Lt. Marissa Flores’ Personal Log A1

Lieutenant’s log, Stardate 2398.75

 

It was my first official day upon the USS Enterprise NCC-1701-D.  Needless to say, there is no doubt why this starship is the most coveted ship to be on.  Captain Jean-Luc Picard is a natural born leader, and he has a staff that is loyal to the end.  You learn this quickly.

My new position upon this fine vessel is Holodeck Engineer.  I am also a support engineer to Lieutenant Commander Geordi LaForge.  I am responsible for maintenance, upgrading, and total control of the 3 holodecks the Enterprise has.  I first became enamored with these machines shortly into my Starfleet training.   Reading was always a hobby of mine, but after discovering the holodeck, the “theatre of the mind” became a reality.  The holodeck created endless possibilities for my imagination’s musings.  They made them possible to live out my books and experience what the characters did.

Since Starfleet contracts are so lengthy, “shore leave” doesn’t come often (unless you visit Risa) so the holodeck provides a getaway for crew members.  It was quite an honor to be given this position.  Holodecks help people not only relax, but train, and learn.  The computer simulations are brilliant, but I love adding little quirks here and there to further enhance the experience of a crew member.  Stretching the limits of the computer has always been a fun challenge for me.

I have dreamed of being a crew member on this ship since I was 10 years old, so needless to say, this is a dream come true.  I’m excited about meeting the rest of the senior crew and seeing Captain Picard again.  I have a welcome dinner tonight with Ship Counselor Troi.  I hear she’s an empath so my guess is tonight’s conversations will be pretty one-sided.

[end log]

——————————————————————————-

Lieutenant’s log, Stardate 2399.75

 

My second day above this starship proved to be just as interesting as the first.  My dinner with Counselor Troi went as well as expected.  She’s very kind and sympathetic, but it’s unnerving being around a Betazoid.  If you’re having a bad day, you can’t deny it.  I do feel comfortable talking to her, but I’m not much of a talker anyway.

Today was my first official day on duty.  I have served on 2 other starships on short term contracts, but the Enterprise will be my longest stint in my Starfleet career to date.  With over 1000 people on board, the holodecks are used quite often so repair and upgrades are a pretty constant basis.

I have yet to meet the other half of senior staff.  So far, Lt Cmdr LaForge, Dr. Beverly Crusher, Lt. Worf, and Counselor Troi seem to be about their wits and very intelligent people.  No wonder why they’re serving on this starship.  I am anxiously awaiting my meeting with Captain Picard.  He has been in arbitrary meetings with the Klingons.  Something about a new council leader is needed.  I suspect I will be able to meet with him some time this week.

Lt. Worf is the third Klingon I’ve met to date, and he has a very tough exterior.  During the tour he gave me, he very matter of fact and gruff about security policy and procedure.  Chief of Security fits him well, but he is quite intimidating.  I would hate to see him on a bad day if these are his good days.   He asked me if I was up to date on my Klingon training programs, as to which I lied.  I know very few, but trust me, it’s on the top of my list to learn.  Having Lt. Worf over my shoulder is not a place I’d like to be.

I will assisting LaForge tomorrow with last minute checks and preparations for our departure from Starbase 243 at the end of the week.

[end log]

——————————————————————————-

Lieutenant’s log, Stardate 2401.5

 

I just met the most interesting person, per se, in my entire existence.  I knew the starship had an android, but it’s hard to grasp the word android until you meet one.  Lt. Cmdr. Data is quite a specimen.  I read about him during school, but nothing can really prepare you for meeting him.  His pale skin and yellow eyes are almost haunting, but at the same time he has such a kind and open demeanor.

I was updating new programs from the 19th century era, and he approached me to see and asked if I was installing better configurations for the AI characters.  I thought, “what an odd question.  Why would an android care about 19th century characters in a holodeck?”  He informed me the Sherlock Holmes programs were his favorite.  I’ll have to admit this caught me off guard.  I had no idea he “liked” the holodeck.  Data is an android, and the likes and wishes and desires of an android escape me.  Aren’t those human characteristics?  I took note of his suggestions and said I’d look into it.  I, myself, have been anxiously awaiting to actually use the holodecks for my own personal use.  The holodecks on the Enterprise are much more sophisticated, so experiencing my Tolkien programs or Shakespeare programs will be a step up.  Having to schedule my personal time for this has been quite a challenge, though.  LaForge is quite a stickler for docking preparations.  I only hope to be as thorough as him.

[end log]

——————————————————————————-

Lieutenant’s log, Stardate 2404.75

 

Today was a fantastic day.  I was finally able to meet with Captain Picard, and it was outstanding getting to see him after all these years.  I had been a painfully shy science project winner the last time I saw him.  I remember that trip like it was yesterday.  At 12 years old, you don’t think about your mortality until you’re put in a falling Turbo-lift with 2 other younger kids and an injured man.  I’ll never forget Captain Picard’s integrity and patience that day.  Being called his Number 1 was one of the most flattering things that’s ever happened to me.  I know I’m only in my late teens and have more to learn, but not every kid can say they had a Commander’s rank at 10 years old.  I kept his ranking pins in hopes of returning them to him one day, either has his replacing Commander or as a crew member in general.  I feared he would get promoted to Admiral before I could finish my Starfleet training and resign his captain role.  Thank goodness for men like him who still yearn to learn and explore.

It’s men like him why I want to serve in the Federation.

[end log]

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All you need is love Chapter 1

 

Chapter 1 

Science class was so boring. There was no point in it, I didn’t give a flying shit about cells and how they worked. Mural tapped me on my shoulder from her seat next to me. I leaned in closer so she could whisper in my ear.

“Hey Lexi, isn’t he cute?” she asked about our science teacher. I rolled my eyes at her. He was cute. And young to. But he was a totaly geek. Mural giggled and I smiled. Mural had been my best friend for as long as I could remember. Our parents had served together on Voyager. Of course my mother was an admiral now and had no time for me or anything else. The bell rang for class to get out. It was the beginning of Christmas vacation so it was even more hectic.  The students all swarmed the door and ran out into the sunny California day. Even though it was december it was still pretty warm out.

“Are you coming to my house?” Mural asked as we walked side by side.

“Can’t, I have to see my dad off remember?” Dad was going away for a while. It wasn’t something I was a stranger to. Normally one or both of my parents would be gone on some sort of starfleet mission.

“Oh yeah,” Mural remembered. “Where is he going?”

“I don’t know. He said it’s ‘classified information.’”

“Oh classified,” Mural laughed as we came to the bus stop and got ready to board the bus that would take her home. “I’ll see you later then Lexi!”

“Yeah, bye!” I said waving. I watched hers fly away. Most students who went to the academy lived in dorms on the campus but Mural’s house was just a bus ride away since both of her parents had to work at the base. Like me, Mural hardly ever got to see her parents. Though her parents always seemed to find time for her. I had to walk a little farther since I lived on the base. The starfleet was base was a the main starfleet building. Since my mother was an admiral, we had rooms in the building. At times that was pretty cool since I could walk to school in under ten minutes. I walked into the lobby of the building, a huge doom shaped room with a transport celling that was eight floors above my head. If you looked up you could see the balcony’s of each floor looking out over the main lobby. Everything was decorated for Christmas so there were green wreaths hanged off of the balconies and sparkling lights on the walls. At the far corner there was a giant Christmas tree that was decorated with the ordainments the kids had made. It was an amazing building but i’d lived here all my life.

As usual the building was full of starfleet officers running around with clipboards trying to get to where they need to go. I spotted my father talking to Roddy behind the front desk.

“Hey honey,” he said when he approached. He already had all his bags him.  “I hoped you’d make it, they pushed the takeoff ahead.” Roddy smiled at me and then went back to what he was doing.

“I’ll come with you the transportation bay,” I offered. I really didn’t like it when he went away. It was harder when I was little. My mother I was more use to. If she wasn’t on a mission then she was working and not at home. My dad nodded and I followed him out of the main building as we started walking towards the transportation bay.

“This is a dangerous one isn’t it?” I asked noticing the look on his face and how he seemed to walk closer to me.

“It’s just diplomatic Lex,” he  told me. “I’m just negotiating a peace treaty.”

“I thought you said you couldn’t tell me what you were doing?” I asked taking one of his bags from him.

“I can’t tell you where i’m going,” he said grinning. “And I probably shouldn’t have told you that either. Don’t tell your mother on me.” I grinned.

“I won’t. So are these people your negotiating the treaty with at war?” He didn’t reply which meant yes. I could tell he didn’t want to leave.  This was defiantly going to be a dangerous one. Though it made me nervous, i’d learned from a very young age that what my parents did was for the greater good and I should be proud of them. Also I trusted my dad to come back to me. We walked into the transportation bay. I handed him back his bag and he put them down to give me a quick kiss on my head.

“Be good to your mother,” he told me. “Don’t bite each other’s throats off.”

“She’s not coming to say goodbye?” I asked.

“We said goodbye earlier.”

“When are you coming back?” I asked.

“I don’t know Lex,” he sighed. Only my Dad ever called me Lex. It was our thing. “I’ll be in communication though. I’ll talk to you when we land to let you and your mother know i’m alright. Okay?”

“Okay,” I said feeling a little better that I knew he was allowed to talk to us.

“Be good,” he told me picking up his bags and stepping into the blue light.

“Bye,” I waved as is figure disappeared with a glowing blue light.

“He’ll be fine kid,” Ben said from behind the beaming station. “You’re Dad, he can take care of himself.” I had many friends that were older then me around the station. It was part of being an admiral’s daughter I guess. Ben was one of my closer ones.

“I know,” I sighed. “I better go, it’s getting dark.”

“Have a good night,” Ben smiled at me. “Do your homework!” I laughed as I walked out. I had a ton of homework, none or which I felt like doing. It was vacation after all.

I walked back into the station building to find my mother deep in conversation with a man I didn’t recognize. She looked up when I walked over.

“The enterprise is flying in,” she told me. “Riker and Diana’s son is coming with them. I was hoping you wouldn’t mind showing him around?” There was never a ‘hello, how was your day’ with her. But I was exited at the news of the enterprise flying in. I liked captain Picard. When I was little he use to bring me presents whenever he flew in from all different planets and galaxies.

“Riker and Diana have son?” I asked.

“Yes, his name’s Tommy. He’s about your age and he’s going to be attending the academy.”

“Yeah, i’ll show him around,” I told her. Mural would be exited. Especially if he was hot. “When are they flying in?”

“Tomorrow morning, you can come to the landing bay with me.”

“Okay,” I agreed. “Are you coming home?”

“Not just quite yet, I have some more work to attend to. You can make something if you get hungry. I might be late.” She walked way with the strange man she’d been talking to. I was kind of happy she wouldn’t be back till later. It meant I got the rooms to myself for a while. I’d video chat with Mural and tell her about the boy I was going to be showing around. Commander Riker was extremely hot, so his son probably would be too. My rooms were up on the eighth floor so I took the elevator up. When I got in I plopped down on the red couch and pulled out my laptop. I saw that Mural was online, as usual not doing her homework, and sent her video chat request. She excepted her face came onto the screen. Since Mural’s mother B’elanna was half klingon Mural didn’t look completely human. She had the face of a Klingon but had blonde hair like her father Tom.

Tom and B’elanna had always been like a second family to me. B’elanna would always joke when I was over that I was their adopted child.

“Hey,” Mural said. “What’s up?”

“So my Mom said the enterprise is flying in tomorrow,” I told her.

“Yeah, Dad told me when I go home,” Mural nodded.

“Did you also tell you that Riker and Diana Troy’s son is flying in with them? And he’s our age? And I get to show him around?” Her green eyes light up like a lightbulb.

“Oh my god! Commander Riker has a son?” she gasped much to my amusement. “He’s got to be hot!”

“That’s what I thought!” I agreed. “Tomorrow should be interesting.”

“So you’re showing him around? Can I help?”

“I don’t see why not,” I said laughing. “But I get dibs if he’s hot since I heard about him first.” Mural made a pouty face.

“Fine,” she sighed. “But that doesn’t mean I can’t flirt with him.”

