where he was standing he could see a number of renowned captains, including Jellico, De Soto, Ramirez, Solok and Z’aheva. All bordered on the status of “Living Legends” in most people’s minds. Riker wasn’t sure if he’d ever seen so many admirals in one place at one time, either. Admiral Nechayev was standing at the head of the coffin preparing to perform the eulogy. Paris, Ross and Savar were near her. Even Admiral N’gana, the former Head of Starfleet, was there despite having been retired for the last twenty or so years. Riker caught a glimpse of Worf in the crowd. Instead of the Klingon uniform he wore on detached duty with the KDF he had on Starfleet dress. “I’ll have to look him up after the service,” Riker noted to himself. Nechayev cleared her throat and the quiet murmuring of the crowd subsided. As she opened her mouth to speak a robed figure stepped through the tree line and into the meadow. The robe was a plain, off-white color and loose enough that the hood and sleeves hid any distinguishing features as the person strode towards the gathered assembly. Everyone waited until who ever it was had crossed the field to stand in front of Nechayev. The figure slowly drew back its hood and a collective gasp arose. Riker’s eyes widened in surprise.

“I, too, was a friend of Boothby’s many years ago. I would be honored, Admiral, if you would permit me to speak,” said Ambassador Spock. Mutely, as if afraid to say anything, Alynna Nechayev nodded her permission and stepped aside. She understood exactly what it had taken for him to come there all of the way from Romulus. Spock replaced her at the head of the casket and lifted his face to address everyone before him.

“While we are mourning the loss of our friend, others are rejoicing to meet him behind the veil. He who has gone, so we but cherish his memory, abides with us, more potent, nay, more present than the living man. To live in hearts we leave behind is not to die. What we have done for others and the world remains and is immortal.”

Spock looked at the many officers around him. “Years ago, when I taught at this Academy, I would walk the gardens during the breaks between classes. On many occasions I noticed one of the gardeners chatting with various students. I finally spoke with him one day and asked him why they stopped to converse. He told me that the pressures of acquiring their education sometimes forced the young people into situations where they made bad decisions or could not decide at all. He said the students sometimes found his perspective useful, since it was so different from theirs. When I asked him what this difference was he said,” Here Spock closed his eyes, remembering,

“Mr. Spock, all of these kids are eager to get their education over with and get out into space. They rush to their classes, they rush to finish school and they rush out into the great unknown. Sometimes they rush right into the arms of trouble. They aren’t necessarily bad kids but anyone can make a bad decision when they’re in a hurry. I grow things. When you grow things there is no rushing the process, so I tend to take the long view. You need to have patience, too. I guess those traits make me a good listener. I know from years of experience that it makes me see things these kids don’t. So when they come to me with a problem I try to help. Sometimes they don’t come to me. I get around this campus and I see a lot of what is going on. Call me nosy, if you want. If I see someone with a problem I’m not afraid to butt in and give them a piece of un-asked for advice.”

Spock opened his eyes. “Some time later I found myself with a difficult situation and I brought the problem to Boothby. His solution was both logical and effective. It was also one I had not considered. I gather from the number of people gathered here today that I was not the only one he helped.”

Spock paused for a moment and reflected. “This coffin is made of wood and will one day mix its atoms with the soil. Boothby shall also mix with the soil and nurture these gardens in death as he did in life.” He stepped back and signaled to the two assistant gardeners standing discreetly off to the side. They came forwards and carefully lowered the casket into the ground. Then they picked up a couple of shovels but before they could begin filling in the grave Spock pulled an American Beauty rose from his sleeve and dropped it in. Several other officers also tossed flowers in. When no one else came forward Spock nodded to the gardeners and bowed his head. The funeral party remained where it was in silent respect while the grave was filled. When the gardeners were finished they, too, stepped back. Spock lifted his head once again.

“I ask that you remain a moment longer, please,” he said. A few people seemed surprised but everyone held their place. Spock lifted his sleeve to his mouth and murmured into it. A second later the whine of a transporter could be heard and a large crate appeared next to him. As he began undoing its fastenings he said,

“Boothby loved to grow his flowers. I think it only fitting that his final resting place be turned into a bed of flowers.” The sides of the crate dropped away to reveal neatly stacked racks of flowers in tiny pots and a large box of hand tools. Spock took a trowel and a single pot and planted it right in the center of Boothby’s grave. Setting the tool down, he got back up and brushed his hands together lightly. There were dirt stains on his robe.

No one said a word. Then Captains Picard and Jellico, acting almost as one, walked over to get what they needed. Everyone else followed. There in the meadow, on a cold winter’s day, these heroes of the Federation; these explorers, warriors and statesmen dressed in their very finest- they got down on their hands and knees; they turned the soil, they dug the holes and they planted a garden in honor of their friend and mentor.

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Counterstrike

Forward

Here Posted is the first TWO Chapters of a 25 Chapter Book. I wrote this 20 years ago, for fun, while trapped in the subway to and from work every day. Thought it might be intriguing to put it out there. I am just editing as I go along so the other chapters will come fast…..

CHAPTER 1

It had always been his practice to wake up at least an hour before his duty shift began. Besides the fact that it assured he was alert by the time he reported, he had always believed that a man should spend time in quiet meditation before he started his day. Of course now he had the power to spend as much time contemplating as he desired. After all, his duty shift may be twenty four hours a day, but being a commander in the Romulan Navy also afforded him the luxury of managing his time as he saw fit.

Still, Commander S’Tal prided himself in his dedication to duty; not in a conceited, arrogant way, but with a fulfilling satisfaction that he was an honourable man. He had seen many a ship’s commander abuse his position and shirk his duty. Honour and duty was the fibre that made a good man; that was the heritage from which the Romulan Empire had grown and what would always remain in those who served the Romulan Way. Today, like most other days, he awoke to the beckoning of the computer’s masculine voice efficiently repeating a clipped military style wake up call. It did not take many conscious moments for his mind to turn to the upcoming mission.

“Computer,” he spoke to an invisible speaker that he had always felt was in the ceiling even though he knew it was built into one of the walls. “Open the Starscape.” Open was not really the correct term since the wall did not actually open up into space. Instead, the computer adjusted the tint of the huge transplanium window that made up the wall curving into the ceiling of S’Tal’s quarters. It was not his style to use his position to get comforts that were not readily available to the rest of his crew. Nevertheless, he had indulged himself the luxury of the viewport he now looked through.

Looking through the enormous window he could not help but be struck by what he saw. For all the trillions upon trillions of light years that made up the universe, when he looked out into space he was amazed at how two dimensional it all seemed. Every speck of light he saw could be an inch in radius and a few meters from his ship, or they could be a thousand times the radius of Romulus’ sun and a million light years away. No man had the eyes or mind to truly perceive the notion of depth in the vastness of space.

S’Tal found the stars even more beautiful when he was actually viewing them with his own eyes, instead of the computer generated images he saw on the bridge. It was easy to get caught up in the aesthetic beauty of the stars, especially when they took on a surreal quality caused by the rippling effect the cloaking device created. Still, he had no time to spare daydreaming about the beauty of the stars when he needed to prepare for battle.

The Praetor himself had endorsed this mission for which S’Tal, his ship, and the Vatrium were preparing. The Praetor had been convinced by his advisors that the time was right to move against the Federation. They argued that for too long now the Romulan Empire had been denying their true destiny as masters of the galaxy because they feared themselves not strong enough to conquer the Federation.  Now those advisers had convinced the Praetor that the empire was strong enough to win   if they could gain an early advantage.  The purpose of this mission was to give them that advantage.

The years of peace had been good to the Empire; her people had grown as a society and had conquered or settled hundreds of new planets.  Honour lay with the military and duty was served by all.  S’Tal had gained his position through outstanding military service in wars with the Gorn and the IKS on the Triangle border.  He had seen war and understood the necessity to wage it.  However, this action against the Federation was different; it did not feel right for him, or for the Empire.  He did not fear for himself – in fact, he looked forward to dying in his Commander’s seat, as a real warrior should.  He feared for what the war would do to the Romulan society.  Regardless of what the Praetor’s advisors said, the war with the Federation would be long and costly.

S’Tal had never actually battled a Starfleet vessel, but was well studied in their design and abilities.  It was this expertise that led to his assignment on this particular mission.  For all of the Empire’s technical advancements, his ship, one of the most powerful in the Royal Navy, was barely a match for many of the Federation’s cruisers. Romulan commanders were superior when their positions had been earned – of that he was sure -, but too many command positions had been given to undeserving men who knew someone of importance.  So where was the advantage in a war with the Federation?  S’Tal knew he would be successful in completing his mission, but whether it would give the Empire the element of surprise and superior knowledge remained a question.

S’Tal got out of bed, went over to the food synthesizer, and returned to the small table that was set up against his wall viewport.  He was far too preoccupied with the mission that would begin today to worry about a proper breakfast.  This morning a cup of hot corum would suffice.  He sipped his root broth as he wondered how honourable it was to fight the Federation, who had shown no aggression to the Empire.  When he was a young man, S’Tal had thought that fighting was always a source of honour.  As he aged, the fighting seemed endless and killing his so called enemy often seemed like hurting innocent people.  More and more, S’Tal was coming to the realization that true honour lay in protecting peace and the strength of the Empire.  If it took war to do that, then so be it.  He did not feel this was the case with the Federation, which was, for the most part, an honourable entity.

That last thought brought an audible chuckle from his throat.  As a Centurion aboard the Cl’Torin he had been furious at the espionage of a Federation captain and his first officer who conspired to steal a cloaking device.  S’Tal had been severely reprimanded for his inability to destroy the Federation vessel when it was fleeing with a stolen Romulan cloaking device.  S’Tal had been slow to react to the Enterprise cloaking and it escaped.

It was his anger at being duped that drove him to be so great a warrior.  He also vowed to become the foremost expert on Federation military organization.  He found that his anger ran out of steam after a couple of years. His Commander later showed him that Federation officers were capable of great honour when that same command crew of the Enterprise worked together with her against Omne. She had been right to trust them even though her career was lost.  He actually developed an admiration for Starfleet and its most powerful ships and decorated officers.

Still, of course his heart lay with his Romulan Empire.  He had fought for the prosperity of its people.  He had sworn his life to the Praetor and regardless of the consequences or possible futility of war with the Federation, he was going to honour his oath.  Duty was the utmost priority to Romulans   and S’Tal was, above all else, a Romulan.  With renewed determination, he rose from his seat and began to dress in his Romulan commander’s uniform.

“Close viewport.”  The viewport darkened on cue as S’Tal added the honour sash to his uniform.  He reached up to the Romulan Bird cluster that held his sash in place and touched it with his forefinger.  It beeped to life.  “S’Tal to bridge,” he clipped in an efficient military tone.  “I’m heading to PTB room three.  Inform Commander Tark that I will be transporting over as scheduled.”

“Immediately, Commander,” S’Tal heard as he left his quarters.

Tark revelled in the command seat.  He often spent many off duty hours on the bridge.  He had spent years of his life in the security sections of various ships, dreaming of getting to where he was now   in the command seat.

It was from the command seat that one could be part of the strategy of battle.  He was addicted to combat, he could admit that.  This was not a vice to a Romulan, provided he had self control and could make the right choices about when to battle, always ensuring the Empire came before personal needs.

Many years of his life had been spent studying every great strategist in the known galaxy.  It did not matter to Tark whether the object of his study was an enemy or an ally, his admiration transcended political and ideological boundaries.  In fact, some of his favourite strategists were from the Klingon and Federation starfleets.  Captain Garth was his chosen commander when it came to fighting against numerous opponents.  General Kord from the Klingon Empire was outstanding at directing and participating in multi vessel encounters.  Yet his favourite was Captain James T. Kirk, commander of the Federation cruiser Enterprise.  It was Kirk who was able to turn any situation to his advantage.  Kirk, who never accepted defeat even if he had to sacrifice his own ship to win.

Tark had spent several years as captain on smaller ships, most of them old and lacking any real power.  It was his knowledge of Kirk and his expertise on combat strategy that got him command of the Vatrium.  His ship was the first of its kind, the first special missions cruiser in the Imperial Fleet.  It had the power to beat the best from the Federation.  Still, he could only hope that it would come to battle with Federation ships, hope to meet Kirk in combat someday.  Nevertheless, it was his duty to ensure the success of this mission regardless of the cost; even if he had to give up the chance to battle Kirk.

Success ensured power.  He would command as long as he was successful.  Command was what he wanted most in life.  As he looked around the bridge at his crew, it occurred to him that they were his to command.  As long as they were on his ship, their lives were his to control, they were extensions of himself on the bridge.  The communications officer was his ears and voice to communicate with others.  His helm and Nav officers were his legs to take him where he wanted to go.  Fists to pound the enemy were provided by his weapons officer, and his engineer was a doctor to care for the body.  The bridge was the brain of the ship and he was the brain of the bridge.

He could not resist smiling to himself.  Here he was a Romulan commander, and he was comparing his ship to his body and himself to a brain; such were not the musings of a Romulan.  He moved his attention from his inward thoughts to the main viewscreen.  The now split screen showed the forward starfield on one half and a navigational projection on the other.  The navigational projection showed his ship’s location alongside the frigate K’Lester, the two starship’s course projection, and the border markings that represented the Triangle and Federation neutral zone boundaries.