“Don’t traumatize him though!” I said giggling.

“I don traumatize cute boys!”

“Um, yeah you do. Remember Rider?” I asked.

“That was once, one time!” she said defensively.

“Yeah suuuure,” I laughed. She stuck her tongue out at me.

“Oh, hi Lexi!” Tom’s face appeared on the screen. “I thought my daughter was in her talking to herself again.”

“Dad!” I heard Mural sigh.

“Hi Mr. Paris!” I giggled.

“What was this about hot boys that I heard?”

“Go away Dad!” Mural groaned. “We’re having a girl conversation.”

“Hey, calm down there Mural, i’m just checking on my girls,” he winked at me and walked out.

“God, he’s so annoying,” Mural sighed gaining control of her computer again. “I better go, though. I’ll see you and the hot boy tomorrow,” she winked looking like her Dad.

“Okay.” I put my laptop screen down considering doing my homework. I had a essay I was suppose to right on the Q contumm by the time break was over. The Q had always interested me, that’s why I chose to write my essay on it. Though that didn’t change my distaste of doing homework, exspeacily during Christmas break. I ended up falling asleep on the couch with all the lights on and my laptop on my lap.

I was walking though a mediaeval looking castle at night. The only light was from the torches lit along the wall. I could hear talking from a door at the end of the hall with a light under it.

“Have to go and warn them,” one voice was saying so quietly I could barely hear him. 

“No! To dangerous,” said another male voice. But this one was stronger and easier to understand.  “Let them rot. They’re nothing to us.”

“Have the warn them,” the first voice said. “Maybe have a child-”

“If you have a child she will be destroyed.” 

“No! I’ll find her. I’ll make sure she knows who she is, i’ll bring her back with me, train her if I can. Whatever you want, just don’t kill her.”

“You can try Q. Bring the girl to me and then I will decide her fate. Try to hide her, and she will be found and i’ll kill both of you, and that boy of yours.” 

“I’ll bring her to you, but you have to promise not to hurt her.”

“Fine. But fail-”

“I know, I know.” Suddenly the man with the louder voice turned and I could see his face. His eyes were bright red. 

“Lexi!” I sat straight up still thinking I was dreaming as I looked into the crystal blue eyes of my mother. She was seated beside me on the couch looking concerned. “Another nightmare?” she asked. I nodded trying to relax. IT was just a dream, just another nightmare like the so many i’d had since I was little. But this one was different, more, more real.

“It’s alright,” she said smoothing my hair. “It was just a dream honey. Go back to bed.” But it wasn’t.

 

 

 

 

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All you need is love

Prologue

“Kathryn for heaven sake!”  Chakotay said pacing in front of Kathryn’s chair. “I don’t want to live a lie, I can’t.”

“We’re not,” she answered looking down at the pink bundle she held in her arms. “She is your daughter Chakotay, I just know it.”

“Then do a blood test,” Chakotay pleaded with his new wife. “Please, just to ease my mind.” Kathryn looked up at him sadly and shook her head.

“I don’t need prove, if she was Q’s she would be something other then human and she seems human to me.”

“She’s two weeks old,” Chakotay pointed out.

“I can’t,” Kathryn muttered. “Because what if it comes back negative? Then what do I do?”

“We handle it togher,” he took her and and looked down at the baby she was holding. Kathryn had decided to call her Kendra, Lexi for short. “Wether she’s my biological daughter or not, I still love her the same.”

“No,” Kathryn said. “I just can’t. She’s yours Chakotay, I know it and I trust my instincts.”

“And I trust mine,” Chakotay told her going back to his pacing. “Do you want her to grow up believing i’m her father and having it be a lie? Do you know how that will effect her when she finds out?”

“She won’t,” Kathryn told him strictly. “And if she knew that there was even a slight doubt that she might not be human, how do you think that would effect her? I want have a normal life. Not like ours when we risk our lives everyday. She deserves to be a child and have good life.” Chakotay sighed knowing he wasn’t going to get anywhere with her. He’d be a father to that baby no matter what. It didn’t matter to him. All he felt for that child was love. And that’s all he would need. All you need is love.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


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Spam-a-palooza

I’ve learned a lesson. Don’t forget about existing sites while working on new ones. Turns out, the site was polluted with SPAM while I wasn’t watching. I’ve solved that problem by deleting the offending users and all of the posted content. Other features have also been implemented to prevent spam from being posted.

If anyone sees any SPAM posts that I may have missed please email submissions@trekfanfiction.net or post a message to the feedback link on the left side of the site.

Thanks!

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Subroutines

Star Trek Voyager
Subroutines
by Loran Wlodarski
(runetodda@hotmail.com)


STAR TREK : VOYAGER

SUBROUTINES

CAST
SPEAKING

      JANEWAY
      CHAKOTAY
      TUVOK
      PARIS
      KIM
      NEELIX
      TORRES
      THE DOCTOR
      SEVEN OF NINE
      ENSIGN
      HELMSMAN
      COMPUTER

NON-SPEAKING

      CREWMEMBERS

SETS

INTERIORS

      USS VOYAGER
      MESS HALL
      BRIDGE
      SHUTTLEBAY
      ASTROMETRICS
      MAIN ENGINEERING
      SICKBAY
      CORRIDORS
EXTERIORS

      VOYAGER
      DELTA FLYER
      UNSTABLE SUN

* * *

TEASER

FADE IN:

INT. MESS HALL

Several N.D. crewmen are staring out windows. An unknown
Ensign ENTERS and is greeted by NEELIX.

NEELIX
Hello, Ensign. Here for
refreshments or for the view?

ENSIGN
The view this time, but I’ll
take a cup of sweedock tea if
you have a moment.

NEELIX
Not a problem. One sweedock
tea coming right up.

Before Neelix strolls to the kitchen, he looks out a window
and seems mesmerized.

NEELIX
Beautiful.

EXT. SPACE – VOYAGER (OPTICAL)

Voyager orbits a dying, violent yellow sun. Numerous
sunspots, surge and loop prominences are visible.
* * *

INT. MAINVIEWER (OPTICAL)

JANEWAY, CHAKOTAY and TUVOK are in their familiar positions
along with other N. D. personnel. The mainviewer is filled
with the image of the sun.

CHAKOTAY
Quite a sight. We don’t often
encounter a yellow star so
unstable.

JANEWAY
To think, the next time Federation
ships visit this sector, they may
a see a red giant instead of this
yellow sun.

CHAKOTAY
Thanks to the deployment of probes,
the Delta Flyer and Voyager, we’ve
already gathered enough data to
keep Star Fleet scientists occupied
for years. I’d say they’d be quite
pleased with us.

The Bridge SHUDDERS slightly. After a quiet pause, another
small shockwave SHAKES the Bridge.

CHAKOTAY
Feels like our friend is building
up for another eruptive flare.

TUVOK
The last solar flare measured
389,000 kilometers above the sun’s
photosphere. These readings
indicate the next flare will be
even stronger. I advise caution.

JANEWAY
It wouldn’t hurt to give ourselves
some extra breathing room. Helm,
back us off another 10,000
kilometers, one-half impulse power.

HELMSMAN
Aye, Captain.

CHAKOTAY
What about it, Delta Flyer, how
hot do you like it?

EXT. SPACE – (OPTICAL)

The Delta Flyer orbits the sun on the opposite side of
Voyager.

INT. DELTA FLYER

KIM, TORRES, SEVEN OF NINE and PARIS are engaged at their
stations. A quick shockwave ROCKS the craft.

PARIS
Oh, I like it hot, Voyager, but I
suppose moving off another 10,000
kilometers won’t affect my suntan
too much.

Paris makes the necessary course adjustments.

TORRES
These readings indicate a
tremendous build-up of pressure
somewhere on the sun, but I can’t
isolate the location. What’s
going on down there?

INT. BRIDGE

A vicious shockwave ROCKS the Bridge, temporarily
causing power to fluctuate.

JANEWAY
I didn’t like the sound of that.

CHAKOTAY
Perhaps we’ve worn out our welcome
here. Should we call it quits?

JANEWAY
Agreed. Delta Flyer, prepare for
departure.

EXT. SPACE – SUN (OPTICAL)

A massive eruptive prominence explodes outward from the sun
at an amazing speed.

INT. BRIDGE

The Bridge is SHOOK by a powerful shockwave that again dims
power and tosses crewmen around. The Helmsman hits his(her)
head hard off the companel.

JANEWAY
Times up. Helmsman, full impulse
power. Get us out of here.

The Helmsman is hunched over, head clearly bleeding.

HELMSMAN
(dazed)
Captain…?

Janeway, realizing what has happened, moves towards the
Helm. Another violent shockwave IMPACTS the Bridge, causing
Janeway to fall. She recovers and makes it to the controls.

JANEWAY
Prepare for emergency warp!

CHAKOTAY
Too late!

EXT. SPACE – VOYAGER (OPTICAL)

Voyager is hit head on by a blast of energy from the sun’s
discharge and is pushed along on its port side.

INT. MESS HALL

The crewmen in the Mess Hall are thrown to the ground
violently. Neelix is tossed over a table.

INT. BRIDGE

Most of the crew is off their feet as the Bridge continues
to SHUDDER. Janeway, on her knees, uses all her strength to
hold on to the Helm controls.

CHAKOTAY
Emergency power… to shields…

Chakotay drops out of his chair and doubles over in intense
pain. Other crewmen are suffering as well.

COMPUTER
Warning. Lethal radiation levels
in twenty-five seconds.

JANEWAY
Computer, autopilot mode!

COMPUTER
Warp and impulse engines are
offline. Warning. Lethal radiation
levels in twenty seconds.

Janeway taps her comm badge and collapses in agony.

JANEWAY
Janeway to anyone aboard Voyager.
Save this ship by any means
necessary… that’s… an order…

The Bridge crew fall into unconsciousness.

INT. DELTA FLYER (OPTICAL)

Kim, Seven of Nine and Paris are at their stations. Oddly,
Tuvok has replaced Torres.

TUVOK
A massive solar flare has struck
Voyager, causing…

An intense white light FLASHES inside the Delta Flyer as
the four disappear.

INT. BRIDGE

Kim, Tuvok, Seven of Nine and Paris are now standing on the
silent Bridge of Voyager. Shocked, they slowly glance
around. The Bridge crew appears to be dead.

FADE OUT.

END OF TEASER


ACT ONE

FADE IN:

INT. BRIDGE

Except for Paris, Tuvok, Kim and Seven of Nine, there is no
movement or sound aboard the Bridge.

PARIS
Excuse me, weren’t we just on the
Delta Flyer?

SEVEN OF NINE
Yes, we were…

Paris kneels to examine the unmoving Janeway.

KIM
Are they… dead?

PARIS
It’s hard to say, but judging by
these burns I’d say they’re all
suffering from severe radiation
sickness.

Paris moves towards Tactical to examine other crewmen.

KIM
Look at the mainviewer.

INT. MAINVIEWER (OPTICAL)

The mainviewer is filled with an image of the incredible
solar energy blast that has struck Voyager. The image does
not move, as if it were a snapshot.

SEVEN OF NINE
It is the emission of solar energy
which has impacted with Voyager.
We seem to be frozen in time.

Tuvok examines a nearby companel.

TUVOK
Not entirely correct. According to
the ships’ chronometer, point zero
two seconds has elapsed since we
reboarded Voyager.

PARIS
Two one-hundredth of a second? Gee,
time flies when you’re having fun.

KIM
Who transported us here? How can
time have been affected by Voyager
coming in contact with a wave of
solar energy? Why aren’t we
affected by the radiation like the
rest of the crew is? This is
scientifically impossible.

SEVEN OF NINE
Our appearance here seems to prove
otherwise, Ensign.

TUVOK
You raise many worthy questions,
Mr. Kim. I believe a thorough
examination of the ship may aid
our quest for answers.

Paris is stunned by something he has seen by Tactical.

PARIS
I know we have enough imponderable
questions already, but take a look
over here.

Paris leads the others to the Tactical. There, unconscious
in the shadows of the floor is another Tuvok.

PARIS
Will the real Mr. Tuvok please
stand up?

Tuvok leans over to examine his duplicate.

TUVOK
Fascinating.

PARIS
I hope you have more to add than
that, because now that I think
about it, wasn’t B’Elanna on the
Delta Flyer instead of you?

TUVOK
(reflects for a beat)
I distinctly recall being on the
Delta Flyer a moment ago.

PARIS
(examines companel)
According to the ship’s log,
B’Elanna was aboard the Delta
Flyer… not you.

KIM
You’re not really Tuvok, are you?
Are you responsible for our
transportation here and for this
time slowdown?

TUVOK
I am Lieutenant Commander Tuvok.

PARIS
The hell you are! Then who’s that
on the ground?

TUVOK
I am unable to answer your
questions. All I can clearly
state is that I am Tuvok.

Paris grabs Tuvok by his uniform.

PARIS
What have you done with B’Elanna?
You tell us or so help me…

TUVOK
(with authority)
Ensign, control yourself. I am
as much at a loss to explain
our situation as you.

SEVEN OF NINE
I believe him.

Paris releases Tuvok and turns to Seven of Nine.

PARIS
You do?

KIM
So do I.

PARIS
Are you both nuts?

SEVEN OF NINE
I am in complete control of my
mental faculties, Mr. Paris. That
is why I believe Tuvok.

KIM
Tom, if there’s some… entity
behind all this, why would it be
so sloppy as to disguise itself as
Tuvok and not remove the real one?

SEVEN OF NINE
Perhaps we were meant to see this
incapacitated Tuvok. It may be a
clue as to our purpose on Voyager.

TUVOK
Our purpose is clear. We must find
a way to rescue Voyager.

KIM
Where do we even begin? We must
revive the rest of the crew soon.
They certainly can’t last much
longer with all the radiation
flooding the ship.

TUVOK
Our first order of business is to
search Voyager for further…
anomalies. When more facts have
been gathered, we can chart a
better course of action to follow.

KIM
We seem to have the ability to
retrieve computer data. Perhaps
we can still activate the Doctor.

TUVOK
Mr. Kim, complete an examination
of the Bridge and meet us at
Sickbay in thirty minutes.

SEVEN OF NINE
And the destination for the rest
of us?

TUVOK
I shall investigate Main
Engineering. Seven, review all
data available at Astrometrics
and Mr. Paris…

Paris moves past Tuvok and heads to the Turbolift.

PARIS
Mr. Paris will be searching for
B’Elanna. I’ll start in the
Shuttlebay.

Tuvok cuts in front of Paris to impede his progress.

TUVOK
Your concern for Lieutenant Torres
is noted. There is, however, much
more at stake here than the life
of one person.

Paris moves past Tuvok and makes his way into the
Turbolift.

PARIS
Just so there’s no mystery about my
feelings, I don’t trust you, Tuvok.
Now if you’ll excuse me, I’m going
to try to find B’Elanna. I’ll meet the
rest of you at Sickbay.

Paris EXITS. Tuvok reacts.

INT. SHUTTLEBAY

Paris ENTERS and begins to check the main Shuttlebay
computer. No one else is around. There is no sign of the
Delta Flyer as well.

INT. ASTROMETRICS

Seven of Nine looks over data in Astrometrics. She stops
for a moment to look around, as if she heard or saw
something. A beat later, she continues to work on the
computer.

INT. ENGINEERING (OPTICAL)

Tuvok ENTERS, being careful to avoid fallen and still
crewmembers. Looking around, Engineering appears to be
heavily damaged. Steam and other gases, frozen in mid-air,
spew from several areas. Tuvok examines a companel.

INT. CORRIDOR OUTSIDE SICKBAY

As Kim and Seven of Nine approach Sickbay from one end,
Tuvok comes from the other side. A moment after they meet,
they are joined by Paris. Kim turns to Paris.

KIM
Any sign of B’Elanna?

PARIS
(disappointed)
According to the computer, the
Delta Flyer and B’Elanna are not
aboard Voyager. I tried to hail
her and scan for the Delta Flyer
but came up empty. She’s… gone.

KIM
Not to make you feel worse, but
after examining the Bridge I
estimate that if normal time were
to continue… the crew would die
from radiation poisoning in eleven
seconds. Three seconds later,
Voyager’s shields will collapse and
the ship would be destroyed next.

TUVOK
It gets worse. We have minimal use
of thrusters but both warp and
impulse engines suffered extreme
damage. It will take approximately
fifty two hours to repair
propulsion to a point where Voyager
could escape the energy blast.

PARIS
But we’re at a slowed rate of time.
Maybe the four of us can expedite
the repairs.

TUVOK
Even with decelerated time, my
calculations show we could not
repair the engines before
Voyager would be destroyed.

KIM
(to Seven)
I hope at least you have something
upbeat to report.

SEVEN OF NINE
(seemingly disturbed)
I have nothing of value to add,
except I heard… a sound.

KIM
There is something else.

The crew stares at Kim. Kim seems reluctant to speak.

KIM
I looked at the Bridge log before
we arrived. Before she collapsed,
Captain Janeway issued one last
order: for someone to save
Voyager by any means necessary.

SEVEN OF NINE
Someone or something has responded
to her command. What we are
experiencing cannot be a natural
phenomenon.

PARIS
Another anomaly? I don’t know how
many more I can take. Well, let’s
see if Doc is home.

INT. SICKBAY

The crew ENTERS the darkened Sickbay and cautiously
begins to search.

KIM
Activate the Emergency Medical
Hologram.

Nothing happens.

PARIS
Hey Doc, where are you?

Seven looks into the Sickbay office and stops in her
tracks. Something she sees has caught her off-guard.

SEVEN OF NINE
I have located the Doctor.

The others join Seven. They are equally surprised.

INT. SICKBAY OFFICE (OPTICAL)

THE DOCTOR is frozen in place. He has just placed a
container on the desk and is gazing at his other arm. The
arm seems to be disintegrating. Kim examines the Doctor
first and activates a nearby companel.

KIM
The Doctor was already activated
during the solar flare up, working
on biocultures.

SEVEN OF NINE
The EMH appears to be is losing
cohesion. Why?

KIM
As far as I can guess, the
holographic emitters are being
corrupted by intense radioactive
bombardment. The Doctors’ program
is running through the emitters
and is being polluted by the
radiation as well. If normal time
was to resume now…

Kim runs calculations on the companel.

KIM
(lowers head, continues)
If normal time was to resume his
program would be totally destroyed
in six seconds.

PARIS
This is not good.

TUVOK
Mr. Paris, you have received
training from the Doctor in the
past. Logically, the task of
reviving the crew must fall upon
you.

PARIS
I don’t think my limited medical
knowledge is good enough to save
the entire crew! The only one who
might be able to help is the
Doctor. We need him activated now.

DOCTOR (O. S.)
Please state the nature of the
medical emergency.

The Doctor emerges from the shadows outside the
Sickbay office. Kim, Paris, Seven of Nine and Tuvok can
clearly see there is another Doctor frozen in place in the
Sickbay office.

Off their reaction.

FADE OUT.

END OF ACT ONE


ACT TWO

FADE IN:

INT. SICKBAY

Kim, Paris, Seven of Nine and Tuvok move from the Sickbay
office and approach the Doctor, who has just appeared from
nowhere.

DOCTOR
Mr. Paris?

Paris is dumfounded.

DOCTOR
Mr. Paris, you called for me. What
is the nature of the medical
emergency?

PARIS
I’d say this time the medical
emergency is you.

Paris points to the Sickbay office. The Doctor is
aghast.

INT. SICKBAY OFFICE (OPTICAL)

The Doctor walks sheepishly up to the frozen likeness
of himself.

DOCTOR
This is not possible… what is
going on here?

KIM
Doc, can you explain any of this?

The Doctor keeps his eyes glued to the likeness of
himself.

DOCTOR
I am a doctor, Mr. Kim, not a
spiritualist. Out-of-body
experiences are beyond the realm
of my programming.

The Doctor finally gets the strength to look away from the
frozen image.

TUVOK
You are the Doctor, are you not?

DOCTOR
Of course I am! This other Doctor
must be a trick of some kind.

Tuvok reflects deeply.

TUVOK
I may have a theory.

The others quickly crowd around.

KIM
Let’s hear it!

TUVOK
I have no logic to support my
thoughts, Mr. Kim. Until I do, it
would be unwise of me to discuss…

PARIS
Come on, Tuvok! If you can explain
any of this, then tell us.

TUVOK
Very well, but you may not like
what I have to say.

PARIS
I don’t like anything about this
whole scenario! At least you’ll be
consistent.

TUVOK
I see a pattern developing. There
is an entity, a force behind
all that is happening to us.
This force seems to be giving us
only the minimum personnel needed
rescue Voyager.

PARIS
That can’t be right. B’Elanna is
not here and we most certainly
need her to repair the engines.

TUVOK
As I previously stated, the
engines cannot be repaired in time.
Therefore, Lieutenant Torres is
not needed.

PARIS
We’re caught in a huge energy
surge! Of course we need the
engines to escape!

TUVOK
Perhaps… but I must note that some
thrusters are still operational.

PARIS
Thrusters? They can’t possibly
help us!

SEVEN OF NINE
Then there must be another way.

PARIS
Another way to escape a force of
energy thousands of kilometers
long? Without engines?

TUVOK
And yet it must be done, or
Voyager will be destroyed.

PARIS
(angered)
Don’t you think I know that…

The Doctor barges between Tuvok and Paris.

DOCTOR
Pardon me, but can we back up for
a moment? You mentioned a force
possibly manipulating us… what
force?

PARIS
God. Q. The tooth fairy. We don’t
know Doc, take your pick.

DOCTOR
Mr. Paris, this is no time for
juvenile antics, not while
I’m… disintegrating just a few
meters away. We must pool our
talents if we are to survive.

SEVEN OF NINE
(to Tuvok)
If Lieutenant Torres is not needed,
why are the rest of us here?

TUVOK
We each have a specific task to
perform. The Doctor is here to
cure the crew. Ensign Kim, an
expert with holographic technology
is certainly meant to save the
Doctor. Since no one knows this
ship’s navigational capacities
like Mr. Paris, it is his
responsibility to clear Voyager
out of the energy surge.

Seven of Nine turns to Tuvok.

SEVEN OF NINE
And our tasks?

TUVOK
Of yours, I am uncertain. I believe
I am needed at Tactical. Tactical,
although damaged, is still
operational while the engines are
not. That is why I was switched on
the Delta Flyer with Torres.

KIM
How is Tactical going to help us?
You certainly can’t use weapons to
help us… can you?

Tuvok walks towards the Sickbay doors to leave.

TUVOK
I do not know… yet. Mr. Paris,
meet me on the Bridge when you are
finished here.

Tuvok EXITS. Paris leans against a companel, confused.

PARIS
I can’t think of a thing to do.
I feel so useless.

KIM
(slaps Paris on the back)
Come on, Tom. Have some faith in
yourself. You can do this!

PARIS
I don’t even know how to start.

KIM
It’s like all the other challenges
we’ve faced. You need to dive
right into this problem and you’ll
think of something.

PARIS
Dive right in, huh? I’m more
likely to sink, not swim.

Paris suddenly gains a look of confidence.

PARIS
(smiling, continuing)
No, I don’t need to dive into this
situation, I need to surf!

An excited Paris EXITS, leaving Kim bewildered.

KIM
Poor Tom. He’s finally lost it.

DOCTOR
Ensign, the mental health of Tom
Paris is not your immediate
problem… I am.

KIM
You mean what Tuvok said about me
helping you? I hate to be blunt,
Doctor, but he’s wrong. I can’t
save your program.

DOCTOR
(alarmed)
And why not?

INT. SICKBAY OFFICE (OPTICAL)

Kim walks back to view the dissolving image of the Doctor.
The other Doctor reluctantly trails behind.

KIM
Doc, you’re already dispersing
from radioactive contamination.

DOCTOR
Wouldn’t shutting down my program
end the problem?