Tark turned to his science officer’s station, “Any ships on long range sensors yet?”

“Nothing yet, sir,” the man answered quickly.  “We should be within scanner range of any enemy vessel patrolling the Federation side of the Neutral Zone and the Triangle boarder in…1 hour, 22 minutes.”

“Excellent, inform me as soon as you detect anything.”

“Yes sir.” The officer firmly punched the left side of his chest and then extended his arm so that his hand was just above the level of his shoulder.

“Commander,” came the call of his communications officer from his post beside the science station.

“What is it Centurion?”

“The K’Lester informs us that Commander S’Tal will be transporting over on schedule.”

“Confirm,” Tark answered, and then added as he headed for the speedlift, “I will be in PTB room one to meet him.”

Tark enjoyed S’Tal’s company, they shared many of the same interests.  There were so few men in the Empire with whom he could talk to about some of the Federation’s greatest strategists.  Since being assigned to this mission, he and S’Tal had spent many hours in simulated starship battle with the simusence helmets and he looked forward to one more before the mission operations began.  Tark had a special recreated simulation that had just been programmed based on a recent event in the Federation. He wanted to run the new simulation with S’Tal.

 

CHAPTER 2

Captain’s Log, Stardate 2/2305.28:

The Enterprise’s‚ first four weeks of patrol duty on the Triangle boarder have concluded without any serious incidents. As is often the case on long and uneventful patrol duty, the crew is losing concentration and becoming bored. I am sending a recommendation to Starfleet, that following the six weeks of our patrol duty, the crew of the Enterprise be given shoreleave on the planet of Lakeland. The two Federation patrol vessels immediately adjacent to us have also reported no note worthy incidents. The Sputnik‚ in the sector to the galactic north of the Enterprise‚   has monitored no activity in its sector and has completed resupply of Outpost 1 along the Romulan Neutral Zone. The Appollo‚ to the galactic south has reported a tediously sparse amount of activity in its sector bordering the Triangle.

Captain James T. Kirk wearily pushed the button on the arm of his command chair that switched off the log recording device.  The thought of continuing patrol duty for another six weeks was devitalizing to say the least. Yet he felt at ease now; now that he was no longer behind a desk. There was a time when he had thought setting fleet procedure behind a desk would be preferable to patrol duty. After experiencing the life of a staff officer, he was resolute that his calling in life was to command a starship   to command the Enterprise. He looked around at his bridge and the efficient crew, who by merely pushing buttons and flicking switches, made the 170,000 megaton Enterprise fly through space at speeds many times faster than the speed of light. He could think of no words to express his feelings at that time. He felt a mix of awe at the thought of travelling at such an incredible speed, and genuine feelings of loyalty for and from his crew – his friends, no, his family.

He knew that it was, in many ways, egotistical to think of the Enterprise and her crew as his, but he often found himself doing just that when he sat in the command chair. There could be no doubt that this chair was his. Looking back now, he found it hard to believe that he had ever given up his ship and taken the appointment as Chief of Starfleet Operations. Even more incredible that he had given her up a second time after the V’GER incident. Those years spent in a desk chair he had constantly dreamed and hoped of again sitting in the command chair of the Enterprise. Now he was and he would not easily give her up again.

The previous five years had seen three serious threats on Terra and the Federation of Planets. He had lived through all of them. His ship, his crew were heroes, but there were heavy casualties. The Enterprise and her crew had paid for their heroes’ welcome with their dearest blood. James Kirk had lost the son he had only briefly known but had loved as much as any father could. It had taken Kirk several long introspective hours and several long talks with Dr. McCoy to realize that it was his friends on the Enterprise that were his family. Still, there could be little reconciliation for the losses he felt.

Nevertheless, all was how it should be once again. The first watch surrounded him, everything felt right. Uhura was at her communication console, her fingers moving across its dimensions as they had for so many years. She seemed to have aged the most gracefully, he decided. She was perhaps even more handsome a woman now than in her younger years.

To her left was the familiar back of Mr. Spock. Kirk was very pleased when Spock had told him that he would stay on the Enterprise as First Officer and Science Department Head. Spock had been satisfied with his role as a Starfleet instructor, but had felt the strongest emotion that Vulcans will admit to having – curiosity. He had a desire to discover things that had never before been discovered, to understand things as yet not understood, to go where no one has gone before. It was this last phrase, to “go where no man has gone before “, that had made Spock decide to request starship duty aboard the Enterprise.  Spock had told Kirk when he filed his request to stay on board the Enterprise, that he had been reminded of his own personal charter by reading the Enterprise’s. Spock had always known the charter of the Enterprise, but it was during that time when the Captain, McCoy and himself were locked in the forward observation deck by Spock’s brother that he had the opportunity to really contemplate the importance of the Enterprise and her crew to what he was; to what he had become. He had come to the realization that it was the duty aboard the starship with his friends that truly fulfilled his one true destiny – and made him content. It was a statement to which Kirk had no argument, so even though it meant Spock giving up his command, Jim Kirk had processed and endorsed the request.

Directly in front of him, Kirk rested his eyes on the team that had guided the Enterprise through more kilometres of space than any other ship in Starfleet history. Chekov had turned down a promotion to command a vessel of his own to stay aboard the Enterprise as Department Head for Security and Weapons System, as well as third in the chain of command. Kirk remembered his misgivings about Chekov turning down the promotion. Chekov was adamant however, he would continue to learn from the best until it was time for him to move up to command the Enterprise.

Sulu was a mainstay in Jim Kirk’s crew, Kirk knew that Sulu would stay on the Enterprise for as long as they would allow him.  Sulu had piloted the ship in every battle manoeuvre in Starfleet’s combat textbooks as well as some that would be added to them. He flew the Enterprise like it was an extension of himself. Sulu also could have had a command position on a ship of his own but had made it clear to Kirk that he was going to wait for a chance to command the Excelsior. He had told Kirk that there was no reason to leave the best ship in the fleet unless he had the chance to command a ship he could make the best.

To the Captain’s far left, sitting with his back to the command chair watching his instruments as though the ship were in a battle was the one man who loved the Enterprise as much as Jim Kirk did – of that he was sure. Montgomery Scott would also stay with the Enterprise until he was forced to retire. Scotty had revelled at the prospect of spending his days in this new Enterprise. Kirk remembered what Scotty had said when he learned of the new Enterprise’s equipment, “Ach, me baby’s finally got the best equipment thot Starfleet has ta offer. And ’tis about time too, a shame it took her destruction for those inept fools ta realize it.” It was Scotty who had complained the loudest about the new Enterprise not being as good as the old . It had not deterred him however; he continued to work her into shape and when the time had come, she performed beautifully and saved the lives of all aboard her. It was not long after the trip to the centre of the galaxy that Scotty was again claiming that the new Enterprise was befitting the name and was his baby. “After all,” Scotty had told Kirk, “it was those inept fools at Starfleet w’at ha’ put her tagether wrong.” The memory brought a broad grin to Jim Kirk’s face.

“Now what’s that grin for? You look like the cat that swallowed the bird, “came the voice of the Enterprise’s Chief Medical Officer and Kirk’s long-time friend and companion. McCoy had grumbled about signing for the five year mission. He had claimed that he would be old and grey by the time he got back, and that space exploration was no way for a man to be spending his twilight years. Someone had to take care of Kirk, though, and he had decided that he was the only man alive capable of having any effect on what Jim Kirk did.

“Hello Bones, I was just thinking back to Scotty’s comments about his baby finally getting the best from the inept fools at Starfleet,” Kirk answered instigatively. The remark had its desired affect for Spock’s head popped up from his watch over the science console. Kirk felt the weariness of patrol duty lift off his shoulders as he straightened for the exchanges that were sure to ensue.

“Captain, I was unaware that Mr. Scott was involved in the conception of the Enterprise, and in fact, that conception of an inanimate object was possible,” Spock offered without even a trace of sarcasm. He had learned long ago that while working with humans it was important to their morale – and therefore their efficiency – for them to have a nearly constant environment of humour. It was for this reason that he allowed himself to partake in their bantering back and forth as the “straight man “. It was logical.

“Spock,” answered Dr. McCoy, “surely you must have realized that it was only a joke and that Scotty was not suggesting that he had a biological part in the Enterprise’s creation.”

“Ah yes,” offered the Vulcan, again without even a hint of humour in his voice or face. “Humour is an abstract human concept.  I have not yet mastered recognizing or understanding it, Doctor.” Every head on the bridge was now turned to listen to the conversation. The bridge crew of the first watch were frequently treated to dialogues between Spock and McCoy. These dialogues were quite often humorous and always interesting. Since he was one of the subjects of this particular conversation, Scotty had turned from his console and was listening intently. “Ach, but ya donna understand,” Scotty jumped in, speaking not to just Spock but to McCoy and Kirk as well. “The Enterprise is me baby just as surely as if I ha’ given birth ta the lass meself.”

Although there was no humour meant in Scotty’s statement, Kirk’s and McCoy’s faces lit up with the widest grins. They themselves were unsure of the motives behind the grins. Perhaps it was simply an acknowledgement of how Scotty felt about the Enterprise, similar to the smile given any mother when she talked of her child. But perhaps the smiles that these grown men were flashing so brightly were because they knew that Spock could not let such an illogical statement go unchallenged. The fact that Spock gave his “interesting but very illogical ” eyebrow raise confirmed their assessment of Spock’s reaction.

“Mr. Scott,” Spock settled into his Vulcan mode readying himself for another attempt – however futile – at righting an illogical presumption. The fact that he was even pursuing a dialogue that would, at its conclusion, not change Mr. Scott’s paternal feelings concerning the Enterprise did not deter him from the attempt. “Might I remind you that the Enterprise is owned by Starfleet Command and that it is neither a “baby” nor a ” lass “.”

“Mr. Spock!… sir,” the Scotsman answered indignantly. “I may nota’ drawn up the plans ta the darlin’ or commissioned her assemblin’, but as sure as I’m standin’ here, I’m the one thot takes care a’ her and makes her whot she is. And Mr. Spock, she is a baby. She has to be coddled and caressed ta ge’ her ta perform as she does. As for bein’ a lass, could anythin’ so beautiful not be a true lady?” Scotty was speaking the truth about how he felt concerning the Enterprise. It was his baby.  Scotty also knew the problem Spock’s logical mind would have understanding the engineer’s feelings. He continued with the conversation for the sheer enjoyment of talking about the Enterprise and the dismay it would cause the Vulcan.

“Mr. Scott,” the Vulcan First Officer offered. “You may have made the other Enterprise what it was previous to its destruction, but I suggest that this Enterprise is as yet unchanged by your hand and is therefore not your “baby “.”  The smiles disappeared from the faces of the bridge crew. The fact that he could have just deeply hurt Montgomery Scott did not occur to Spock until Kirk answered to Spock’s comment.

“The thing you don’t understand Spock, is that the spirit of the Enterprise lives on in this vessel and in fact is carried by the crew that lives within her.” Kirk realized that he had been far too sentimental with his statement but he felt it was needed to raise the morale of his disenchanted Chief Engineer. He also knew that Spock would pick up on the fact that he had touched on a taboo subject and that it was time to end the conversation. “The metal may be new, some of the people may be new, but she is the Enterprise, there’s no doubt about that.” There were times during the mission with Sybok that Kirk had doubted just that. Not anymore, the Enterprise had proven herself.

“Yes, of course. Mr. Scott, please accept my apology if I have given offence.” Spock answered right on cue to the Captain’s  – Was it mental – communication. Spock had mind melded with his commanding officer and friend on several occasions and in fact had created a mental link on occasion to keep in contact with the captain when that was the only form of communication possible. He had also thought that he had severed the thread that had joined the two men. Now he felt unsure; unsure of the presence of the link or if his feelings of camaraderie had just taught him to read his captains hints and hunches. Then, what is the difference?

“Ach, Donna worry yourself Mr. Spock. You couldna’ known. Besides thot, I may be the mother o’ the Enterprise, but with all thot ye have added ta her you are atleast an uncle,..sir.” Scotty answered innocently. Again the faces of the bridge crew were lit up with giant Cheshire grins and Spock’s eyebrow rose underneath his hairline.

“Indeed,” was all that Spock could or would say. He knew that he had been the brunt of another harmless joke and chose to ignore it. Turning in his chair to again monitor his console he was aware of the subdued chuckles of the bridge crew. My theory correct, I have just greatly increased the morale of these humans.

“Jim, I came up here to see if you would like to join me for dinner when shift is over.” It often seemed as though Leonard McCoy’s southern drawl got more profound as end of shift grew nearer.

“I’d love to Bones, but unfortunately I have other, more strenuous, plans. ”

At this comment McCoy looked towards Uhura and leaned closer to Jim Kirk’s ear as if to avoid the possibility of being overheard. “You have a date then. I guess I can take rejection as long as she’s beautiful. Who is it this time? the girl from Life Sup…”

Kirk cut him off before McCoy had a chance to recite a list of every woman on the ship to whom Kirk had mentioned a slight attraction. “I have the playoffs of the energyclub tournament tonight. Thanks anyway Bones.”

“Jim, why do you continue to enter yourself in Security’s combat tournaments? You know you’re getting too old for that sort of thing.” McCoy purposely put the emphasis on old; after all, if they could not tease each other, who could they tease? There was a real, tangible bond between the two officers and friends. They had been through life and death – or close enough – together.  There had been nothing that had not been said between them, there was nothing that could not be said now –  no matter how bruising the subject may be.

“I have an obligation as this ship’s commander to keep up with all the latest personal combat techniques,” Captain Kirk answered as though he were reading from a Starfleet Captain’s Handbook. There was no way he was going to give his tormentor the pleasure of showing any discomfort. “Besides that Bones, how many times have I had to fight to secure the safety of the Enterprise and her crew?” The memories of those times flashed back to him. The Gorn incident, the Excalbia incident when Kirk had to watch his hero Abraham Lincoln die, the fight in the arena of the Gamesters of Triskelion, and others were all still fresh in his mind, as were the fears and desperation he had felt.

It was obvious from McCoy’s face that he was searching for a point from which he could argue. Not finding one, he decided to settle for a cynical remark. “You won’t be able to fight for the security of anything if you’re in sickbay on your back from a silly security tournament.”

Kirk seemed amused by the whole exchange. It was always enjoyable to argue with McCoy, especially when the Doctor lost and resorted to cynicism – a sure sign he was frustrated. All that was needed now was to smile, this would serve to annoy McCoy more than another remark.

McCoy knew when he was beaten. He turned his attention from the Captain to the Engineer.

“Scotty, how about you? care to join me for a bite to eat? I know you wouldn’t be fool enough to enter into a security combat tournament.”

“Aye, surely I wouldna’. But I canna’ join ya for dinner Doctor, for though I wouldna’ enter meself, I wouldna’ miss the cap’ain in the finals o’ such a tournament,” Scotty answered then added. “Why don’t ya join me Doc? ‘Tis gonna’ be a great final.”

“Has the whole ship gone crazy? Do we not partake in enough violence in our travels that we need to volunteer our spare time to beat up on each other.” McCoy bellowed at no one in particular but soon turned to Mr. Spock. “Well then Mr. Spock, I guess it’s just you and me. I may not have a lot of fun at dinner but at least I’ll have some company.”

Spock turned his chair so that he could face the Doctor.

“Thank you for the gracious invitation Doctor, but I am also attending the tournament as a spectator.”

“You Mr. Spock? Why would you want to watch such a barbaric display of violence?” McCoy brightened at the chance for another argument. He was anxious to redeem himself for the quick defeat at the Captain’s hands moments earlier. He saw Spock’s desire to watch the tournament as illogical and felt sure he could prove that watching violence was as bad as partaking. I’ve got him on this one.

“As a doctor yourself, surely you must recognize the benefit of physical activity to the healthy upkeep of any humanoid being,” Spock answered. He knew that he was entering into a discussion with Dr.McCoy that the doctor would treat as an argument and verbally fight with aggression far more ferocious than the physical sparring that would occur in a combat tournament aboard the Enterprise.

“Physical activity I have no problem with. Callisthenics and other forms of non-violent activities can produce the desired physiological benefits.” Yes! Good answer. Spock can’t get out of this one. No Way.

“I have noticed, during my stay with humans, that they often require the excitement of competition to push themselves to an activity level conducive to physical fitness improvement.”

“There are many forms of non-violent sports that can be participated in that are very competitive.” McCoy seemed to get more confident each time he answered one of Spock’s comments. I’m going to win this one.

“That is true Dr. McCoy, but none of those sports also offer the added benefit of improving the proficiency level of a necessary skill aboard a military vessel. Surely as Chief Medical Officer you can see the importance of military personnel being proficient in a skill that could someday save their lives and lower the need for spending time under your care.” There was an air of finality in Spock’s statement. Neither he, nor any one of the bridge crew, expected an answer from Dr. McCoy and doubted that the doctor could provide one.

McCoy again got a pained look on his face. His eyebrows slanted inward and downward into an expression that was alarmingly similar to a child’s when the cookie jar is taken away and placed out of reach. Still he had to say something. He couldn’t think of a good retort so he again searched for a cynical remark to bail him out.

“I …” McCoy was interrupted by the opening of the turbolift doors. The second watch crew came through the doors and made their way to their respective posts. The commotion caused by the crew exchange rescued McCoy from finishing his remark and allowed him to exit the bridge before anyone thought to look to the Doctor to hear the rest of his retort. Well they’re not the calvary, McCoy thought to himself. But they did come in the nick of time. At least I don’t have to make things worse by saying something that would only be conceding to Spock. I’ll concede to Jim, but never to Spock. I have my reputation to think of.

 

 

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Fatin’s Faith and Her Penchant for Problematic Positronics

Fatin’s Faith and Her Penchant for Problematic Positronics

After the great battle in which Data sacrificed his life to save the entire crew of the Enterprise, a salvage operation was conducted by a team of unrelated scavengers from a nearby star system, who collected various pieces of the items left after the battle, most of which were damaged.  The parts, capable of being repaired, were sold, one of which was acquired by a talented young girl, Fatin, age 14, who, with much patience and effort, was finally able to fuse it into her own computer, despite its severe damage.  It operated with positronic components, a type of circuitry that she had never before encountered.  She discovered that the component not only had sentience, but also had a history, both facts she uncovered when, to her astonishment, it saved her life.   This is the story of how she was able to recover what was the remainder of Data’s essence; how Data, despite being seriously damaged and consisting of little more than computer memory, risked his existence to save her life; and finally, how she, in turn, desperately sought to return the favor.

Chapter One:  Please Help Me, Lt. Barclay

Fatin sat down to begin her subspace communiqué to a man she had never heard of, much less met, and began to compose her plea for assistance.  Acquiring the information necessary to send the message was far more difficult that she ever imagined, but apparently the location of Starfleet officers is not readily available to just anyone who wants to find them.  Although getting the correct address was difficult, it was nothing compared to the stress associated with trying to find the correct words to secure the assistance of this Lieutenant, who her computer program convinced her would be willing and able to preserve his existence.  Yes, it was only a few short weeks ago that she, herself, would have dismissed out of hand, even the possibility, that a computer program could be sentient, even with its unique positronic circuits. Just thinking to herself about what she was about the say was difficult to comprehend, in that she knew that anyone would think she had misplaced her own intellect.  Realizing that she would be perceived as crazy, she began:

Dear Lt. Barclay,

I have gone to significant lengths to identify you and to find your location, so I could send you this sub-space communiqué, seeking your urgently needed help.  You don’t know me, but something happened to me, something amazing.  Although I have been led to believe that you will receive this communiqué with the greatest of enthusiasm, it is my fear that you will report me to a mental health facility.  Regardless of the consequences, I am desperate for your help, not just for me, but also to help me save the existence of a sentient being that apparently lives in my computer.  Before you dismiss my request, please understand that I realize how bizarre that this must seem to you, and I am the first one to admit that the concept of someone, or something, living in a computer, is impossible – nevertheless, that is the situation which confronts me.

The entity has a name, Data, and this Data is of the impression that you are the only one who can help him, and help me help him.  It was quite some time before I realized that his name was Data, as I assumed he was referring to data in regard to information stored inside a computer database; but apparently, this Data is an acquaintance of yours, and he holds you in the highest regard, not only with respect to your astounding ability, but also in friendship and loyalty.  I am willing to endure the embarrassment, be it temporary or permanent, that this request may generate, and in fact, I will do whatever it takes, regardless of the time, effort or expense, because, as difficult to understand though it may be, this Data saved my life.  Actually, he not only saved my life, but the life of my little brother, my family and my entire village.  So, Lt. Barkley, I know that you may wish to dismiss me and what you probably believe is the distorted musings of a young kid, but sir, if you would indulge me for a moment more, I will tell you how I have gotten myself into this position, how I acquired salvaged parts from what was apparently an epic battle for life and death, and how I have been able to integrate these spare parts into my own computer system, which, to my surprise, is self aware. One more thing, Lieutenant, I fear that if I don’t get your assistance, the program that holds Data will fade away, and Data might be lost forever.  So, Sir, I implore you, please help me, Lt. Barclay.

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White Flight to the Stars

enneth E. Butler

6714 General Drive                                                                                           about 12,521 words

Richmond, Texas 77469

(281) 545-1114

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

“WHITE FLIGHT TO THE STARS”

by Kenneth E. Butler

 

Chapter I

Captain James T. Kirk of the USS Enterprise stared at the chessboard in front of him. His brow was furrowed in thought. Suddenly, a voice destroyed his concentration.

“It’s your move, Captain,” stated the logical alien first officer, Mr. Spock.

“I know that, Mr. Spock. “If only though he knew where to move! Aha! King to Knight’s Pawn Three placing the Bishop in a defensive position.

But Spock saw this move, saw an opening, and took Kirk’s queen. The ship’s communicator interrupted their game.

“Captain Kirk, Trilate is ahead: please report to the bridge.”

“Coming,” Kirk said into the ship’s intercom.

On the bridge, and on the ship’s view screen, he saw a planet covered by clouds. Underneath the clouds he could make out a vast expanse of desert land interspersed with green oceans, and, he could see small particles of mulch and other fertile areas.

“Status report, Mr. Spock,?” he asked.

The first officer  looked up from his library computer where he was listening to the output, as he was the only person on board the ship who could read the electrical bit noises directly without the benefit of the universal translator.

“Class M planet, sir, helium-argon-oxygen atmosphere, 58%, 22%, 20% respectively. The oceans comprise approximately sixty percent of the planet’s surface. Humanoid inhabitants. Shall we send an exploratory team down, Captain?”

“First, let’s get some background information on the populace.”

If he was going to send his people down, he wanted to know what type of people they would be dealing with.

“Computer, personality and socio-analysis of major races on planet,” Kirk said.

– INSUFFICIENT DATA ON THIS SUBJECT -, intoned  the female voice.

“I thought the planet had been explored, Mr. Spock?” questioned  Kirk.

“Apparently, Starfleet was in error,” Spock hypothesized , “Perhaps it was only noted and mapped. “

“Give us a visual and sensory scan of the major population centers,” stated  Kirk.

Cylindrically shaped edifices appeared on the main viewing screen of the ship’s bridge : the buildings appeared to be rods of glass or some kind of translucent plastic. Solid glass tubes connected the buildings in which black  people were being whisked to and from buildings. Other similar cities appeared in the fertile areas.

“Attempt communication,” Kirk said to Lt. Uhura.

The communications officer replied, “I’m getting a signal, Captain.”

“Display, Uhura.”

“Yes, sir.”

A pisogram of a very dignified elderly black man appeared standing in front of Kirk. He was about six feet tall, wearing very flamboyant clothing, colored in red, blue, and yellow. He also wore a headdress of red, blue, and yellow globules and what appeared  to be feathers of some kind of bird.

“I am Min Son Kee Tra 712,” the alien said , “Who may I ask are you?”

“I am Captain James T. Kirk, commanding the USS Enterprise, a vessel from Starfleet sent by the United Federation of Planets, what can I do for you?”

“You can send down a search party,” the alien said in a telepathic transmission. Although what Kirk heard was, “Welcome to my planet. What is mine is yours.”

“I appreciate your hospitality and every effort will be made to get along with you. We will beam down a greeting party soon. Until then, Kirk out.”

Kirk quickly put a search party together in his mind. He would send his first officer, Mr. Spock, whose scientific and engineering expertise would be useful. Also, Lt. Shieh, a physical scientist of Chinese descent with PhD’s in physics, chemistry, and mathematics; Ensign Welch, a very attractive blond  that also happened to be an esteemed anthropologist; and Second Sub lieutenant Decker, a historian, who was well noted for his diplomacy. Decker had bartered with the Romulans for dilithium crystals from the asteroid Riga.

Leonard McCoy had raised objections to Kirk wanting to send a search party instead of a plasma drone. However, Kirk felt diplomacy and speed were needed. He sincerely hoped he was right.

His thoughts were interrupted by the beep of the communicator: “Captain-” and that was that.

Spock, Shieh, Decker, and the beautiful Ensign Welch landed. Specifically, they were in a building, in an office of Kee Tra 712. He stood in front of them in a regal costume.

Spock managed a hello, saw the flash emerge from black uniformed guards on the underside of the office, and then the lights went out. Spock managed to contact the Enterprise before losing consciousness.

“Where are we, Mr. Spock?” Shieh asked despairingly.

“We are precisely at latitude 24.13579, longitude 28.29654,” said the Vulcan.

“Sir?” Decker and Welch questioned.

Then Decker, “Please, Mr. Spock. Oh, never mind.”

To be truthful , the crew of the USS Enterprise was standing in a large cave. The walls and stones were a grayish-white. Hanging along the roof were thousands of sharp stalactites. On the floor of the cave was a similar pattern of stalagmites. The Enterprise crew was enclosed in a glass cage.

Spock felt for his communicator, however, he discovered it was gone. The rest of the crew found their equipment missing also. Presently, a large portly black man entered the cave. He was dressed in a white costume that was neatly molded to his entire body. Attending him were several white women clad in bikinis.