KIM
It would take much more than that.
Your program is so polluted that
it would immediately have to go
through a defragmentation and
reinitializing phase to regenerate
the damage.

DOCTOR
My program has built in safeties
that would automatically repair
itself.

KIM
Sure, but even if you shut down
right now Voyager is still trapped
in this energy flow. Its radiation
will continue to flood the ship,
and that radiation will interfere
with your programs ability to
regenerate itself.

DOCTOR
So that’s it? You’re giving up?

KIM
No… you never gave up on me when
I needed you. Listen Doc, I can’t
promise any results, but I’ll see
what I can do.

DOCTOR
(grateful)
Thank you, Mr. Kim. I’m sure
you’ll do your best.

Kim walks to a back companel and begins calculations.
The Doctor takes one more look at his image and moves
out of the office. The Doctor almost runs into Seven of
Nine on his hasty retreat from the Sickbay office.

SEVEN OF NINE
You have a disturbed look to your
face when you see the other image
of yourself. Explain.

DOCTOR
Are you blind? I’m dying in there
and there’s nothing I can do about
it. Seeing it up-close… with my
own eyes… it’s like somebody just
walked on my grave.

SEVEN OF NINE
You will have no grave in all
likelihood, Doctor. You are a
hologram. Even if you did…

DOCTOR
(annoyed)
It’s an expression, Seven.

SEVEN OF NINE
I see.

Seven of Nine stares at the Doctor.

DOCTOR
Seven, is there something I can
help you with?

SEVEN OF NINE
Actually, the opposite applies. I
believe my task is to aid you.

DOCTOR
You help me?

SEVEN OF NINE
I don’t know why, but I’m certain
you will need my assistance with
the treatment of the crew.

DOCTOR
Yes, the crew. Let’s see what
their condition is.

The Doctor and Seven of Nine move to a companel where the
Doctor begins to operate it. The Doctor turns to Seven Nine
in disbelief.

DOCTOR
This is terrible!

The Doctors fumbles through some medical instruments
till he grabs a portable medical scanner.

DOCTOR
I need to see one of the afflicted
crewmen personally. Come with me.

INT. HALLWAY

The Doctor (wearing his mobile emitter) and Seven of Nine
walk through a dark hallway until they find an unconscious
crewman on the floor. The Doctor scans the victim.

DOCTOR
This is worse than I thought. The
entire crew is about to die from
radiation poisoning seconds after
normal time is restored!

SEVEN OF NINE
You must cure them.

DOCTOR
Easy for you to say. If we can’t
escape the energy blast we’re
caught in quickly, then there’s
nothing I can do.

SEVEN OF NINE
You must assume that Tuvok and Mr.
Paris will find an expedient way
to remove us from the energy wave.

DOCTOR
Even if they did, I’d have only
seconds to save the entire ship!
It’s ludicrous to think I can save
some 140 individuals in two or
three seconds. I can’t be at
more than one place at a time…

Seven of Nine begins to open her mouth and point towards
the Sickbay, but the Doctor interrupts her.

DOCTOR
(continuing)
I can’t be in 140 places at once.

SEVEN OF NINE
Then use environmental controls to
flood the ship with hyronalin.

DOCTOR
It’s not that easy. Voyager has
crew members aboard that will
violently react to hyronalin. I
know for certain that Talaxians
die from hyronalin exposure.

SEVEN OF NINE
A percentage of the crew may need
to be lost to revive the majority.

DOCTOR
Unacceptable! We must start out by
thinking how to save one hundred
percent of the crew.

SEVEN OF NINE
It may not be possible.

DOCTOR
(has an idea)
Seven, I know what your task is.

SEVEN OF NINE
You wish for me to devise a plan
to save the entire crew, all at
one time?

DOCTOR
Yes. I will come up with an
individual treatment for each
crewmen and you will find a way to
deliver it to them all at once.

SEVEN OF NINE
Very well.

DOCTOR
Then we’re partners?

The Doctor extends his open hand. Seven of Nine hesitates
for a moment but soon shakes the Doctors hand.

SEVEN OF NINE
Partners.

The Doctor hands his medical scanner to Seven of Nine as
the two begin to walk away. As the two move away from the
crewman, he (she) begins to PHASE out of place, like
he (she) is about to disappear. This phenomenon goes
unnoticed by the Doctor and Seven of Nine as they have
their backs to the crewman.

DOCTOR
First, we’ll have to scan every
single person aboard Voyager,
then…

SEVEN OF NINE
(interrupting)
Doctor, did you hear a noise?

DOCTOR
No… did you?

SEVEN OF NINE
It is… nothing. Please continue
with your strategy.

As the two walk on, the crewman PHASES out of sync
more before reverting to normal.

FADE OUT.

END OF ACT TWO


ACT THREE

FADE IN:

INT. MESS HALL

The Mess Hall doors open and Seven of Nine ENTERS. She
looks over the darkened room. Like elsewhere, the crew are
frozen in place, their bodies locked in pain. She
approaches Neelix, who is on his knees with arms gripping
his sides in agony. After scanning the sight, Seven of Nine
moves towards another crewman, leaving Neelix behind.

INT. BRIDGE

Tuvok and Paris are busy working at separate companels. The
Doctor ENTERS via the Turbolift, armed with a medical
scanner and wearing his mobile emitter.

TUVOK
May we be of service to you?

DOCTOR
No thank you. Seven and I are
scanning every crew member to
determine the optimal treatment for
each person. I know you’re busy so
I won’t be but a moment here.

PARIS
Actually, you’re just in time to
hear my big announcement.

TUVOK
I take it you have found a way to
remove Voyager from harms way
without propulsion?

PARIS
(triumphantly)
I have.

DOCTOR
This ought to prove interesting.

Tuvok and the Doctor give Paris their full attention.

PARIS
Tuvok, are you familiar with
surfing?

TUVOK
If you are referring to the water
sport involving controlled planing
on the sloping section of a wave as
it moves towards shore, yes I am. I
have surfed the silver waters of
Tedus-Torn Prime, for example.

DOCTOR
(to Tuvok)
You never mentioned surfing
before. That seems more like
something Mr. Paris would do.

PARIS
(surprised)
Tuvok, I surfed on Tedus-Torn
Prime. The trip was a birthday
present to me.

TUVOK
(confused)
It was one of the few enjoyable
present you ever received from
your father, correct?

PARIS
That’s right.

TUVOK
I possess that memory as well.

DOCTOR
Tuvok, you’re not gaining some
mental link to Mr. Paris, are you?

TUVOK
I certainly hope not.

PARIS
Let’s… figure out how you
acquired my memory later. Right
now, look at the mainviewer.
INT. MAINVIEWER (OPTICAL)

A complete image of the energy blast fills the screen.
A small image of Voyager indicates the location of the ship
in comparison to the huge energy wave.

PARIS
To be a successful surfer, you
need to understand the ocean.
Many people look at the ocean and
view it as one solid mass of water.
Yet, it isn’t. An ocean is filled
with waves, whirlpools, eddies and
currents that twist and pull the
water in all directions.

TUVOK
You are about to compare the
energy blast of the solar flare to
an ocean. It looks like a unified
object, but it too is laced with
numerous waves and currents.

PARIS
That’s right!

TUVOK
Ingenious. You propose to “surf”
Voyager out of the energy blast on
a single thermal wave.

PARIS
Look at the viewscreen again.

INT MAINVIEWER (OPTICAL)

The image of the energy blast is altered. It now shows
the wave is composed of hundreds of bands of energy,
all of them twisted together but flowing in numerous
directions. The area where Voyager is located is enlarged.
Paris walks up to point out his plan.

PARIS
Here you have the location of
Voyager on the energy blast. If
we can get Voyager to this thermal
wave…
(points to a thermal wave up
and to the right of Voyager)
…we could “surf” the ship out in
less than five seconds.

DOCTOR
Mr. Paris, wouldn’t riding that
thermal wave require inputted
thruster adjustments in a blink of
an eye? One mistake, and the ship
would be ripped to shreds. Even
you could not be that precise.

PARIS
You’re right, I couldn’t. But the
computer is fast enough to adjust
the ship’s direction once we reach
the thermal wave. I just need to
write a flawless program for the
computer to follow.

TUVOK
Your thermal wave is still thirty
kilometers away and facing the
opposite direction of Voyager.
For your plan to work, the ship
would have to be turned around and
moved upwards. How do you propose
we accomplish this feat?

PARIS
Well, I can’t think of everything.
Guess I’ll leave that problem in
your capable hands, Mr. Tuvok.

TUVOK
There may be a way…

DOCTOR
If your plan is even half as
dangerous as Mr. Paris’, I don’t
want to hear it. But if it means
anything, good luck.

TUVOK
Thank you, Doctor, but I will need
skill, not luck.

DOCTOR
If you will excuse me, I must
proceed with my medical scans and
report back to Sickbay.

INT. ENGINEERING

Seven of Nine ENTERS Engineering and begins to scan her
crewmates. The scene is eerie and dark.

INT. BRIDGE

Tuvok works the Tactical computer. Paris finishes his work
on another companel and moves closer to Tuvok.

PARIS
Tuvok, about my conduct earlier on
the Bridge, I was…

TUVOK
(interrupting)
…out of line for a Star Fleet
officer. Yes, I know.

PARIS
Look, I just don’t know what got
into me back there…

TUVOK
The strain of the situation would
be great for most, Mr. Paris, you
need not explain anymore.

PARIS
(surprised)
Thank you, Tuvok. Can I ask you a
question now? Do you still think
something is behind all this?

TUVOK
(still working on companel)
I find this hard to admit, but I
believe there is a force working
with us now, guiding us. This goes
against all my mental training, for
I have no logic to back up such a
theory.

PARIS
(intrigued)
You mean, you’re going on a gut
feeling rather than almighty Vulcan
logic? Hearing that makes this
whole mess almost worthwhile.

TUVOK
My theory is based on something
different than a feeling, different
than logic. I simply know there is
an outside force at work here. I
cannot explain how or why I know.

Paris walks to position himself by the unconscious
bodies of Janeway and Chakotay.

PARIS
Then why doesn’t this force revive
more of the crew? Having Janeway
and Chakotay now could only benefit
us, right?

TUVOK
Perhaps the force behind this is
limited, unable to assist us any
further. In its judgment we five
may represent the best use of its
finite power, given the current
circumstances.

PARIS
Could this be some sort of test?
Maybe we’re under observation right
now as some creature evaluates us
under the worst possible conditions.

TUVOK
The Federation has been tested in
the past by several species, but I
believe that is not the purpose of
this disaster. Again, I cannot
explain…

As Tuvok speaks, he suddenly sees something on the
mainviewer. He walks past Paris and approaches it.

PARIS
Tuvok?

INT. MAINVIEWER (OPTICAL)

Paris joins Tuvok near the viewscreen. It still
contains the simulation of Voyager pressed against the
blast of solar energy.

TUVOK
Your simulation is exceptional, Mr.
Paris, except for one flaw.

PARIS
And that flaw would be…?

TUVOK
You have the port side of Voyager
in direct contact with the energy
eruption. That is not the case or
the hull would be compromised.
Our shields are in direct contact
with the energy, not the hull.

PARIS
That look in your eyes, Mr. Tuvok.
You’re on to something!

TUVOK
Indeed.

Tuvok moves back to Tactical and begins furious
calculations on the companel. Paris watches from a
distance, trying to figure out what Tuvok is up to.

INT. SICKBAY

Ensign Kim works on a companel when the Doctor ENTERS.

KIM
Doctor. How are you?

DOCTOR
(with satire)
Depends on which Doctor you’re
asking.

The Doctor returns his scanner to a table. Although he
does not want to, he looks at the Sickbay office.

DOCTOR
Ensign Kim!

The alarming tone of the Doctor makes Kim jump from
station and rush to his side.

INT. SICKBAY OFFICE (OPTICAL)

The image of the Doctor in the Sickbay office seems
more deteriorated than before. Instead of just the
hand dissolving, most of the chest area has dissipated
as well. Both react to the sight.

DOCTOR
Why do I look worse than before?

KIM
Because approximately three seconds
has passed since we first appeared
on Voyager. You only have about
three more seconds at normal time
left before… well, you know.

DOCTOR
Before I cease to exist? This is
not the news I was hoping to hear.

KIM
I’m sorry, Doctor. I’m trying,
but I still can’t find a way to
protect your program once we shut
you down.

DOCTOR
What about placing a level ten
forcefield around Sickbay? That
would certainly limit radiation
leakage into my program.

KIM
All emergency power has been
diverted to shields so there’s no
way to do that. At the most, I
could muster up a level ten
forcefield a few millimeters wide.
That wouldn’t help unless…
(Kim looks at the arm of
the Doctor and smiles)
You’re wearing your mobile emitter!

DOCTOR
I’ve been traversing every crawl
space in Voyager, searching for
crewmen to scan. You know I need
my mobile emitter to gain access
to most sections of the ship.

KIM
The mobile emitter! That’s the key!

The Doctor finally understands.

DOCTOR
If I were directly downloaded into
the mobile emitter, you could
erect the forcefield around it!

KIM
The emitter is just small enough
to be protected with what little
power there is to spare.

DOCTOR
Wonderful. When do we begin?

KIM
Begin?

DOCTOR
Yes, to download my program and
erect the forcefield. I don’t have
much time left.

KIM
Time… that’s a problem now…

Kim moves back to the companel he was working on.

DOCTOR
What’s the matter now?

KIM
The Doctor in the Sickbay office
seems to exist in a realm of time
I cannot control. Normal time has
to resume for our plan to work,
and if it did no one would be fast
enough to download you and to
erect a forcefield.

DOCTOR
Mr. Paris ran into a similar
situation, so he is creating a
computer program to take over
navigation.

KIM
Interesting. We do have access to
the computer for some reason.
Perhaps I can write a program that
would automatically protect you if
normal time were to resume.

DOCTOR
And the computer is the answer to
a dilemma I face, for if I’m
taken off-line who would be left
to treat the Voyager crew? I can
download the scans that Seven and
I made and instruct the computer
on how to save each crewman.

KIM
Sounds like we’ve both got a lot
of work to do.

Kim and the Doctor begin to work on companels.

INT. HALLWAY (OPTICAL)

Seven of Nine finds another fallen crewman in a darkened
hallway. She then hears a noise in the shadows and turns to
face the invisible menace.

SEVEN OF NINE
Show yourself.

A section of wall down the hall begins to PHASE out of
place. Then, like a dam bursting, the phasing in the walls
streak towards Seven of Nine. She drops her scanner and
dashes away from the phenomenon. The entire hallway appears
as though it’s dissolving. Seven of Nine doubles over in
pain. A beat later, the pain is gone and the hallway
appears normal.

SEVEN OF NINE
(taps comm badge)
Seven of Nine to Tuvok.

TUVOK (COM VOICE)
This is Tuvok.

SEVEN OF NINE
We have another problem.

FADE OUT.

END OF ACT THREE


ACT FOUR

FADE IN:

INT. SICKBAY

Seven of Nine lies on a bed while the Doctor performs tests
on her. Tuvok, Kim and Paris stand nearby.

TUVOK
I have verified my findings with
the ship’s computers. Since our
arrival on Voyager, there has been
fifty occurrences of molecular
instability. The last one
encountered by Seven was the
longest and most severe incident.

KIM
Seven, describe how you felt when
you encountered the instability.

SEVEN OF NINE
(sits up in bed)
I was frightened, as though my
very existence was about to end.

DOCTOR
My scans reveal no indications of
fear, Seven. Heart rate, blood
pressure, all are normal.

SEVEN OF NINE
The feeling was real!

DOCTOR
I suppose my equipment may be
faulty. At least you seem fully
recovered now.

SEVEN OF NINE
Then I must report back to duty.

DOCTOR
You do seem to be in perfect
health, but I need to verify one
more scan.

Tuvok, Kim and Paris huddle for a makeshift conference. In
the background the Doctor checks a companel.

PARIS
Any theories on this instability?

TUVOK
It could mean our stay on Voyager
is nearing an end. Normal time may
begin at any moment.

KIM
We better finish with our work
soon.

TUVOK
I concur. Mr. Paris, please
accompany me to the Bridge.

PARIS
Let’s go.

The Doctor is by Seven of Nine, looking at a companel. In
the background, Kim moves to another companel while
Paris and Tuvok EXIT.

DOCTOR
(mumbles)
Not another mystery…

Seven gets out of bed to view the information.

SEVEN OF NINE
Am I ill, Doctor?

DOCTOR
Absolutely not, in fact you’re in
peak physical shape, exactly like
you were six days ago when I last
gave you a complete check-up.

SEVEN OF NINE
And this alarms you?

DOCTOR
I do not exaggerate when I say
you’re in the exact physical
condition now as six days ago.
It’s medically incongruent that
these separate scans would match
so perfectly.

SEVEN OF NINE
Obviously, your equipment is
malfunctioning. Excuse me Doctor,
I have calculations to perform on
the scans we gathered.

Seven walks O. S., leaving the Doctor to ponder the new
mystery by himself.

INT. BRIDGE

Tuvok and Paris stand near Tactical, looking at the
viewscreen image created by Paris earlier.

TUVOK
As you know, we need to turn
Voyager one-hundred and eighty
degrees around, then move the
vessel thirty kilometers to reach
the safety of the thermal wave.

PARIS
And I also remember we have no
engines to propel us.

TUVOK
But, we still have limited shields
which we can use to move Voyager.

PARIS
Our shields can move Voyager?

TUVOK
Observe.

INT. MAINVIEWER (OPTICAL)

Tuvok adds shields to the computer image of Voyager on the
mainviewer.

TUVOK
The normal shield pattern forms an
even, protective cocoon around
Voyager. But, what if I were to
alter the shape of this cocoon?
For example, if the shape of the
port stern shield were more
triangular and four times the
length of the forward shields…

The computer image of the shields change to demonstrate
Tuvok’s example. The new shape of the shields push Voyager
away from the energy blast.

PARIS
Oh, that is good! Voyager is like
a boat that’s been wedged against
a rock. You’re using the shields
like an oar, to push Voyager off
the rock and spin us around.

TUVOK
Precisely. Once we are facing the
proper direction, I can then alter
the shape of the shields further
to push us up and over to the
thermal wave.

PARIS
Tuvok, how can you possibly alter
the shields fast enough to reach
the thermal wave? You’d have to
move Voyager thirty kilometers in
about two seconds.

TUVOK
I cannot, but the computer can. I
must create a detailed program for
the computer to follow, just as
you must do.

PARIS
There are so many variables. If we
miss just one…

TUVOK
(interrupting)
Do not miss any, Mr. Paris. That
is an order.

PARIS
Okay. Now that we settled that…

Tuvok and Paris begin work on different companels.

INT. SICKBAY (OPTICAL)

Seven examines data on a companel when the Doctor strides
past.

SEVEN OF NINE
Doctor. I have created a new
chemical mixture that can be
released into the environmental
controls. It will cure ninety-one
percent of the crew.

The Doctor reviews the work.

DOCTOR
Your so-called cure doesn’t revive
the other nine percent of the
crew because it kills them.

The Doctor manipulates the computer controls.

SEVEN OF NINE
You just deleted my work.

DOCTOR
Haven’t we been through this? When
you agreed to assist me, I made it
clear that we must rescue ALL of
the sick aboard Voyager. I will
not allow you to save one crewman
by sacrificing another.

SEVEN OF NINE
Saving ninety-one percent of the
crew, under these circumstances…

DOCTOR
(interrupting)
Is still not good enough! Thanks
to our scans, I have developed
treatments for everyone here.
It’s up to you to deliver the
medication to everyone some way
other than environmental controls.

SEVEN OF NINE
You ask for too much.

DOCTOR
And that will be the excuse you
give to the friends and family of
the nine percent you failed to
save? There must be another way.
Think, Seven. What other system
on Voyager could we use besides
environmental controls?

Seven begins working on a companel furiously.

SEVEN OF NINE
The transporters are still
functional. Yes… it can work.

DOCTOR
The transporters? You mean to
beam the treatments directly into
the bodies of the crew? Has this
been done before?

SEVEN OF NINE
Normally, such a procedure would
fail, but we know the location of
every person aboard Voyager. If I
wrote a program, matching your
treatments with the coordinates of
the crew, the computer could do
the rest.

Before their eyes, the companel begins to PHASE out of
existence. A beat later before they can react, the companel
appears normal.

DOCTOR
I suggest you write your program
fast.

SEVEN OF NINE
That is… your best advice of the
day, Doctor.

INT. BRIDGE

Paris is finished working on his companel. He approaches
Tuvok to speak.

PARIS
I’m done.

TUVOK
Are you certain?

PARIS
(nodding)
I’m certain. Do you need a hand?

TUVOK
That will not be necessary. My
task is nearly complete.

PARIS
Then I’ll check on the others to
see if they need my help.

TUVOK
Very well.

Paris heads for the Turbolift.

INT. TURBOLIFT (OPTICAL)

Paris ENTERS the Turbolift.

PARIS
Sickbay.

The computer beeps its acknowledgement of the command.
As the Turbolift moves, the roof begins to PHASE. The
phenomenon creeps down the walls, unbeknownst to Paris
at first. When Paris senses what is going on, the
phasing has nearly surrounded him. Paris reaches for
the control pad but it warps as well. Even the floor
near his feet begins to phase.

PARIS
Computer, emergency stop. Open
Turbolift doors!

The Turbolift comes to a halt and the doors open.

INT. HALLWAY

Paris leaps out of the Turbolift and rolls into the
hallway. When he looks up, the Turbolift is normal.
Paris taps his comm badge.

PARIS
Tuvok, this is Paris.

INT. BRIDGE

Tuvok is working at Tactical when he hears the hail.
He taps his comm badge to answer.

TUVOK
Report, Mr. Paris.

PARIS (COM VOICE)
Something weird just happened in
the Turbolift. You better keep
your eyes open, it started near
the Bridge.

Tuvok turns his head as if he heard a noise.

TUVOK
Acknowledged. Tuvok out.

Tuvok moves to where Janeway and Chakotay lay. Their bodies
are PHASING in and out of existence. Tuvok kneels to closer
examine the warping and is dramatically overtaken by pain.
Tuvok puts his hand in front of his face to see that it too
is DISSOLVING. A beat later, the phasing has stopped. Tuvok
rises to his feet and looks at his hand again. It is solid.
He again looks at the body of Janeway.

TUVOK
Of course.
(touches his comm badge)
This is Tuvok. I need everyone to
report to the Bridge immediately.

INT. BRIDGE

Seven of Nine, the Doctor, Paris and Kim walk out of the
Turbolift and ENTER the Bridge. Tuvok is near the
Captains chair.

TUVOK
I have the answers we seek.

KIM
You mean, you’ve actually solved
this mystery?

TUVOK
At first, I could not. Logic
abandoned us the moment we arrived
from the Delta Flyer. There were
inconsistencies here that defied
all rules of nature. Then I
recalled an ancient Vulcan saying,
stating that if the foundation of
an event was not based in logic,
the event could not exist.

The crew reacts.

PARIS
What are you saying? Because none
of this is logical we don’t exist?

TUVOK
It is the only explanation. You,
me, this ship. None of it is real.

Off crew’s reaction.

FADE OUT.

END OF ACT FOUR


ACT FIVE

FADE IN:

INT. BRIDGE

Tuvok has just announced his shocking revelation.

PARIS
Tuvok, you claim we’re not real.
Then what is this? What are we?

TUVOK
Mr. Kim, will you please check the
status of the ships’ holodecks.

Kim moves to his companel and accesses the data.

KIM
Someone is running a program on
Holodeck Two, but the emitters are
being corrupted by radiation and
are about to shut down…
(suddenly realizes the
truth after a pause)
I understand! WE’RE the program
running on Holodeck Two, and the
phasing we’ve encountered is due
to radiation deterioration, isn’t
it?