“What is your purpose with us?” Spock asked.

“Shut up, slave,” the man said viciously as a ray of purplish-blue light emanated from his gun and hit the Vulcan.

Spock was immediately aware that the pain was the most intense he had ever felt in his memory. Immediately, he decided it would be wise to obey this alien, if he desired to escape. Therefore he obeyed.

“We shall teach you discipline, Vulcan,” the man stated.

Spock immediately answered, “Yes, I shall obey.”

“Bend down and pray.” He immediately did so. However, realizing that his crew would lose respect if he continued behaving in a subservient manner, Spock reached out with his right hand and yanked the man’s ankle. The man fell hard to the ground letting out a yelp. The Vulcan then dispatched him with a nerve pinch.

“Let’s go!,” Spock yelled.

Decker, Welch and Shieh then proceeded to follow the Enterprise’s first officer out of the cave, and were immediately greeted by a dark South-American looking rain forest. Amidst the forest was a trail made up of gold stones, which seemingly continued forever. Nonetheless, there was a veer in the trail that led to a large golden edifice.

Immediately upon seeing the trail, Welch exclaimed, “Why it’s beautiful.”

Spock, after hearing the emotional outburst, stared hard at the beautiful anthropologist.

Welch blushed and looked away.

“I am much more interested in your evaluation of the society, Ensign Welch,” Spock said.

Welch became her professional self, “It appears in the group we have so far encountered, the dominant race is black whereas the subservient race is white. This situation is in marked contrast to the United States on Earth where blacks were utilized as cheap labor beginning in the 1600s and extending into the middle of the 19th century.”

“Yes, as I recall, they were freed by the prominent American President Abraham Lincoln,” replied Spock.

“Unfortunately, Mr. Spock, I believe we are regarded as only slightly better than animals,” Welch said.

Decker looked disgusted and said, “Well isn’t it just like the human race to put its brothers in bondage.”

“Indeed,” the Vulcan said.

Shieh said something for the first time on the trip, “Well, shall we proceed?”

The others nodded their heads in agreement and began to walk. They passed through rich, multicolored vegetation on either side of the trail. Curiously enough, Spock noticed the vegetation did not extend past an imaginary plane perpendicular to the ground on either side of the trail. The Vulcan theorized it was a force field.

After walking about thirteen kilometers, the castle loomed above them. It appeared to be no more than two thousand kilometers in the distance. It was extremely elegant being made of gold and shaped like a giant bell with blocklike extensions on either side of it. Covering the castle were figures that appeared to be chiefs.

Their admiration was cut off by a yell in the treetops above them. Four Caucasians leapt out of the branches. One made the mistake of diving at Spock, and the Vulcan dispatched him with a well-placed kick to the groin. Meanwhile, Welch and her antagonist were wrestling on the floor. He appeared to be winning and was sexually molesting her. He had torn off her blouse  exposing her bodacious breasts. He had started to caress one before Decker landed a quick, fatal karate chop to his neck. Meanwhile, Shieh had knocked his opponent senseless. Decker was losing the fight to his current opponent. Luckily for Decker, Mr. Spock was in a hurry. The alien had Decker flat on his back and was slowly choking him to death. Decker had lost consciousness before Spock kicked Decker’s aggressor in the face.

Unfortunately for the first officer of the USS Enterprise, the man was not a bad fighter. He reached underneath his tunic producing a sharp knife. He made several passing jabs at Spock almost hitting him where his heart would have been had he been a Terran. He and Spock crouched below facing each other. Suddenly, the man ran forward and with a piercing yell lunged at the first officer. Spock was faster. He turned, wheeled, grabbed the man’s shoulder and flipped him resoundingly to the floor. Spock then methodically chopped at his face a few minutes and then walked away, leaving a trail a blood coming from the man’s broken face.

The search party of the Enterprise began to compose itself and repair their clothing. Welch had used the miniature matter-energy converter to repair her blouse .

“All right,” said the voice, “we have seen that you are good fighters, now we shall see if you are good slaves as well.”

Chapter II

Captain James T. Kirk was lying in bed with a beautiful Rigellian princess engaged in heavy lovemaking. Interrupting their lovemaking was a piercing call of Mr. Scott via the ship’s intercom.

“Calling Captain Kirk. Captain Kirk to the bridge.”

“Just a minute, Scotty,” Kirk managed to reply.

The princess asked if he had to leave and he said yes.

On the bridge of the Enterprise, Mr. Scott was looking intently at a view scan of the planet.

Kirk angrily asked him, “If that’s what you called me up here for… ” He left the sentence unfinished.

“No sir, it’s not,” he responded indignantly, “you know me better than that, sir”.

Mr. Scott pressed a few buttons and played with a few dials. The screen showed the scene on the planet a few hours ago with Mr. Spock, Lt. Shieh, Ensign Welch, and Sublt. Decker engaged in combat. The screen began to crackle and electronic noises were being emitted; then the picture became fuzzy and the screen went black. Kirk expressed his consternation, but Scotty replied that this was the signal they had, and the energy beam needed to transport the image had been rendered ineffective. Kirk than decided to call a briefing.

In the briefing room, sat the top officers of the USS Enterprise. Kirk informed all that he didn’t know what the situation was. He had pretty well decided already to send another search party down, but he wanted to know his advisors’ opinions first.

“Well, gentle beings you know the situation, opinions?,” Kirk asked.

Lieutenant M’ress purred, and then said, “Rrry not send a robot probe down, Captain Kirk?

“Yes, Captain, the probe could be made to locate a being with Mr. Spock’s specific brain waves and chemistry and beam the information aboard. Why with that pointy-eared Vulcan’s unique chemistry, it is impossible to lose him! Also we would incur no loss of life,” said the esteemed Dr. McCoy.

Lt. Uhura made the addendum that whereas the probe was useful in some ways, it still was not quite as intelligent as a human and couldn’t react as fast. Also all its actions were prerecorded reactions to other situations that it had encountered in the past and it would take some time for it to respond correctly to any unique, novel situation.

Kirk said, “Well, what I think I will do is send down some special spacers.”

The special spacers were a group of highly intelligent, well trained paramilitary human and alien personnel designed for special situations. Some had been bred so they could live in any kind of atmosphere, and others possessed incredible strength. Still others had ray-proof bodies. It was extremely difficult to kill a special spacer. That was, of course, the reason that Kirk wanted to send them.

The others agreed with a slight hesitation.   Kirk thought they were worried a life may be lost. It might happen, he reflected, but that was a chance man had been taking ever since he first ventured into the unknown realm of space. Indeed the chance had been taken ever since man was put on this earth.

However, with McCoy and Scotty’s prodding, Kirk decided that he would also send down an electronic probe to be used in place of the humans wherever possible.

Chapter III

The five special spacers and the probe stood on the planet’s surface. They were very near a large outcrop of a material that resembled gold. Surrounding them was a vast desert-like region similar in terrain and climate to the Sahara Desert on Earth. For miles there stretched nothing but sand. Nevertheless, there were a few plants resembling Terran cacti around.

The leader of the group, Chieko Moriba, stood near the largest outcropping. She was of Japanese ancestry, an attractive female. She was a slim lady, had long black hair, smallish breasts, and a full mouth. A product of the Eugenics Wars of the early 21st century, she was fluent in several languages, and was indestructible.

She turned and said, “I think maybe we should go that way,” pointing in a southeasterly direction.

The others began to follow. They kept moving through the dense vegetation without seeing anyone or anything. In fact, the trip was simply boring. Harri showed his boredom by nervously clenching and unclenching his claws.

An hour later a beeping noise came from the probe. “Ah ha!,” Dr. Person thought.

“Probe, where is the target search party?” she asked.

“The largest search party is 30 kilometers due west,” answered the probe, “that is, in Gradient 10.”

The others discussed the situation amongst themselves and then decided to proceed.

“Let us proceed,” said Chieko, then turning to the probe she said, “Probe, proceed along the path you have started, staying an approximate distance of five kilometers ahead of us at all times.” She left unstated the fact that the probe would constantly be sending back information to their party, preparing them in case they had a fight.

They then proceeded along the path indicated by the probe, it relaying back information to them. They went through the vast desert like area for several hundred kilometers until it began to encroach upon a place that looked like a South American jungle. They soon found the same golden statue that the first search party had found. They walked a little distance along the path, toward where the Enterprise group had been captured. Along the path they found a few of the articles of the crew. For example, they discovered Spock’s dropped calculator. It was apparent that the crew had left those articles in case anyone came looking for them. Soon they saw the ornate golden castle that the first group had found.

Chapter IV

Spock, Shieh, Welch, and Decker were sweating profusely. For the last nine hours they had been erecting a building to honor their captors. They had been building the structure stone by stone and were extremely tired. Welch had been the most tired of all and Spock was afraid that she was going to collapse. He tried to let her rest but their captors would prod her with an electric stunner until she resumed working. These people have no compassion at all, Spock thought, disgustinged. He turned and spat into the reddish clay. This produced a sharp reaction from the blacks.

Min Song Kee Tra 712 (whom Spock instantly recognized as they were being taken the area slightly outside the city) kicked Spock in the rear end. Then, with an evil smile on his countenance, he set his electric whip to as near kill force as he dared. When he touched Spock, Spock immediately jumped, but Spock being Spock, and stoic, said nothing.

“Back to work, slave,” Min Song said viciously, while Ensign Cheryl Welch begin to go to his side, “You there-get back to work!,” Min Song yelled at her.

Cheryl looked anxiously at Spock who made a motion for her to stay back. Nevertheless, she continued coming until Spock made a determined push against her. She looked hurt but then went back to work.

Min-Song squinted his eyes and had a cruel smile on his lips as he said, “Very intelligent of you, Mr. Spock.”

Decker flushed red with anger. “Are you going to stand here and take this abuse, Mr. Spock?”

“I am afraid you have no other choice,” said Min Song.

“Oh, yes we do, you big creep,” Decker said.

“Do you wish to be stunned, human?,” questioned the alien.

“Fuck you. Fuck you!,” screamed Decker.

The alien didn’t respond to this; and it became apparent that the alien didn’t understand the meaning of what was said. Meanwhile Decker began to calm down, and Mr. Spock said, “Don’t make any more trouble, Decker. That is an order.”

When Decker had sufficiently calmed down, he then began to think. He wished that the aliens would just let them go. He didn’t understand why the aliens needed more slaves when they already had enslaved an entire race. Ironically, he recalled a distant ancestors’ slave plantations.

“I guess now I know what it feels like,” he thought ironically, “When we get out of this mess, I’m going to take their goddamn heads off.”

Ensign Welch continued to lift the stones onto the temple as the guards watched her silently but with guns drawn. They had been doing the same kind of work for the past six days ever since they had been captured and she was extremely tired. At first it had not been too hard, but with just the meager rations she had been receiving, she felt her strength dwindling away. She really didn’t know how long she could hold out.

For his part, Mr. Spock, in his own Vulcan fashion, simply tolerated the bad situation. He had to find some way for his people to escape. However, the aliens had stolen their phasers and they were outnumbered.

Shieh was thinking of his early childhood on what had been called Taiwan in prior centuries but in the 23rd century was referred to as the state of Kisser: part of the southeastern area of the planet Earth. He remembered the garden he had in his backyard and his pet dragon from Esar. It was funny how one’s mind turned toward pleasant thoughts when one was put in bad situations like the one the crew of the USS Enterprise was now in. He and Spock would have to call on their vast knowledge of science to get them out of this mess. They should be able to do something he thought as he lifted another stone.

The guards watched with mean expressions and rifles ready. Every so often, one of them would shift his feet. They thought they were working by guarding these humans. They were, of course, unaware of the thoughts of Spock, Decker, and the others.

Spock and Decker continued to build the castle stone by stone. Welch was having considerable trouble maintaining the pace required by her “employers “. She would stop, falter a bit and then resume her work pace. When she fell, the guards would shoot a dirty look in her direction.

One of the guards would give her a most lecherous look. She heard the alarm. It was time to eat.

The guards served the hostages from the USS Enterprise a greenish porridge. Decker thought, “What is the stuff?” He looked at Lt. Welch. She smiled back. God, but she’s so beautiful, he thought.

“How are you feeling, Miss Welch?” asked Decker.

She decided to be honest. “I don’t know how much longer I can hold out.”

“Nor do I,” he replied sadly.

“This reminds me of the time when I was a little girl,” she narrated, “My father decided to punish me because I had been to cruel to my pet Cheehop. His punishment was that I build a house for the Cheehop.

I was not feeling very well that day – I believe I had a touch of the flu – but he made me work anyway. It was very hot and I was beginning to feel the combined effects of my illness and the heat. As I was heat-sealing a plank of plastiwood, I suddenly fell down from exhaustion. I must have passed out as I awakened in my bed by a kind old gentleman in a white lab coat. He was bending over and my father was there standing on my left, asking him who I was. From then on my father and I only spoke to each other when we had to.”

“I’m sorry,” said Mr. Spock.

“That’s OK, it was a long time ago,” responded Miss Welch.

At that moment, their eyes met, Decker looked embarrassed and finally looked away.