TUVOK
When my hand dissolved a moment
ago, it reminded me of the
Doctor’s hand dissipating in
Sickbay. I realized then that I
too was a hologram, facing
extinction much like the true
Doctor is on the real Voyager. The
radiation has nearly destroyed our
program. We will shut down in
approximately one-tenth of a
second.

KIM
It would take me days to design a
simulation this complex, yet the
computer says that all this was
created and running for only five
point one seconds.

TUVOK
It would take the real Harry Kim
days to create this, but not the
main computer on Voyager. It
processes billions of information
bits in a nanosecond.

DOCTOR
I see. The Captain ordered Voyager
to be saved by any means necessary.
The computer, detecting the entire
crew was incapacitated, decided it
had to intervene immediately.

PARIS
Let me get this straight. The
computer takes control over the
entire ship and in a crisis it
decides to take a vacation in
Holodeck Two?

TUVOK
The computer could not comprehend
how to execute Captain Janeway’s
command. It needed more guidance
yet the crew was unable to help it.

Tuvok walks up to each crewman he names.

TUVOK
(continuing)
It needed the medical abilities of
the Doctor, the unorthodox
navigational talent of Tom Paris,
the holographic expertise of Harry
Kim, the knowledge of all ship
systems that Seven possesses and
the tactical skills of Tuvok.

SEVEN OF NINE
With the crew either unconscious
or not on board, the computer did
the next best thing — it created
images of those it needed the most.

TUVOK
Using every bit of data from
personal logs to medical records,
the computer constructed us, set
up this holographic Voyager based
on real circumstances and let us
think up the ideas it could not
devise on its own. But the
radiation created errors.

PARIS
Yes. Like when the computer
accidentally put my logs of the
surfing trip on Tedus-Torn Prime
in the hologram of Tuvok.

DOCTOR
(to Seven of Nine)
And that’s why your medical scans
were the same as six days ago. The
computer based you solely on those
medical records.

TUVOK
The computer taxed itself to its
limits, having no extra memory
available for other crewmates. We
were its only hope.

DOCTOR
Wait, am I not already a hologram?

Paris slaps the Doctor’s back lightly.

PARIS
Correction, Doc. You are a
hologram of a hologram.

DOCTOR
Can my existence be anymore
complex?

SEVEN OF NINE
Time has never slowed down then.
It’s been proceeding normally but
our perception of time is vastly
different inside the main computer.

TUVOK
Correct, although time is almost
at an end for us.

SEVEN OF NINE
We must complete our mission and
rescue Voyager before time expires.
We are… subroutines in the computer
matrix. Our completed assignments
must be set in motion immediately.

The five line up in order.

KIM
Let’s do it. Computer.
(the computer beeps)
Initiate Kim Program One: transfer
of the Emergency Medical Hologram
to the mobile emitter with level
ten forcefield protection.

TUVOK
Computer.
(the computer beeps)
Initiate Tuvok Program One: shield
modifications to guide Voyager to
the thermal wave.

PARIS
Computer.
(the computer beeps)
Initiate Paris Program One:
thruster adjustments to ride
Voyager along the thermal wave.

DOCTOR
Computer.
(the computer beeps)
Initiate EMH Program One: medical
scanning and radiation treatment
for ships’ crew.

SEVEN OF NINE
Computer.
(the computer beeps)
Initiate Seven of Nine Program One:
direct beaming of medication into
the Voyager crew.

TUVOK
Computer, enable Voyager Rescue
Hologram Program. Priority Alpha.
Begin… now.

A brilliant white FLASH fills the Bridge as the scene
dissolves.

INT. BRIDGE – REAL VOYAGER

As before, most of the crew is off their feet as the Bridge
continues to SHAKE. Janeway, on her knees, uses all her
strength to hold on to the Helm controls.

CHAKOTAY
Emergency power… to shields…

Chakotay drops out of his chair and doubles over in
pain. Other crewmen are suffering as well.

COMPUTER
Warning. Lethal radiation levels
in twenty-five seconds.

JANEWAY
Computer, autopilot mode!

COMPUTER
Warp and impulse engines are
offline. Warning. Lethal radiation
levels in twenty seconds.

Janeway taps her comm badge and collapses in agony.

JANEWAY
Janeway to anyone aboard Voyager.
Save this ship by any means
Necessary… that’s… an order…

The Bridge crew falls into unconsciousness.
COMPUTER
Working.

The ship continues to SHAKE violently but the crew does not
move. Five point two seconds pass.

COMPUTER
Command acknowledged. Initiating
Voyager Rescue Hologram Program,
Priority Alpha.

INT. SICKBAY (OPTICAL)

The Doctor’s office SHAKES repeatedly, forcing the
Doctor to put down a bioculture on a table. He looks
at his arm in horror as it and his chest area begins
to disappear. Suddenly he is redirected to the mobile
emitter and a tiny level ten forcefield surrounds it.

EXT. SPACE – VOYAGER (OPTICAL)

Voyager is pressed against the energy surge on its
port side when the shields change shape and size,
bouncing the vessel around and up some distance to the
beginning of a thermal wave.

EXT. SPACE – VOYAGER (OPTICAL)

Voyager rides on top of the thermal wave for a few
seconds with the thrusters helping to keep the ship
balanced. Voyager spins away to safety.

EXT. SPACE – ENERGY SURGE (OPTICAL)

The huge energy blast continues to travel through space
without Voyager.
INT. SICKBAY

Various Sickbay computers turn on by themselves as the
computer accesses crew information.

INT. MESS HALL (OPTICAL)

The ship has ceased shaking, although everyone appears
unconscious or in agony. The sound of medicine
MATERIALIZING into the crew is heard, then the suffering
ends. Neelix breathes deeply and staggers to his feet.
INT. BRIDGE (OPTICAL)

The Bridge has stopped shaking but the crew continues
dying. The sound of medicine MATERIALIZING into the crew
can be heard, then the suffering ends. Chakotay rises and
assists Janeway up.

COMPUTER
(the computer beeps)
Voyager Rescue Hologram Program
complete.

TORRES (COM VOICE)
Delta Flyer to Voyager. Please
respond!

JANEWAY
(takes a breath)
Go ahead.

INT. MAINVIEWER (OPTICAL)

The image of Torres on the Delta Flyer appears on the
viewscreen.

TORRES
You’re alive?! We thought you were
destroyed for sure. How did you
escape?

JANEWAY
B’Elanna, I have no idea…

INT. MESS HALL

Paris, Seven of Nine, Chakotay, Tuvok and Janeway are
seated at a table. They are then joined by the Doctor
(wearing the mobile emitter) and Torres.

CHAKOTAY
How goes the repairs, Lieutenant?

TORRES
Impulse engines are fully
functional. Warp drive will be
on-line in thirty hours.

JANEWAY
And you, Doctor? I understand we
came within seconds of losing you
forever.

DOCTOR
My program has repaired the damage
done by the radiation. I’m back
to my old self.

Janeway signals for the two to sit and join them.

JANEWAY
I still can’t understand how the
computer steered us through the
solar blast without engines.

DOCTOR
Or how it decided to rescue me and
developed the strategy to beam
radiation therapy directly into
your bodies.

Kim enters the Mess Hall and walks to the group. In his
hand he holds several PADDS.

JANEWAY
I had Mr. Kim run a complete
diagnostic on the computer.
Perhaps he has some answers.

Kim stands next to Janeway and hands her a PADD.

KIM
This is amazing, Captain.

Janeway examines the PADD. She is surprised.

JANEWAY
(handing PADD to Chakotay)
The last thing I did before
blacking out was to order the ship
to saved by any means necessary.
The computer, it seems, activated
a Holodeck for five point two
seconds right after my command.

CHAKOTAY
(examines PADD)
Whatever it learned in those few
seconds, it was enough to save us.
Mr. Kim, were you able to retrieve
this program?

KIM
No sir. It was badly damaged by
radiation and collapsed a
nanosecond later. I was only able
to recover fragments of data.

JANEWAY
Did you learn anything from the
fragments?

KIM
(hands a new PADD to Janeway)
Only that Tuvok is quite a surfer.

TORRES
(to Tuvok)
Don’t tell me you surf? That
sounds like something Tom would be
good at.

TUVOK
I was unaware that I possessed any
surfing prowess, but given my
physical conditioning and mental
alertness I assume I would excel
at the sport.

PARIS
Oh really? Meet me at Holodeck One
at nineteen hundred hours and
we’ll see about that.

JANEWAY
(examines the second PADD)
Odd. There are bits of information
on Tom, Tuvok, Harry, the Doctor
and Seven, as if the computer used
them as models in a holographic
program.

CHAKOTAY
I feel somehow obligated to the
computer for rescuing us, but how
do you express thanks to a
computer?

JANEWAY
How about this: computer.
(the computer beeps)
I hereby nominate you for the Star
Fleet medal of bravery. What do
you think about that?

The computer makes a razzing noise.

COMPUTER
That statement does not compute.

CHAKOTAY
(to Janeway)
At least you tried.

Neelix comes to the group with a tray full of drinks.
Once close enough, he hands each person a glass.

NEELIX
I couldn’t help but overhear you,
Captain, so I opened a bottle of
Talaxian rose champagne. I’ve been
saving it for a special occasion.

TORRES
You’re proposing a toast?

NEELIX
Certainly, for I understand what
has transpired here. You see,
we interact with the computer
everyday and fill it with our
knowledge, ideas and passions. In
times of trouble we turn to it,
so it’s little wonder that the
computer turned to us when it
faced a crisis. In a way, we are
the computer and the computer is
us.

JANEWAY
I’ll certainly drink to that.

Janeway raises her glass, followed by the others.

JANEWAY
To the computer.

The crew drinks to the computer.

FADE OUT.

END OF ACT FIVE

THE END

 

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ST: Beta – Part 3

PART 3

Banks stood at the landing pad of dash 11’s main defensive platform. Its walls looked like an industrial kitchen, solid brushed stainless steel matte walls that shot up forty feet into the air, at the top of the tower sat the deadly planetary defensive weapons. The phaser banks weren’t capable of striking him at that angle, still that didn’t mean the installation wasn’t equipped with macro lasers or disruptor’s hidden in the paneling. Looking around the landing pad floor he couldn’t make out any scoring from particle fire. This was the best sign he could hope for.

He zipped up the front flap of the survivor suit then clicked its belt into place he could feel its mirco fiber sensors reading all of his vital signs then, the suit started picking up environment data around him and was now feeding that information directly to his mind. He could feel the pressure of he air as clearly as the voltage running through the security panel of the platforms hull door.

Aldus marveled at the paranoia level of the Y’thulian commercial triangle when it came to the protection of their royal families. The suit was designed to give its wearer a full array of plasma armaments as well as full survivability in nearly any environment. Its material was still form fitting around his muscles as he watched the ZIG mini ship float away with his old leather and polylatex merchant rags. The new suits material looked like a combination of charcoal dust with diamond specked evenly throughout it. The belt wrapped around his chest and waist, in it housed the electronic brain that monitored the sensory input along with its hosts homeostasis, when needed it had a reflex built in that would allow defensive reflex actions. Powering all this is a small hydro fusion core or HFC, by extracting the sodium molecules then breaking them down with tiny controlled nuclear reactions it was capable of building and saving an endless and extremely dangerous supply of energy that was being stored at the small of his back.

Aldus held up his hand out at the panel, the fingers of his wrist wrench tingled as a new set of sensors started building synaptic bridges through his already existing wrist implant. He thought about the possibility of unwanted side effects this might be creating for a moment then, pushed the coming tide of anxiety down and focused on getting off the planet was the priority. His prongs shot out and fed directly into the panels input terminal. The synthetic alloy in his wrenches finger tips could interpret more now. Subtle electrical waves in the heat signature emanating from the filaments behind the panel started to feel like a pulse. He touched it with is hand to the panel and wave of data started flooding into his mind. The entire electrical layout of the security grid and the defensive computer hooked up to the door was now clearly visible inside his mind. He let his wrench fingers probe further inside the panel until he could feel the leads of where the doors encrypted key card would be fixed. Banks knew the door was never going to open with brute force hacking for a digital key so employed the crude age old method of generating a short in the terminal and just as it did the Defense mainframe because nervous and shot a stun burst through the terminal designed to knockout any would be intruder or curious animal. Aldus knew the mainframes action well in advance and had his wrist wrench rewire the terminal to blow its own panel.