She asked him, “Are you falling in love with me?”

“What a question!” he replied, “but, yes I believe I am!”

He leaned over to kiss her. They kissed. She began to cough, and cough, and cough. She fell unconscious into the arms of her newly found beloved Lt. Decker.

“Mr. Spock,” Decker yelled, “Come here quick!”

Mr. Spock, who had been staring at her porridge, got up and went to the table where Lt. Welch was sitting. He occupied the seat next to her and asked, “What’s wrong, Lieutenant ?”

“I don’t know,” she replied, “I just feel very dizzy and sleepy.”

As he was not a medical doctor, Spock didn’t know what he could do for her, and wished McCoy was present. However, he had the girl describe the symptoms and knew that it was probably fatal. Then, he told her to lie down and rest.

Decker helped Mr. Spock spread out a cot for the girl to lie on, all the while hoping she wouldn’t die. Spock, of course, realized that the unfortunate girl didn’t have much longer to live although he didn’t know precisely how much longer she had.

She slept through the night peacefully enough but when she awoke she began to cry out in pain. This immediately awoke Spock, Shieh, and Decker. Shieh, the calculating man he was, inquired as to how long they expected to be in captivity.

“I don’t precisely know,” replied Mr. Spock, “Nevertheless, I estimate from a week to one year with a 95 % confidence limit.   My first priority at the moment is to ascertain Lt. Welch’s condition.”

Mr. Spock then began administering to Miss Welch, who by this time was in deep pain and crying out.

At about this time the guards arrived ready to put them to work.

“Time to get up and go to work, slave,” yelled one of Min Song assistants while leisurely kicking Dr. Shieh in the behind.

At this, poor Dr. Shieh, his nerves shot from the ordeal, began to whimper. Spock looked at him and Shieh quieted himself.

Dr. Shieh picked himself off from the rough hewn stone beds which the captors had began to use, walked over to the half finished estate that the Enterprise personnel had been working on and slowly reached down and picked up a brick. He placed the brick on top of a partially constructed edifice.

Meanwhile, as Shieh worked on this building, Decker and Mr. Spock were bent over the prone Cheryl Welch. Mr. Spock knew that she suffered from the rare disease Norine, but did not know what to do.

Norine was an iron deficiency disease in which the body excretes all iron ingested in the urine.   This is caused by a defective enzyme contracted from the planet Nori (hence the name of the disease, Norine). Unfortunately, when Miss Welch contracted the disease, Federation scientists did not realize all foodstuffs of this newly discovered planet contained this enzyme.

“Mr. Spock, I know that I am going to die, but promise me this,” Welch said, “before I die you, will get me out of here?”

“I will, Ensign,” said Mr. Spock, “I will.”

“And promise me that, somehow you will bring my body back to my home planet,” she said.

“Rest, Ensign,” Spock stated .

With this last utterance, Spock continued to work on her, utilizing every bit of scientific and medical knowledge that was applicable to her case. He took her temperature: it was 43 C. Her blood pressure was 158/100. Her pulse rate was annoyingly fast: 120 beats per minute. She was also sweating profusely, and although he had given her powerful anti-diarrhea medicine, every hour she would pass red fluid through her bowels. Spock was forced to conclude she was dying.

The rest of the captives, especially Lt. Decker, were very concerned for the young lady. Decker was especially concerned because he was falling in love with her.

The night passed slowly and no one slept well. Indeed, Decker managed to drop off only two or three hours after spending most of the time with his beloved Ms. Welch. During the night he held her hand tightly.

Morning came and Ensign Welch felt much worse. Spock knew her time had come.

They ate breakfast and Spock attended to the girl. However, the captors did not allow him much time with her before he was forced to work.

Spock and Decker worked on the now two-thirds finished estate. Decker paused in the middle of placing another brick on the building and requested his captors transport the next-to-lifeless Welch aboard the USS Enterprise where she could be treated properly. They refused. Soon after, he heard her call him. Decker slowly walked toward her. He wanted to comfort her yet at the same time he was afraid that she will break down. He knelt beside her.

“. . . Dick. . . .,” She began.

“Yes, darling,” He responded.

“I will always . . . love . . . you.”

With those last words, Cheryl Welch died. Decker was besides himself with grief, and began sobbing uncontrollably. The others: Spock and Shieh, tried to comfort him, but to no avail.

The guards, however, were insensitive to the young lady’s demise — they insisted the small contingent from the Enterprise’s crew get back to work. Kee Tra 712 yelled at Decker to get back to work.

“Get back to work, slaves,” Kee Tra 712 said with a menacing look.

The others continued sitting down in a cross-legged fashion near Decker. They felt that they had hardly enough energy to continue working.

Kee Tra 712 then pulled out his seven-foot long bullwhip and brandished it in a threatening manner.

Spock and Decker slowly started back to work. Decker, however, completely paralyzed because of his love for the young lady did not make a move.

“I said get back to work . . . you, you disgusting human,” yells 712.

Decker did not move.

712 with whip still in hand, advanced upon Decker. He began to raise it above his head in an overhead movement. The whip descended in an arc approaching Decker’s head.

At the same instant, Decker, driven to an insane furor because of the Lieutenant’s demise, shouted, “Die you inhuman bastard,” at Kee Tra 712, and lunged at him before Spock and Shieh could stop him.

The alien 712 backed off and killed Decker with a quark gun.

Spock and Shieh, were of course, appalled by the sight of two deaths in less than fifteen minutes, but wisely made no move.

Shieh, muttered under his breath, “You alien son of a bitch,” but didn’t move.

The alien 712 and the other guard yelled at them to get back to work and they did so.

Spock slowly put another brick on the government building. Shieh did so also.

“Spock, we have to get out of here!” Shieh said.

“Dr. Shieh, I am trying my best to formulate an escape plan – however, it is difficult under the circumstances.”

“Perhaps we should just rush the guards when they were off-guard. After all, there are only four of them and two of us. With our Starfleet defense training we should be able to rush them and win.”

“At what odds,” Spock said, “Lt. Shieh, you forget they have quark guns.”

They then continued to work on the government building.

Later, after sundown, the guards gave in and allowed them to bury the two bodies. Spock and Shieh dug two graves, each about five feet deep and long enough for the bodies in the soft tropical soil. They stood side-by-side close to the graves.

“Do you wish to deliver the eulogy, Lieutenant,” Spock said to Shieh.

“Yes, sir,” responded Shieh, in a like fashion.

“We are gathered here today on the occasion of the death of two of our finest Starfleet officers: Lieutenant Cheryl Welch and Second Sublieutenant Decker. One of the officers was an anthropologist, the other a fine historian. It appeared that the two were beginning to have a strong attraction for each other, and it’s a damn shame that it wasn’t consummated,” his voice broke with emotion. He continued, “Of Second Sublieutenant Decker, I can only say this: He was just the most caring man. Of Lieutenant Welch, I can only say that she was the one of the best anthropologists in Starfleet. May their souls rest in peace.”

The Starfleet officers covered the graves with sandy loam. They then retired to the caves and slept under the watchful eyes of the guards.

During the next few days, Shieh began to increasingly rely on Mr. Spock. He was angry at Spock since the Vulcan was in command and therefore responsible for the predicament in which he finds himself. That was how Shieh saw the situation. Ordered by their captors, Shieh and Spock continued to construct the building. Spock’s escape plan was to wait one night until all the black guards were asleep and steal their quark guns.

One night, approximately a week after the death of their comrades, the two guards had been working and sweating all day putting the last few touches on the building. The guards were obviously tired out from watching the men all day. The guards fell asleep near a roaring fire with their quark guns resting lightly on their laps. Decker and Shieh feigned sleep while lying on the ground near the walls of the government structure. Spock nudged Decker on the shoulder – “time to move, Mister,” he told him.

They advanced toward the sleeping guards. Shieh had a close encounter of a bad kind when he slipped on a rock and rustled the underbrush. One of the guards shifted his weight uneasily, and turned around and lied on his back, but fortunately did not awaken. Because of this screw-up though, Shieh received a quizzical lifting of the left eyebrow from Mr. Spock.

Spock was now only four meters away from Min Song– Decker about the same distance from the other guard.

They continued to advance.

Three meters away. . . .

The guards continued sleeping; Kee Tra 712 rolled over and let out a big burp.

Shieh tried very hard to stifle his laughter – drawing a disapproving glare from the impetuous Vulcan, Mr. Spock. They continued to edge closer to the guards.

1 meter away . . .

They both anticipated holding the quark guns in their hands. Shieh perspired heavily, and Mr. Spock perspired somewhat.

There, there . . .

Spock leaned over and applied the famous Vulcan nerve pinch to the sleeping Min Song Kee Tra 712. At the same time, he grabbed the quark gun from him. With quark gun in hand, he stunned the other guards.

Meanwhile, unbeknownst to Spock and Shieh, a sentry from the golden castle had been watching them. The sentry had come to deliver a message to Kee Tra 712 regarding the appointment of new officials to the Council Of Elders in Podjay. Seeing what was going on, he quickly waved to his fellow guards.

Spock and Shieh started running along the trail from the edifice to the golden castle. Unfortunately, before they could get very far, they were met by a contingent of seven guards and the original sentry about a mile down the road.

“What will we do now, Spock?,” yelled Shieh in anger.

Spock said nothing (there being nothing to say). He drew his quark gun and managed to stun one of the guards before he and Shieh were stunned by all seven of the guards firing their quark guns simultaneously.

The contingent lashed Spock and Shieh to six-foot long poles. The poles were made of sturdy pine, and they were lashed together with heavy rope. The poles were then placed across the shoulders of two of the biggest guards. One of the guards carrying Mr. Spock was called Min Song Lee Ta 612 and the other guard was called Lin Sung Lee Tsu 512.

As they were walking, Min Song Lee Ta 612 started a conversation. “Umpf! This Vulcan is very heavy,” remarked Lee Tra 612, as perspiration dripped from his body to the lush foliage below.

Suddenly, Lin Sung Lee Tsu 512 stumbled, causing the load to shift.

“Watch it, you idiot!,” yelled Lee Ta 612.

“I’m sorry, I hit a branch,” whimpered Lee Tsu 512.

“Don’t hit branches!” yelled back Lee Ta 612, still angry over the incident.

They continued along the meandering road, grunting and heaving with the exertion of carrying the weight of the Vulcan and the historian.

For his part, SubLt. Decker was being carried by Lin Sung Nee Sha 412 and his brother Mee Sha 312. They also complained.

Later, Tsu 512 stumbled again.

“You stupid son of a bitch,” yelled Lee Ta 612 at his companion.

“Shut up!,” yelled Lee Tsu 512.

All this noise served to finally awaken the slumbering Enterprise officers. Spock looked around groggily as he tried to focus his eyes. The stun rays were indeed highly effective, he thought.

“We failed, didn’t we, Mr. Spock?,” inquired Shieh in Chinese.

“Yes, unfortunately your analysis of the situation is quite correct, Mr. Shieh.”

“I know one thing, if we ever get off of this planet, I will exact vengeance!”

“If we ever get off. . . . ”

He was rudely interrupted by Lee Ta 612 telling him to shut up. The guards, of course, understood nothing of this, never having bothered to learn Chinese.

The rest of the journey continued in relative silence. After they reached the government building, they took out some rope from underneath their long flowing robes. They untied the Enterprise officers while still having their quark guns trained on them and motioned them to some big trees similar to oak. Under protest from the captives, the guards delivered twenty lashes in unrelenting blows similar to that practiced on Earth during the slave days.

Spock declared, “I protest this action as being against all interplanetary rules for the conduct of prisoners.”

“Silence, Vulcan!,” snarled Kee Tra 712, who then proceeded to lash him ten more times. Spock refused to give him satisfaction by crying out in pain.

Chapter V

Meanwhile, the Special Spacers and the probe continued on the trail toward the Golden Castle. The probe was now less than five kilometers away from the Golden Castle, which meant the search party was only five kilometers behind the probe. They continued along the same trail that the first group had walked.

The probe remarked, “THE SCENT OF MR. SPOCK AND LT. SHIEH IS VERY STRONG -THEY CANNOT BE FAR NOW.” They continue along, hiking through the dense, blue-green jungle foliage.

“Probe, . . . wait for us,” Chieko ordered, as the probe became increasingly close to the Golden Castle. She decided not to risk having the probe seen by their captors.

The five special spacers and the probe continued toward the Golden Castle. They stopped right outside the entrance to the Golden Castle. They waited and sought shelter in some large caves which overhung the clearing where the Enterprise crew was kept in captivity.

“Status Report – Probe,” Chieko inquired of the machine.

The probe responded, “THERE ARE TEN GUARDS, AND THEY ARE ALL WITHIN THE CAMP. MR. SPOCK AND LT. SHIEH ARE TIED TO TREES AND ARE BEING TORTURED. THEY ARE BEING WHIPPED WITH LONG BLACK QUIRTS. THEIR VITAL FUNCTIONS ARE LOW.”

This last statement had Chieko very worried. Although she would have preferred to wait to obtain some more information, she realized that there may not be time. She didn’t want to be responsible for the death of one of the best science officers in Starfleet.

Meanwhile, Spock was still being whipped by Kee Tra 712. His back was now covered with more than thirty bloody red welts. However, he still had not given the guards satisfaction by crying out.

The probe shifted slightly. Some dirt rolled down from the cave to the clearing below, and made a very slight sound.

Spock with his acute Vulcan hearing, heard this. He swiveled his head in the direction of the noise and spotted one of Krosnevik’s tentacles, and then his head. Shieh looked in the same direction to see what Mr. Spock was looking at. Unable to contain his excitement  at anticipated freedom, Shieh yelled. Their captors turned around to see where the noise was coming from.

Chieko yelled, “Let’s move out,” The five ran down from the caves into the clearing below. Harri swooped down from the caves gliding on his wings. He landed on top of a guard and bit him delivering a poison that rendered the victim unconscious for five to six hours.

Chieko ran into four guards. Before they had time to pull and fire their quark guns, she knocked them down. She front kicked one in the groin while simultaneously double punching two guards on either side of her. The fourth guard raised a club over his head and began a downward descent toward Chieko’s head. She blocked with a high block while stepping in and delivering an elbow strike to her attacker’s rib cage. She then followed with a left hand elbow strike toward the face. The guard tried to ward off the blow, but to no avail. He attempted a Shito strike toward his neck, but it wasn’t successful and Chieko flipped him. He landed on the floor. While the guards struggled to their feet, Harri pressed a lever on his arm and shot a sticky web over them. Phaser and quark gun fire was exchanged between Ramus Krosnevik, Karen Person, Madam X, and the three other guards. Harri ran over to Spock and cut his bonds with a wingtip .

“I will take you to safety,” yelled Harri above the din of the battle while reaching out toward Shieh and Spock.

Mr. Spock declined to be helped. “I shall fight!,” yelled the normally passive First Officer.

“Then I shall fight too,” reiterated Dr. Shieh.

Mr. Spock made two or three indecisive steps before regaining his balance. A guard came up to him and pointed his quark gun.

“Prepare to die, Vulcan,” said Lee Mung T’al 610.

“O.K.” replied Spock before jumping up and kicking the gun out of the black man’s grasp. He then stepped behind the guard and applied his famous Vulcan nerve pinch. The guard slumped to the ground and was out.

Shieh, apparently weakened by his wounds, fell to the ground. Effortlessly, Harri picked him up and flew toward the cave that the group had previously used for cover. He tended to the human’s wounds. Using his mandibles, he applied sticky gauze to the wound. Dr. McCoy had remarked in the past that it was a most effective dressing.

Meanwhile, the battle still raged on. Ramus Krosnevik, and Madam X were still exchanging weapon fire with two guards. Karen and another guard were lying on the ground. Karen was dead, but the guard was merely stunned. Spock was fighting with a guard. He used his martial arts skills and physical prowess to best the guards. He then managed to escape into the hills. Ramus and Madam X managed to stun the other two guards with their phasers. Madam X yelled in pain after being hit with a quark gun.

The battle was finished after Karen chops Kee Tra 712 with the edge of her right hand and felled him. During the whole battle the probe had not bothered to join in the fracas. It had merely stood in the background observing the fight.

Spock decided to call Kirk on his communicator.

“Spock to Enterprise. Come in, Jim,” Spock said to Kirk on the communicator.

Meanwhile, on board the starship, Captain Kirk was discussing with Mr. Scott and Dr. McCoy the fate of the search party and the original contingent consisting of Spock, Decker, Shieh, and et cetera. Of course, he had kept in touch with the special spacer search party so that he had no questions about their fate. However, he was very concerned about the fate of the others.

“I hope they are still alive,” Kirk mused hopefully.

“I think they probably are,” said Dr. McCoy, “It’s amazing what the human body can stand Jim .”

Scott sat morosely at the end of the table aware of the fact that the sensors had still not been able to penetrate into the mysterious dark clouds that surrounded the planet. The formless clouds swirled into a mystical pattern forming images of mythological creatures such as a centaur, and a unicorn. He was also very painfully aware of his failure to modify the sensors so that they would penetrate the planet’s cloud covering.

“Have you been able to modify the sensors, Scotty,?” Kirk asked.

Scotty was morose, but had no answer except to tell the truth. “No, sorry, Capt’n. I dinna ken find a way to increase the power of the transreceiver of the secondary sensor to enable it to see through the clouds.”

“Scotty, I want to be able to see what’s going on!,” Kirk yelled.

“I’m doing the best I can, sir !” Scotty yelled back.

“Do better,” Kirk replied testily.

Uhura’s voice broke through the discussion in the briefing room.

“Captain, I’m receiving a transmission from the planet !,” She said.

McCoy, Kirk, and Mr. Scott all stared at each other for a second or two. Then Kirk grinned broadly and said, “Patch them through, Uhura.”

Kirk then heard his communicator beep. He took it off his belt and flipped it open.

“Spock to Enterprise. Come in, Jim.”

“Spock, is that you ? Are you all right ?,” Kirk asked.

“Of course it is me, Captain. And I am in perfectly good health, I assure you!”

“Tell me what happened, Spock !”

Spock then proceeded to tell him the events of the past few weeks.

“Well I’m glad to see that everyone came out of the situation, OK. I want you to take the prisoners to the glass city of Podjay. I will beam down a small party, say two dozen security guards to take over the city and free the white slaves.”

“But, Captain – that would violate the prime directive. We would be interfering in their culture,” Spock protested.

Kirk knew that he was right. However, in his heart he also knew that he could not allow one race to enslave another. Especially, not a white race  very similar to appearance to his own.

“Spock, it is true that the black culture is progressing but the white culture is stagnant. The prime directive refers to vibrant cultures – not stagnant ones. We must give the white people an opportunity to develop.”

“But, sir, the prime directive instructs us not to interfere under any circumstance. If we are to interfere we could be severely reprimanded by Star Fleet Command.”

“Mr. Spock, this discussion is finished. You have your orders. Kirk out.”

Spock thought that was the end of their conversation. He was not happy with his orders, but on the other hand what could he do? He decided that he would try to persuade Kirk one more time.

“Spock to Enterprise.”

“Kirk here. What is it, Mr. Spock ?,” Kirk inquired.

“Sir, logic dictates that I try to persuade you to reconsider.”

“Spock, I’ve made my decision!,” cut in the Captain of the USS Enterprise, an angry edge to his voice.

“Captain Kirk, if I may continue!,” responded the Vulcan empathetically.

Kirk sighing, said, “Continue, Spock . . . ”

“I would like to point that we do not know what the effects of freeing the whites would be. They could be so incensed that they kill their former captors. By freeing them we may be responsible for much bloodshed. They also have no experience at self-government and may not know how to get food, shelter, and other things that they require. It will be very expensive for the Federation to train the whites.”

Kirk had calmed down and merely replied, “Spock, I’ve already considered your comments. And I appreciate them. But I think the blacks can be made to help educate and train the whites. The Federation will send down a team to assist where necessary. Now, please, Spock follow my orders, Jim out.”

“OK, sir, Spock out.”

Spock then flipped the communicator down and slid it inside his pocket. He then had no choice except to follow orders. Soon the guards on the ground began to awaken. They all began to stir.

“What will you do with us now, ” asked Kee Tra 712.

“We are going to the glass city of Podjay,” replied Spock coolly.

They then began to walk along the trail toward the glass city of Podjay. They walked through the jungle, pushing black vines as they strode, back along the same trail from whence they had come.

Kee Tra, not having much else to do, struck up a conversation with Mr. Spock – he was trying to get the Vulcan first officer to sympathize with him and thus perhaps let him go. Spock, for his part, of course knew that he was merely playing psychological games with him.

“Mr. Spock, do you not agree that the whites are savages, uncivilized and uncouth. I do not think these savages are capable of governing themselves. We, the rulers of this planet, have merely been taking care of an inferior race. We provide them with food, shelter, and all the necessities of life, ” argued Kee Tra 712.

“Except for one thing, Kee Tra,” said Spock.

“What’s that, Mr. Spock ?,” he asked.

“Liberty,” replied Spock.

“Again, Spock, I do not think that the white populace would know what to do with this so- called liberty.”

“Ahem, ahem!,” were murmurs of ascension heard from the other captives.

“Yes, but perhaps they could learn,” disagreed the Vulcan, although he still had doubts whether they could.

“They are not capable of learning, Mr. Spock,” insisted Min Lee Song 612.

“Every mammal known in the galaxy is capable of learning. These mammals are humanoid and thus should be expected to learn much more. Indeed, I would think that they might even be capable of learning how to read and write,” responded Spock.

“Ha! Ha!,” responded the rulers of the planet in disbelief.

“In fact, they might even be capable of doing higher mathematics such as vector and tensor analysis; and of writing great novels similar in quality to Charles Dickens’s Oliver Twist, and Twadon’s Gods of Plenty,” stated the Vulcan emphatically.

This last statement clearly astonished the blacks who let out an angry din of protest. They simply could or would not believe what they were hearing.

Before Spock or the ex-captors could reply, ten blacks jumped out of the dense foliage surrounding a bend they had come to. The blacks leveled quark guns at the trio.

“Give up,” yelled the leader, “put down your weapons!”

The answer to this demand was a blast of phaser fire from Spock, Chieko, and the entire Enterprise contingent. Spock managed to stun five of the party with an entire sweep from his hand phaser before being hit in the gun hand with a quark blast. The gun battle raged on.

Chieko fired her phaser at one black who had ducked behind a palm tree at the same instant that Spock had fired the first phaser blast.   Chieko exchanged gun fire with him before finally hitting him full in the stomach with a blast from a phaser rifle. This blast knocked the man back through the foliage, where he came to rest his head on a boulder.

Harri and Ramus were fighting a losing battle hand-to-tentacle with four of the blacks. Their phasers had been knocked to the ground earlier in the battle. The power had been drained from them. Ramus had been severely injured when one of his tentacles had caught a full blast of quark power. The blast had drained a large portion of his strength. Harri also received a quark blast that amputated his left wing. The blacks were beating them senseless. Spock jumped into the fray, however, and dispatched two of them with well placed nerve pinches.

Meanwhile, the original captive blacks, still bound, tried to help their fellow comrades. They were rattling their handcuffs and making quite a racket.

While the fierce fighting was going on, the probe had been given the task of guarding the captive blacks. It stared at them with his internal phasers locked on them.

Madam X and Shieh had taken refuge behind a tree and spotted the lone black running away; they quickly cut him down with phaser guns.

Soon the fight was over as superior fighting ability and advanced weaponry combined to defeat the blacks . They quickly handcuffed the blacks with force field-type handcuffs and they continued trudging along toward the glass city of Podjay. The crew was now less than one kilometer away from the glass city of Podjay,

The terrain became increasingly rugged and quite mountainous. The foliage became sparse and had more of a brown, rather than a green tint; the vegetation had changed from tropical to deciduous forest.

The blacks trudged along; they began talking amongst themselves but Spock ordered them to shut up. The crew was less than 1/2 kilometer away from the city. The lights on the probe began to blink on and off.

“What is the problem, probe? Do you detect something?,” he questioned it.

-THERE IS A PARTY OF FOUR BLACKS IN THE TREES BESIDES US- the probe reported in its dry mechanical voice.

Then, quark fire again hit the contingent. Madam X went down – she had been disintegrated into nothing.

“No!,” yelled Ramus. Insane with fury he fired his phaser at random, destroying trees and sending wild animals yelling and running from the forest. However, the random phaser fire managed to kill two of the aliens.

Chieko tried to get Ramus to calm down. “Calm down, Ramus, you are destroying everything that is precious on this planet. If you cannot control yourself, I will have you court-martialed.   Your actions cannot help Chieko now. This is not the kind of action that one would expect a highly trained special spacer to take.”

These last words had a sobering effect on Krosnevik. The probe quickly located one of the blacks by his body heat and stunned him with a phaser blast. The other black fired a quark blast at Shieh, but Shieh managed to duck behind a tree. Shieh and the black exchanged fire.

“Come out, and give yourself up, you don’t have a chance,” yelled Shieh.

The black refused to answer. Shieh thought probably the black cannot understand. He borrowed the universal translator from Spock and tried again to no avail.

His only answer was a blast from a quark gun. In turn, he replied with a phaser blast. The black reloading his quark gun with a cartridge from his belt made the mistake of leaving his head exposed outside the tree. At that instant, Shieh cut through a line of trees while the black was distracted. The black leaped out from the tree cover and fired at the tree where Shieh was. Of course, Shieh was no longer there. He had snuck along a tree to his left and had succeeded at putting himself at a 45o angle to his opponent. He quickly fired a phaser blast at his opponent while his opponent fired at him. The blast stuns the black. Later, all the blacks were gathered up and handcuffed and they proceeded toward Podjay.

Soon, they were on top of a mountain which overlooked the famed glass city. They do not know exactly what to do and decided to wait until Kirk beamed down the security forces.

The city was awesome, replete with many tall glass buildings that have rod-like shapes. Some of the buildings were of different colors: red, green, blue, although most of them were clear. The buildings were connected together by glass tubes which were large enough to convey the packages and people that were to be conveyed. A few of the buildings were shaped like triangles or squares.