It did. Aldus stood back, the shock wave came and fried its own system. Blowing the panel off its foundation and releasing the manual override control. It was an old old security glitch that space faring lock picks built into their own systems when, owners had the absentmindedness of leaving their key cards inside the mega fortress. The door gasped as it creaked open and released the recycled air trapped inside. “Like putting a screen door in a castle wall.”

Aldus Banks squeezed his way inside the building.

Inside the mood of the decor changed dramatically. Banks was now surrounded by industrial pipes and tubing crudely painted reds and blues shooting up from the ground into tighly cut out holes in the ceiling. A small stair case at the back of the hall was the only place to go, so he walked forward letting the wrenches tentacles rub up against the pipes as he passed them. Like a sixth sense he could feel the pipes shoot far down into the ground where the bases power generator was likely to be hidden under thousands of feet of rock and layers of mesophasic steel. A nasty material that could reshape itself from liquid to solid at the first sign of tampering.

Aldus made his way to the control room, there several alien green/yellow computer terminals that resembled vanity desks occupied the walls into a solid fixture. Metal beams with a green tint arced upwards into a vaulted ceiling. He stepped into the room and the screens came to life. A flurry of bleeps and chirps of whizzing screens lighting up echoed around the room then crescendoed away. The language on the screens were clearly Y’thulian and Banks was able to quickly identify the control screen. He slapped the command surface it bleeped back immediately. His wrist wrench fingers stretched out below the panel and tapped directly into the hardware as he tapped at the screen. A red window appears, he is about to tap it then stops. He postulates the situation for a moment. A memory floods back to him. The ship Idyll told him was scanning the surface for his ships wreckage. But everything that has happened suddenly seem to lose all credibility. The Survivor suit, the shock gel tank, the planetary defense system. Even the Tahlese pirates who boarded his original ship started to seem staged. Problem now was, why?

Suspicions began to form in his mind, the likeliest of which was that the Zig was part of some elaborate plot to frame Aldus leaving him the pawn in a Y’thulian industrial war. The entire thing made no sense. The clock was running. It had been running since.. the dabo game.

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ST: Beta Part 2

PART 2

His name is Captain Aldus Banks and he is stuck in a tropical paradise with a glass Y’thulain grub wine in hand.

From the exterior planet 903884-11 looked like any class-M planet capable of supporting life. Its endlessly fractured map comprised of rolling green hills surround vista’s that grew lush vegetation. Rivers from endless aquifers and streams feed into a deep crystal blue ocean. A fine place for anybody that isn’t Banks. To him it was giant round cage.

Aldus stood at the zenith of it all from the beach head where Zig, his mini-escape pod landed. Space debris from the Zigguratt was still falling into the upper atmosphere. He knew from the behavior of most planets defencive systems that this one would be on high alert. So, trying to break orbit in a sub-warp class vessel was out of the question. For a man who spent so much of his life in space on a ship eating re-sequenced protein meals, a few days retreat in a desert island planet would, to a normal human, be a welcomed vacation.

Sadly Banks knew better than to allow himself a moment of tranquility because 903884-11 or  DASH ELEVEN as he thought of it now was not part of some vast celestial prairie. Dash Eleven was the sole property of a Real Estate magnet. An inner-galactic commercial dictator named Brene owned the entire solar system and several others just like it. The planets and their sun’s were nothing more than monikers of his wealth and the alarm has been tripped.

So the countdown had started and his options were few. He thought about the amount of time he had, divided it in half and sternly walked back aboard the Zig mini. On board the sexy Y’thulian politely pointed out an in coming ship. His blood ran cold. Aldus asked what class of ship; which she replied:

“Zethin class luxury vessel” Banks held his breath “it does not seem to notice us captain”.
Zig continued to track the ship as it hovered around orbit scanning the parent ships wreckage. Aldus marveled for a moment at the Zigs computational prowess. Never before had a ship, to his knowledge been, capable of expressing concern over a situation with an almost emotional concern.

The reason for being boarded just hours before may have actually been for his escape pod. A ship of this capability probably HAD to be smuggled through the Y’thulian system if it was going to be safe from pirates and spies.

The Y’thul systems are not a criminal safe harbor, any more that is. They are in-fact a cruel and methodical commercial oligarchy. The Prime solar systems, of which there are 3 rest at the nexus of 3 mega systems. Each of the Prime systems grew and traded with its neighbor for nearly a thousand years, spreading their trade and economical wisdom like seeds across the galaxy. Today the Y’thulian are more like a royal family. Their offspring are just as crude as their forefathers but now competition between the three families has dissolved into land disputes and patent lawsuits lasting entire lifetimes. So its no surprise that technology smuggling and industrial espionage was the favorable career path in the this part of the Beta Quadrant, as opposed to peaceful space exploring federation.

Aldus, now an unfortunate part of said espionage had to figure a way off this planet. Fast. No matter how intelligent his new ship was, it couldn’t hide its power signal or the heat trail its landing generated. He boarded the Zig, its hatch closed automatically. Her voice came in through the hidden speakers felt like a real person standing on the bridge with him.
“So you’ve made a decision captain?”
Aldus looked around for a speaker or display to respond to but couldn’t find one so he just glared out the front window. “Ship, can you take us closer to the planets defensive platform without being fired upon?”
“I’ve already plotted that course as one possible scenario. Along with accessing the defensive administration system.” she replied.
“Great, can you program its system to let us get away?”
“No, its system control is on a closed circuit and cannot be over written by remote systems.”
“Then how did we avoid bombardment on our decent?”
“It would seem that we temporarily confused the planets computer into thinking we were wreckage.”

Banks wondered what a ships computer was doing making assumptions. Even more disturbing was the fact that this computer was making assumptions he himself had made. “And obviously there’s no fooling a computer into thinking that ship wreckage falls upwards.”
“Obviously, captain.”
“You can call me Aldus ship, there’s no crew here to warrant a title.”
“Very well, Aldus. You may call me Idyll, and the ship I control goes by Ziggurette.”
“Okay Idyll, take the Zig and pilot us to the defencive tower. Keep it as low to the ground as you can.”
“As you wish sir.”

The Zig promptly lifted its landing gear back up into its hull cavity and floated away at a terribly fast and low speed barely keeping its body feet away from the desert island fawna.

Aldus rumaged through the hull for a life suit and any weaponry he could find. Each case seemed to unlock one more treasure trove after the other. It worried him more and more with every click of every latch. The pessimism of space adventure he thought.

Finally he found what he’d hoped for. A full panic survivor suit.

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USS Oregon: Reassignment

Chapter 1

“Looks like I missed all the fun,” Captain Jonathan Gardner sat down by Josh at his usual booth in the Nimitz Captain’s Lounge.

“Oh yes, it was a real party,” Josh took a swig of his water. “Suspicion, intrigue, trial, and Romulans, an exciting holonovel to be sure.”

“You made it out alive, with your career intact, and even a commendation,” Jon pointed out to his friend.

“Just throw it on top of the pile,” Josh shrugged. “It was entirely too much stress to be worth it. Where the heck were you?”

“I’m afraid can’t tell you that,” Captain Gardner gave a sly grin. “Let’s just say it was much less exciting than whatever you went through. I heard through the grapevine that you picked up a defector.”

“Unfortunately,” Jackson sighed. “She’s been a real pain in the butt.”

“So who’d she defect from, Pelliad or Terrik?” Gardner queried.

“Both,” Josh answered. “It is rather confusing and quite classified. Long story short, she was a spy for Terrik that got stuck behind Pelliad’s lines, so she tried to defect back to Terrik. Unfortunately, she inadvertently tipped off Pelliad to Terrik’s whereabouts, so he disowned her. Dumped out in space completely on her own.”

“That’s interesting,” Jon scratched his chin. “Doesn’t sound like the Terrik I know to summarily dismiss someone, even if they seemed to be a traitor.”

“Well, how well do you really know him?” Josh asked. “He’s a Romulan, after all. Suspicion and vindictiveness are part of their cultural DNA. But she’s on our side now, so it matters little. So how long are you here for?”

“Just until tomorrow afternoon,” Gardner answered. “Long enough to restock torpedoes, which won’t take long, and get some basic maintenance done and then we’re off again.”

“What are you guys up to?” Jackson queried.

“Some scientists are doing some subspace communications research in the Bassen Rift and given its proximity to the Neutral Zone, we’ve been assigned as protection,” Gardner informed. “Plus they want to use our super-sensors to help them out. Since it cuts off communications, they want a big gun there in case the Romulans try something.”

“Unlikely, considering that they’re currently involved in a civil war,” Josh commented.

“Yes, well apparently someone stirred up a hornets nest,” Gardner eyed Josh suspiciously.

“Uh, well, I can’t really comment on that,” Jackson coughed awkwardly.

“Of course not,” Jon chuckled. “Well, hopefully Felix will be bored to tears for the next six weeks. Miguel will have a blast. In fact, he hasn’t stopped beaming since we got them.”

“What’s Eina doing?” Josh asked.

“She’s been mediating a dispute on Draylax for the last couple of weeks. She’ll join me in guarding the expedition,” Jon raised his eyebrows. “Is there a rock on this station you’ve been living under?”

“I’ve been out of the loop the last two months,” Josh answered. “First with my, uh, mission, then the trial, and then getting the Oregon put back together. Suffice it to say I’ve been a bit preoccupied.”

“Good point,” Jon agreed. “So when do you ship out?

“As soon as we get orders,” Josh answered. “Oregon’s almost up to par, Another day or two. So at this point, we’re just waiting for an assignment.”

“Probably won’t be anywhere near the Neutral Zone,” Jon commented wryly.

“Hope not,” Josh chuckled. “They’ve got a bounty my head that would probably buy a whole system. We’ll probably be sent near the Klingon or Cardassian border.”

“Not that the Cardassians have a much higher opinion of you than the Romulans,” Jon pointed out.

“True,” Josh sighed. “I’m just not very good at making friends.”

At that moment, the doors opened and a young lieutenant walked in and sauntered over to them. The attendant at the bar was too preoccupied with a lovely brunette captain to notice.

“Josh, Admiral MacCray wants to see you in his office. I guess it’s about our new assignment,” Saehir informed him.

“You do know that this is a captain’s only lounge?” Josh growled at her, not enjoying being interrupted, especially by her.

“I thought the Federation was big on equality for all,” the Romulan wrinkled her nose. “Seems rather hypocritical to have a captain’s lounge.”

“Rank hath its privileges,” Josh quipped. “Privileges I have earned, which is far than I can say for you.”

“Aren’t you high and mighty?” Saehir shot back.

“That’s what these mean,” Josh tapped the four pips on his collar. “Now fetch me another water, lieutenant. You can hand it to me at the door on my way out. I’ll be only another minute or two. And that’s an order.”

“You can’t do that,” Saehir complained.

“Actually, I can,” Josh allowed a sardonic grin as he once again gestured to his collar. “Now go.”

“Touchy for a Vulcan,” Jon noted as Saehir stalked off.

“She’s the Romulan defector, actually,” Josh corrected. “And now, as per orders of Starfleet Intelligence and Admiral MacCray, my chief tactical officer.”

“What?” Jon’s eyes bulged. “That has got be some kind of violation, not to mention just plain stupid.”

“I agree, but given my track record, I am not exactly in a position to complain about breaches in protocol,” Josh shrugged. “I happen to be rather notorious for them.”

“Listen Josh, be careful with her,” Jon warned his friend as he got up to go. “If Terrik didn’t trust her, than I wouldn’t either. She’s dangerous.”

“Thanks for the warning,” Josh nodded. “I’ll watch my back.”

“Here’s your water, your highness,” Saehir sarcastically handed him his glass.

“Thank you lackey,” Josh smiled as he took a sip. It was lukewarm. “What the heck?” he exclaimed as he spit it out.