The security team headed by Lieutenant Spielman arrived. He lead a party of twelve heavily armed security personnel equipped with phaser rifles, photon grenades with their launchers, and sonic disruptors. They were a tough looking lot – all trained in various methods of combat. All of them had black belts in the martial arts, in addition to a master’s rating in weapon expertise. Each of them had a particular weapon that they were experts on.

Lt. Spielman reporting, sir,” said the lieutenant.

“At ease!,” replied Mr. Spock.

There followed a moment of awkward silence. Finally, Mr. Spock chose to speak again. “Well you know why you have been called, lieutenant, and what is necessary. I only hope that you are prepared to do it.”

“Indeed, I am,” replied the lieutenant, and indeed he was. The lieutenant had spent most of his adult life, and some of his younger days training for the security forces. He was well versed in the subtile martial art of aikido, and also the brutality of the phaser cannon.

Spock then confided to the young lieutenant, “Ok, this is the plan: I will have Captain Kirk knock out all the people in the city, and any advancing armies with the ships’ phasers. It will be up to your contingent to secure the city. You must set up communications with the leader.” Spock knew how important it was that he emphasize to the lieutenant exactly what he wanted done. He then proceeded in detail to explain the plan to the young officer.

According to Spock, the security team would move in three task forces across the city. Each task force would consist of four people. Initially, two task forces would take over the government buildings by approaching them from either side. The third task force would approach the city from the rear, preventing any of the population from escaping.

Meanwhile, aboard the Enterprise, Captain Kirk would stun all of the military and advancing parties and would also stun hostile forces. Of course, the security teams would also be prepared to deal with the others if they became hostile. Once the city had been secured, Kirk would tell the people on the Enterprise loudspeakers that they were free. The security team headed by Lt. Spielman would also inform them of their rights. The security team would also force the emperor to communicate to the other cities that they must come to a meeting.

The plan was put into action. Lt. Spielman and the others began to move down the mountains. They inched their way slowly down the mountainside.

Meanwhile, Spock called up to Captain Kirk, “Captain, please stand by, we are almost ready to put our plan into action.”

Kirk sat in his command chair on the bridge. From his position he could swivel around and see all the subcommand stages on either side of him. There was Lt. Uhura, the lovely Bantu woman to his left; Mr. Sulu and Chekov directly in front of him, manning the navigational console; and to his right was the library computer station which would have been manned by Mr. Spock had he been there, but instead, was manned by Mr. Dyadik – a Deltan male.

Kirk nervously waited for Mr. Spock to give him the command to fire his phasers down at the populace. He was ready to fire at a moments notice.

Dr. McCoy stepped out of the turbolift onto the bridge of the Enterprise. “Good morning, Captain, are you ready to put your plan into action?”

“Yes, Dr. McCoy,” said the Captain.

“Well, I hope that it works,” said the medical doctor – somewhat roughly, it seemed to Captain Kirk.

“Well, doctor, I for one do believe it will work,” said the Captain with irritation.

Suddenly, Kirk heard his communicator beep, “Spock to Captain – are you ready?”

“Yes, Mr. Spock,” said the starship commander, “I am quite ready.”

The lieutenant and his contingent then quickly moved down from the rocks into the camp.

The security teams were headed by Lt. T’Cael, a half-Romulan, half Vulcan, who was known for his mind and agility with figures, the lovely sergeant Ms. Janette Wu, and, of course, Lt. Spielman. Ms. Wu happened to be an expert in ten martial arts, including, but not limited to, Shotokan Karate, Ju-jitsu, Tae Kwon Do, Shaolin Kung Fu, and Hapkido. Mr. Spock would be in charge of the first team which would advance toward the front of the city, and Lt. Spielman would be second in command. Lt. T’Cael would advance from the side perpendicular to that of Mr. Spock. Sergeant Wu decided that she would remain at the back of the city to prevent any of the men from escaping. Spock also decided that he would remain in the caves to observe what progress was being made.

They advanced down the rocks into the city. At first they met very little resistance and their presence at the camp was quite unexpected; and therefore, of course, quite surprising. Meanwhile, Kirk, on board the Enterprise, fired a phaser blast. However , they met up with some slight resistance outside the emperor’s palace.

Spock stood outside the emperor’s main gate. “I wish to speak to the emperor,” he yelled at the entrance to the palace.

The frightened security guards yelled back, “The emperor is not here.”

Spock, of course, realized the guard was frightened, but was not so easily dissuaded from what he saw as his appointed task.

The palace guards, meanwhile, grew quite nervous and wary as time goes by. They did not know how to get rid of the Vulcan, but they felt that they must. “Please leave,” they yelled at Spock.

Spock, of course, bound by the Vulcan sense of duty and out of loyalty to his friend and Captain refused.

“No, I cannot leave. I must speak to the Emperor Kee Tra 712! I must convince him that what he is doing is wrong!”

The blacks then began to group en mass. There were approximately twenty of them, strong, lithe, and ready to fight. They were replete in gold and silver dress, and carried baskets of gold and silver jewelry. Their faces reminded one of Halloween – some of the warriors had a skull painted on their forehead. Others in their group have what appeared to be a cross painted on their cheekbones. All in all, they appeared to be a very frightened, but dedicated group.

One of the blacks stepped forward. He was an imposing figure, and stood perhaps seven feet tall. What looked like an ostrich plume came from the top of his head and rose straight up to make him appear even taller.

“I am called Lin Trong See Tra Da 604,” he said in flawless English, “Who might you be? And what do you want?”

“I am Spock – first officer of the USS Enterprise. I must speak to your emperor. He must understand that what he is doing is wrong. All people were equal and must be treated as such. I have come to liberate the whites and will not stop until they are liberated. I demand to speak to the emperor!”

“You are not in a position to demand anything, you insolent bastard,” yelled 604, his face contorted with rage, “I, on the other hand, I’m in a position to grant whatever I choose.”

Hearing these words, Spock decided that it was time to show the people of this planet that he meant business. He then reached down in his uniform and picked up his communicator. He flicked it open.

Not knowing what it was, the blacks were mystified and began chattering amongst themselves. Meanwhile, Spock was trying to get in touch with the Captain.

“Captain, ready your phasers to fire.”

Kirk then replied, “Kirk here, standing by to fire at your command.”

“Captain, stun the guards at coordinates 6 mark 7.3 by 12.”

Kirk who was sitting in his command chair on the bridge of the starship Enterprise then decided to lay a path of phaser fire down on the planet. He followed Spock’s request to the letter, stunning the guards and leveling the rather beautiful facade outside the palace. The other guards were quite surprised by the action the captain of the Enterprise had taken. They became quite agitated, chattering excitedly amongst themselves. This chattering, which was quite unintelligible to Spock, made him nervous.

The other guards proceeded to look up rather nervously at Spock. They looked at him in awe, uncomprehending the fate that had felled his comrades. Spock peered from his vantage point and saw armies advancing from the south and east toward the city. They appeared as staid warriors ready to fight.

The other warriors were, of course, milling about. One of the guards stepped forward, his name was Han Lee Tran 804.

“I am Han Lee Tran 804, now we will see who will be in charge of what is going on. I will be in charge!”

Spock merely looked him straight in the eye and said, “No!” With this last remark, he then signaled up to Kirk on the Enterprise.

Kirk laid out a steady stream of phaser fire that caused the advancing army to collapse. With his last shot, he was confident that the resistance had crumbled.

Han Lee Tra 804 looked terrified. He did not know what to do. Kirk, Spock, and the mighty power of the starship Enterprise had made him very afraid. He looked into Spock’s eye and said, “I will accede to your request. Whatever is your desire let me know, mister.”

“This is my list of demands, forthwith,” Spock began:

“(1) I demand that you release all the whites and make them equal to yourself.

(2) I further demand that you contact the emperors of the other cities and tell them to come to Podjay.

(3) I demand to see the emperor.”

“Yes, I will do it,” stated the palace guard. He then went with three others into the palace. After a brief interval, the emperor Kee Tra 712 came out.

Meanwhile, the others who have been sent into the city encountered varying degrees of resistance. Lt. T’Cael stunned approximately half of the troops that he battled with. He ordered the remaining troops to sit down and wait out the proceedings.

Miss Wu had apparently nothing to do since no one saw fit to leave the city. She had patiently been awaiting the outcome, in constant, although brief communication with Mr. Spock’s unit. Luckily for the success of her mission, and her own sanity, she was used to the inattention.

Spock then decided to call all of his commanders to the Emperor’s palace. He sat heavily down on the ornate golden bench outside the palace that was inlaid with rubies and emeralds.

“This is Commander Spock. I hereby request (read order) that all my commanders meet me at the emperor’s palace as soon as possible. Is this understood? Please respond. Spock out.”

Lt. Wu, camped out with her three assistants, was the first to respond. She replied, “Aye, sir, my estimated arrival time is three hours.”

Lt. T’ Cael who sat underneath a tree watching his men, who in turn, watched about fifty conscious troops, and another fifty to sixty more unconscious troops responded next. “I estimate my arrival time to be roughly three and one half hours, T’Cael out.” he said. He turned to one of his most trusted men, Sergeant Dickerson and asked him to take over. He told Sgt. Dickerson that he was extremely tired and planned to sleep. He then went inside the tent, and without bothering to take off his uniform, fell fast asleep,

The men brought the unconscious prisoners around with some awakening gas. The prisoners awoke, although they were still groggy. “What — what the hell is going on? What are we doing here?”

The gas had the side effect of dulling the receptor portions of the brain. This made the prisoners very leery and nervous. The mental confusion was similar to that which would result from being awakened from a nightmare.

Sergeant Dickerson proceeded to get the prisoners ready for transportation. The company also got the captors ready for transportation. Ensign Craig directed a levitation beam at him. The beam lifted him up about three feet above their heads and they started walking. They had a long trek ahead of them, indeed. Dickerson began to wonder that the journey may take longer than he originally estimated it to be. They keep going though, first through winding roads, then through thick underbrush. Occasionally – and, of course, not at all unexpectedly – the men snag their clothes on underbrush.

“Damn,” said Julie Weintraub, a young lieutenant with the group. “My trousers caught on this bush.” The bush she was referring to was a prickly pear bush with three-inch long projectiles sticking out of it. It had been there a long time.

“Well, let me help you with that,” replied Ensign Ilya.

“No, no. It’s quite all right I’ve got it. There’s no need to bother everyone about my little difficulties.” said Julie Weintraub.

“Really, it’s OK. I don’t mind helping.” replied Ensign Ilya.

Ensign Ilya then proceeded with this course of action and with a deft swift of his wrist unsnagged the lieutenant’s pants leg. Unfortunately, however, he ripped the material slightly.

“Oh, I’m sorry. How stupid of me! Of course, I will reimburse  you for the material.”

“It’s no problem, really,” laughed Lt. Weintraub. “I’ll fix it in fifteen minutes once we get to the location.”

“Well, I’ll help you, in fact, I insist that I do.”

They proceeded along the path, trudging pass rocks and boulders along the way. After they traveled for approximately two hours they stopped for about five minutes to discuss and anticipate what will happen after Captain Kirk gives an order that the slaves will go free.

“I predict that there will be a general uprising, and that the blacks will fight to the end on this,” stated Sergeant Dickerson emphatically.

“Well, I’ll wager five to one against Captain Kirk,” replied a creature four feet high with several tentacles.

“OK, I’ll take you on,” yelled another voice.

“I’ll put twenty credits on it,” said the third member of the group.

“Hey, I want some action too,” stated one of the black prisoners.

Sergeant Dickerson blinked. The tentacled creature began laughing in his strange alien fashion. The third member looked at him amazingly. The other prisoners began talking excitedly among themselves, their communication punctuated by brief intermittent laughter. Of course, all the laughter was bound to have an effect on the state of Lieutenant Commander T’Cael. He began to move, slightly at first, but his movements increased ever so, but ever so, slightly with time. He yawned, then said, “Sergeant Dickerson, would you come here a minute please.”

“Yes, sir,” replied the sergeant respectfully. He moved toward the lieutenant slowly at first, but then moved more rapidly, albeit somewhat nervously.

Meanwhile, the lieutenant ordered his men to turn off the levitation beam and jumped down.

“Sergeant Dickerson, while you are entitled to your opinion, I do not suggest that you voice it too stridently. Certain elements might not approve. That is all. Dismissed sergeant.” With this admonishment the group continued their trek toward the city.

By the time they arrived at the city, all the leaders were sitting around.

Some of the Enterprise crew were sitting down on the steps outside the palace while others were lounging around the lush, rich grass. Others had set up tents and were merely relaxing or playing inside them. The members of many black tribes from the many cities of this amazing little planet were also present. Some of the emperors were even bigger than Kee Tra 712 and were as tall as eight feet. They were all dressed quite richly and exorbitantly. One of the black emperors wore a hat that was extremely close to the style of a cowboy hat with a Mohawk of feathers running from the front brim all the way to the back brim. The black brim of his hat was inlaid with jewels that were on gold studs. Another emperor was dressed from head to toe in a shiny silver uniform that would remind one of space traveler from an Amazing Stories short story of the 1930’s. To top it all off, and completely finish the look, he was wearing a gold helmet with a green visor on the top of his head.

Although it was not unexpected, a few women had actually shown up. They wore long flowing gowns that served to accentuate their sexuality in the most feminine and hide the unattractiveness of those women who were less good-looking. Many of the gowns had gold and silver jewels embroidered in a vertical pattern on the front of the dress starting at the breast level and extending to the hips.

Mr. Spock called the meeting to order. Kirk and Spock had arranged it so that Kirk’s voice could be blared over the 23rd century equivalent of loud speakers that had been set up especially for that purpose. Kirk’s voice then came over these speakers, “Listen to me, emperors of the planet, from now on all your people were free. The whites have just as much say as the blacks in determining their destiny. There will be no more discrimination on this planet.”

The emperor and slaves stood together listening to the speech. Some nodded in ascension while others frowned in dissent. However, the ratio of those expressing approval to the plan to those expressing disapproval was about two to one.

Emperor Kee Tra 712 began to interrupt but Kirk cut him off. Kirk then proceeded with his speech, “The United Federation of Planets will assist the citizens of the planet with the change of government. We will establish a interim period in which the government will be granted six months for the transition. We will attempt to make the transition as smooth as possible. Of course, Federation representatives will be available to assist any citizen of the planet who requests it. Do you have any questions?”

“Only one,” replied the emperor. “What will happen to the ruling class?”

“Well, not being part of the team to help you with the transition I’m not sure of the details. I will just say that . . . uh, of course, it is obvious that you will have to reduce your standard of living somewhat. You will be allowed to maintain all your personal property that has been in your family estate but you will have to give back all the public property that was put in trust or bequeathed to you.”

With that, Kirk called Scotty, “Scotty, beam us up.”

Later, in Kirk’s cabin aboard the USS Enterprise, Captain Kirk, Dr. McCoy, and even Mr. Spock on this special occasion were sitting around sharing a bottle of Rigellian brandy.

Kirk looked around focusing his eyes upon the collectable antiques. In particular, he looked at the middle of the 1970 aircraft carrier bearing the same name of the ship under his command. It was beautiful artwork and he was very proud of it. It was an intricate model of the famous aircraft carrier – accurate and precise in every detail even down to the gun turrets on the bridge of the craft. He remarked, “I often wonder what it would be like to have been commander of this ship back in the 1960’s and 1970’s. I envy the captains and skippers of old – they did not have to worry about the populations of the planets that they serviced. I hope that I made the correct decision down there.”

McCoy stretched on Jim’s bed, sipped his brandy and said, “You made a decision, Jim. A decision that I believe is correct, but to which there is no way of discerning whether it was correct or not – that is simply a matter of opinion.”

Mr. Spock, uncharacteristically drinking, replied in the same vein, “I concur. Although it is true that the good doctor and I disagree much more than we agree, I have to admit that he is correct this time.”

Kirk leaned back in his chair, looked at both of them and smiled. Dr. McCoy looked at Mr. Spock incredulously. Mr. Spock had not agreed with anything he had to say in the last six months. “Mr. Spock – I can’t believe that you are lending me a vote of confidence but thank you very much.” he said.

“You are quite welcome, Doctor, as I said, I believe that you are absolutely correct in this case. I cannot imagine that Captain Kirk had an easy time making his decision. I am glad that I am not in a position requiring difficult decisions such as these.”

Kirk replied, “Sometimes I wish that I didn’t have to make decisions like this, but it is the nature of my job and I must do it. I think the people of this planet will do all right by themselves.”

“Aye,” Mr. Spock and Dr. McCoy mumbled in ascension.

The Enterprise was like a great big silvery eagle with the stars glimmering in the background. The adventure continued.

THE END

 

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Post-Mortem

Post-Mortem

 

For Greg P., who taught me set my mind free from the past that haunted me.

The past may be hell, but the future is to be explored. And you just might find heaven.

Besides, we just gotta go where no man has gone before.

Thank you,

Riley

 

 

Welcome to the dawn of a new age, Admiral.

An age where MY destiny flourishes.


 

 

I walked about the abandoned warehouse, unsure what to make of the disturbances that were reported. Albeit, this was right next to a Borg camp that we’ve somehow manage to prevent from expanding, but the reports I’d received were… Different at best.

The clouds above the shattered skylights congregated about the sky, shrouding the warehouse and the rest of the desolate, ruined city in the middle of Wyoming in their condescending shadows of authority and raw power.

I simply walked about the warehouse, picking up small things here and there that I found useful. The metal of the decrepit storage facility groaned as mighty winds swept the city. As I continued wandering, I heard something skitter across the dust before me.

I was quick to draw my revolver, a silk black MP412 (Yes, weapons have come much further than gunpowder/projectile, but they work surprisingly well) that I customized myself with a small Dacter reflex sight, suppressor, laser pointer sight, and bullets that I fashioned with 20 pellets of birdshot. Looking down at where I heard the dust scatter, I find a simple rat, going about its business.

I debated silently whether to shoot it, as I was not one to trust anything and everything in this horrid, depressing hellhole of a wasteland caused by the Fourth World War and the Third Borg Incursion of Sector 001, the former still ravaging the continents of Earth and the latter barely won by the now obliterated United Federation of Planets.

I decide against shooting the animal, as I go on an “eye-for-an-eye” basis. I still kept my pistol in hand, though; better safe than sorry. As I dug out a small piece of dark gray scrap metal from a pile of rotted, moldy wood, I noticed that the groaning of the metal has been continuing for a lot longer than it should have despite the mighty winds. I decided to semi-briefly survey the warehouse, my Vulcan mind of logic kicking in. I let my Oculus, a small, yet effective glass/holograph visor that covered my left eye of a brutal wound I dared not reveal, emit a Thermal Pulse (It’s like thermal vision, only in a shockwave). It reaches to the walls, finding no abnormally high spikes or drops in temperature.

I’m suddenly startled by a monotone voice, sounding like mine only a tad deeper. But as I process the event, I could not help but surrender my spine to the chills that wished to ascend it.

“I knew someone would send your pitiful soul down here.”

“I’m not sure I understand.”

“How sad. Some people in this damned city think you’re a god. ‘The savior.’ But others like us see you as another pushover. An obstacle that we will not only destroy, but assimilate. Now, do us a favor…”

‘Us.’ The Borg have created some deranged copy of me! Doing the only thing I can at the moment, I close my eyes and open my mind to the auras around me.

I’m not a normal Vulcan. I was born with a gift. My mind is much, much more advanced than a standard Vulcan’s. I can sense the… The goings-on of others’ minds. What they feel. I am also diagnosed with Asperger’s Syndrome, but that’s irrelevant at the moment. Considering that I’m facing the me from hell.

I can’t help but shudder again as the doppelgänger began his “favor” assertively in a monotone Borg voice I dread;

“Lower your weapon. We will add your biological and technological distinctiveness to our own. Your being will adapt to service us.”

“Resistance is futile.”

Resistance is futile. I let that reverberate in my head as I’m reminded of the past. You see, I have a different perspective. Some yearn for the past. Some just ignore it.

But me? My past is the living hell that is now.

But again, irrelevant. I only have one phrase to sum up my current opinion of the situation; I’m royally screwed.

I continue opening my mind to the auras around me, and I’m suddenly overwhelmed, almost hurt by what is probably the most powerful aura I’ve ever felt from something out of the Collective. But I noticed something different; his mind was separated from the hive.

He was Locutus. The Queen had found a replacement. An artificial, demonic replacement that was designed to be the anti-Vice Admiral Cecelius Pixive Dmitri.

I slowly holster my revolver and ask as emotionlessly as humanly (and Vulcan-ly) possible,

“Who are you?”

“I am you. The you that should have been. The you that could not be Locutus of Borg. The you that would not give in to success. Power. Perfection.

I was suddenly overwhelmed by an emotion that was beyond my knowledge, forcing me to shut my mind off from the outside, and the soul- or lack thereof- within it that would haunt my sleep for weeks to come. If I ever claim sleep after this encounter.

The soul that stood no more than 30 meters behind me.

I stood my ground. If there were a time where my personal vendetta with the Borg would hinder me, it’s now. I put the past aside, and decided to face my fear. I turn around, showing no emotion as a normal Vulcan would, and stared up at the being before me.

He- er, I mean it was wearing simple, gray clothing; Shirts, pants, shoes. The only visible implant was a small plate on the left eye, a red laser emitting from where the pupil would be. Its skin bore that cold, pale light turquoises that all assimilated drones do.

I decided that there would be only one outcome; Me or it. And I was gonna try my absolute bloody hardest to make sure that this disgrace of a Borg creation would cease its function.

I flipped a sheath at the side of my left leg outward, drawing an elegant blade carved out of tritanium I found from a downed shuttle. Smooth, curving indentations that flowed with the contours of the blade were engraved with emerald. This blade never ceased to fail me, and it sure as hell wouldn’t fail me now.

I hope.

He met my action with a similar one, drawing a much more straightforward broadsword out of a straight sheath on his back. He suddenly dives at me, and I quickly parry it. The sparks began to fly, as steel struck mighty steel in a clash of positronic strength. But I found myself being overwhelmed. His blade suddenly made mine retreat with each strike I blocked. His blade simply made mine bounce towards me whenever I tried to go offensive. I start making split-second decisions now, my first being to activate my first lifeline; Quantum Acceleration. My decision is suddenly interrupted, but not changed, as his blade suddenly struck my tritanium exoarmor with excruciating force. I suddenly find my uniform gone; he struck only of my holoemitters. My jet-black armor now exposed, I tap into my mental interface and trigger the Quantum Acceleration drive, lighting the contours of my armor with light-blue, glowing veins of pure quantum energy. I feel my energy emerge quickly, and suddenly the tables turn. My blows made his blade flinch; his parries were leaping towards him.

As the complex, and to be honest draining, fight continued, his complex patterns of attack began to surpass mine yet again. He was right, he is the me I could not be. I decide to make one last attempt to come back. By now, the sparks that ran desperately from the blades as they clashed provided the only solace from the cold storage facility that may soon be my grave. I lash out and send his blade backwards, the edge behind his back. I Reel my blade over my head to land my first blow, and he suddenly lunges.

He had pulled a charade.

His blade strikes mine. Sparks shower me, but this time, it’s different. My blade feels lighter all the sudden.

As I stagger backwards, I suddenly see, and hear why. I hear the edge of my blade dig itself into the ground several feet away. But I look at my hand, and can’t suppress the gasp of shock; the hilt and a very small portion of the blade were still in my hand.

The hellish being before me laughs maniacally, though briefly, and slams my wrist with the broad side of his blade. My hilt drops to the floor and I stagger back. He strikes me in the head twice, also with the flat of his sword, and I find myself on the dirt ground.

My head is ringing now. My vision is blurred. I hear heavy bootsteps crunching the dirt. Advancing towards me. My hearing is in flux. I can’t tell whether I’m deaf or hearing better than I normally do.

It laughs again.

But before I have a chance to groan, I am met with the most painful thing I’ve ever experienced.

His blade thrusts through my back. Metal tears as if it were paper. I feel my organs being grazed and sliced by the cruel razor of a weapon. It soon finds my chest, the armor proving again to be useless. The blade pierced the tritanium plating, then the ground below it. Unsettled dust soon stung the outside of the wound, compounding a brutal stinging to the insatiable rage that is the pain that coursed like blood throughout my body. The only difference is that blood escapes my now lifeless figure. The pain showed no sign of resentment.

The ground cracks below me, suddenly breaking to admit the colossal broadsword within it to retreat form the earth’s mighty grasp, which until now would have been the only thing able to stop it. I find the sword being slung behind his back, like a fisherman poised to cast his rod, only I’m the bait.

The lifeless, metal bait that he now lifts with demon-like ease. I can only watch through my horrendously blurred vision as I am hoisted upside-down behind the drone’s back, blood soon streaming down my back and dripping onto my face, the warm grasp being a dramatic contrast from my icy tritanium.

He suddenly hurls his blade forward, my limp corpse (or at least it felt like my corpse by this point) launching like a rag towards a box. I came to a conclusion that he purposefully aimed for that, because I learned the hard way that he does not miss. I slam into the box hard, finding myself inside it (a surprisingly perfect fit) as the crate tumbled.

It felt like an eternity before the crate came to a halt, tilting on a side before it slammed to the ground. The now looming figure walked with utmost confidence toward me, laughing ever so slightly.

“Welcome to the dawn of a new age, admiral!”

He emphasized Admiral mockingly…

He’s won… And he knows it…

“The age of the Borg. The age where MY destiny flourishes! The age of PERFECTION.

He kicked the crate closed, and I hear my fate seal as an electronic lock triggered.

He gave my new, high-tech coffin one last kick, breaking the lock and sending it tumbling into what sounded like wood. A lot of it.

My ears start ringing. The pain in my chest and head is unfathomable.

The ringing is escalating. I can’t make out anything. Even though it’s pitch-black, I can still see my vision blurring intensely. But it soon is replaced by white. Slight at first, like a distant lamp. But it grows. Grows like an infection until it coats my vision.

And just like that…

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