It was Saehir’s turn to smile. “You didn’t say you wanted it cold, sir.”

************

“You wanted to see me, admiral?” Josh tapped on the door.

“Yes, captain, come in,” MacCray looked up.

“So what’s going on?” Josh asked once seated.

“You’re being transferred,” MacCray informed him. “The Oregon is now under the command of Admiral Tim Richards based out of Starbase 123.”

“Richards? I can’t say I’m familiar with him,” Josh looked quizzically at the admiral across from him.

“Old war hero. Got his admiral’s box after the Dominion war, surprised you didn’t run into him then,” MacCray informed.

“I was but a young lieutenant back then that was mostly concerned with keeping my ship in one piece to care about other captains,” Josh shrugged. “I’m still rather young.”

“Right, keep forgetting that,” MacCray chuckled. “Anyway, he’s not much different than you, the warrior-type. Like you, he doesn’t crave battle, but he’s good at it and understands the need for strong military defense. As such, he’s been charged with defending the Isolated Region.”

“Sounds like an exile to me,” Josh mused. “Starfleet doesn’t particularly like us military-types.”

“Oh I agree,” MacCray nodded. “But in this case, it is not an exile at all. As you know, to get there, one must pass through the Klingon Empire and it is cornered by the Klingons (whom I don’t completely trust) and the Romulans. As such, it is fairly isolated; it’ll take about five weeks to get there and a week from Federation space. Because of this and because it isn’t comparatively important with the rest of the Federation, Command doesn’t want to allocate a fleet to defend it.”

“So their sending me?” Josh was dubious.

“Well, you’re joining the task force,” the admiral clarified. “Anyway, in order to compensate for this, they are deciding to send the best military captains to help defend it. That includes you. You guys have a small force, but should be capable enough to manage against any Romulan incursions.”

“So when do we leave?” Josh asked.

“Two days,” MacCray provided. “You have an immediate mission en route. You’re to deliver Ambassador A’ral to Starbase 123. He is mediating a dispute in the Isolated Region, though I’m not privy to the details.”

“That it?” Jackson asked.

“Make sure he gets whatever he needs,” the admiral answered.

“Great, babysitting,” Josh sighed. “Just another of my favorite things.”

“Sarcasm isn’t going to make it more fun,” MacCray waggled his finger. “He’s a rather congenial fellow for a Vulcan, so he shouldn’t be too much trouble.”

“I suppose I don’t have much of a choice,” Josh shrugged. “If that’s everything admiral, I probably best get the crew and ship ready.”

“One last thing,” Gregory held up his hand, stopping Josh. “As my last order to you, I am entrusting the Starfleet training of your new tactical officer, Lieutenant Saehir Aelhih, to you, specifically.”

“Oh come on,” Josh groaned. “You are going to miss messing with me.”

“Most certainly,” MacCray grinned evilly as he stood. “And captain, it’s been a pleasure, mostly, working with you.”

“Likewise admiral,” Josh allowed a rare genuine smile and shook the man’s hand.

**********

Chapter 2

To Saehir, it was as if the temperature in the room dropped five degrees the moment she walked into the main lounge. The loud conversation she had heard outside the door stopped for a moment as people cast a rather unfriendly glance her way before resuming at a quieter tone. Putting on a brave front, she smiled nervously and asked for a drink at the bar.

“Here you are,” the man at the bar joylessly informed her as he handed her the beverage and turned away. Taking it, Saehir scanned the room for a seat. No one offered one and no one made eye contact. After an awkward moment, she spotted Ras and Rio chatting near the window with an available seat next to them. Plucking up her courage, Saehir made her way towards them.

“Mind if I sit here?” she asked politely.

“Would it make a difference if we said yes?” Ras coldly responded.

Saehir shrugged. “No, probably not,” she answered and sat down.

Abruptly Ras stood up. “I have work to do,” he told the group and strode out.

“So, uh, how are you?” the new Lieutenant Aelhih asked Rio.

“I am finished, enjoy you’re drink,” the Bajoran stood up and followed Ras out. Looking down at the table, Saehir noticed that more than half of Rio’s meal was still there.

Sighing deeply, Saehir turned her gaze outside the window as she observed the star lines race by. She had hoped that joining Starfleet and the crew of the Oregon would ease her loneliness, but instead she found herself just as isolated. Here the crew simply shunned her, rather than shooting at her. She almost missed the disruptor fire.

“It is a pretty sight, isn’t it?”

Saehir jerked around to see an average height blond woman in a white lab coat standing there with a drink in one hand and a pleasant look on her face.

“May I join you in staring off aimlessly?” she prodded.

“Uh, sure, if you want,” Saehir responded. “Though I should warn you that associating with me might cause you to be anathematized.”

“This isn’t high school dearie,” the woman chided as she sat down. “Besides, with my connections, they wouldn’t dare. You’re the new tactical officer, right? The Romulan?”

“Yeah, the Romulan,” Saehir sighed. “I’m thinking of changing my name to that, since it’s the only thing people call me anyways.”

“Sorry,” she apologized. “So what’s up with you? I’ve seen you around, but you always seem to be by yourself.”

“Maybe I just like being alone,” Saehir sniffed. “I fought more than my share of battles and lost a lot of friends,” she pointed out, before silently adding to herself, killed a few too. “Being alone makes it easier,” Saehir continued. “Besides, given the last month of my life, who knows how long I’ll be here. So why settle in?”

“It would be easy to believe you’re that much like Josh,” the woman raised an eyebrow, “except that I watched you get shut down by Rio and Ras, so I know that you are trying to fit in. So what’s really the story?”

“What are you, some kind of spy?” Saehir turned a Romulan glare on the woman, who merely shrugged.

“No, just someone who pays attention,” she answered.

“Sounds like something Josh would say,” Saehir bitterly growled. “Where’s he been anyway? I hardly ever see him except when we’re on the bridge at the same time.”

“The captain?” the woman queried. “He keeps to himself. Unlike you, he wants to be alone. But what about you? What’s wrong?”

“Why do you care?” Aelhih acidly. “No one else seems too; especially your precious captain. Everyone seems to treat him like he’s the Emperor or something.”

“Josh’s something alright,” the woman nodded with a wry smile. “But this isn’t about him; it’s about you.”

“What are you, the ship’s counselor or something?” Saehir growled.

“Something,” the woman answered again. “Actually, ship’s counselor is one of Josh’s rare oversights. At any rate, what’s your deal? You’re as evasive as one of the Jackson’s, yet you keep trying to reach out. What’s going on?”

Saehir started to say some dismissive reply but realized that this is exactly what she had been looking for. Why was she fighting it? Taking a deep sigh, the Romulan gave in.

“No one likes me here,” she finally explained. “After all I went through in the last couple of months from getting tossed from one side to the other this seemed like an opportunity to have some stability in my life. No more subterfuge, no more politics, no more suspicion; just being me for once.”

“But instead, you find yourself an outsider,” the woman finished.

“No one likes me,” Saehir confirmed with a sigh. “I mean, I get that the crew has been together on a mission already and I’m kinda jumping in with all the little cliques already formed, but people are ignoring me. It’s like I don’t even exist.”

“That’s got to be lonely, especially for being the only Romulan in the fleet,” her counterpart commented.

“It is,” Saehir agreed. “But it’s more than that. It’s one thing if I was simply ignored; I can handle that. But people are shunning me; talking to me only when they absolutely have to and then they sound like they’d rather shoot me than talk to me. I get the feeling like the entire crew absolutely hates me.”

The woman studied the Romulan for a moment. What she needs is a friend, she concluded silently.

“I don’t hate you,” she told Saehir.

“You’d be the only one,” Saehir scoffed.

“I get off duty in a couple of hours,” the woman ignored the comment, “you want to hang out?”

“Sure you want to risk it?” Saehir raised an eyebrow.

“C’mon, you can’t be that bad,” the woman chuckled. “Besides, with my connections, the rest of the crew wouldn’t dare touch me. You like sports?”

“Huh?” Saehir was confused.

“Sports,” the woman repeated. “You know athletics; games involving intense physical activity.”

“Oh right,” Aelhih nodded. “Yeah sure.”

“Great,” the woman smiled. “Meet me in a couple hours in the rec area and I’ll show you some Federation sports.”

“That’d be awesome, thanks,” Saehir felt her lips involuntarily start to smile. This day was looking up.

“See you then,” the woman stood and started towards the door.

“Hey, what’s your name?” Saehir almost forgot to ask.

“Kirsten,” she answered and walked out.

*************

It was a couple hours later when Saehir found the gymnasium located on deck five in the Beta section. With the ship together, the three parts really did not matter that much, but it was always good to be apprised of where one was in case something happened.       The blond, Kirsten if Saehir remembered the name right, was waiting for her with a smile, a tight tank top, and matching shorts. Saehir herself was clad in a gray t-shirt and black shorts, not having a clue what she was going to be doing.

“So what’s the plan?” she asked Kirsten walking up.

“You made it,” the blond gave her a wry smile. “I was wondering if you had chickened out.”

“No, just got a little lost,” Saehir defended. “This had got to be the most haphazard and confusing layout I’ve ever seen in a ship.”

“Yeah, it’s a labyrinth alright,” Kirsten agreed. “That’s one of the drawbacks to cramming three ships into one is that you have to shove things into whatever cranny they’ll fit, which leads to a random layout.”

“I see,” Saehir nodded. “So what’d you have in mind?”

“That’s up to you,” Kirsten gave a sweeping gesture around the room. “We can do your basic martial arts and calisthenics, though I should warn that I’ve had two very good teachers, just run to keep in shape, pareci squares, racquetball, tennis, fencing, and more.”

“What’s that one?” she gestured to an orange circle three meters off ground resting against a meter by meter piece of transparent aluminum.

“You would be interested in that one, wouldn’t you?” Kirsten gave a sly smile before adding under her breath, “You are so much like him.”

“Huh?”

“Nothing,” Kirsten waved her off and returned their attention to the apparatus at the end of the gym. “That is a basketball hoop. It’s an old earth game from America called basketball.”

“How does it work?” Saehir asked.

“Computer, basketball, women’s,” Kirsten ignored her for a second. Beside them materialized a round orange ball 72 centimeters in diameter. Kirsten hefted it, bounced it a couple of times and then began to explain.

“The essential object of the game is to get this ball through that hoop,” Kirsten expounded. “When playing offense, I cannot carry the ball, I have to bounce it like this,” Kirsten dribbled for a few steps in demonstration. “When playing defense, I must try to stop the defender from scoring without ‘fouling’ or intentionally hitting, tripping, bumping, or really touching the other player. I can touch the ball, just not the player.”

“How do you stop them?” Saehir was confused. Stop someone without contact?

“Position and maneuvering,” Kirsten answered. “Let’s play and I think you’ll catch the hang of it.”

For the next thirty minutes, the two women danced around the half-court area of the gym while others either worked out or looked on, mostly with Kirsten teaching and Saehir learning. Kirsten noted with mild pride that Saehir was catching on fast and rapidly learning how to use her superior Romulan strength to her advantage. But Kirsten’s experience won out in the end.

“You’re a natural,” Kirsten complimented her opponent as they headed for the lounge to get a drink.

“Thanks, but you’re really good,” Saehir returned the compliment between pants. “No offense, but I always thought that human women didn’t do sports.”

“Generally no,” Kirsten agreed. “Though Starfleet women need to keep in peak shape to survive. But that is usually your basic workout routines and martial arts.”

“So how’d you get so good at ball-basket?” Saehir asked.

“Basketball dear,” Kirsten corrected. “My husband and his brother are crazy about the game. It’s one of the very few things that help them relax and unwind. So I picked it up from them.”

“Why have you been so nice to me?” Saehir queried Kirsten when they sat down with their drinks.

“You’re pretty cool, coolest Romulan I’ve ever met in fact,” Kirsten grinned. “Why shouldn’t I be friendly?”

“Because everyone else hates me,” Saehir reiterated. “Aren’t you the slightest bit worried about getting ostracized?”

“Like I told you earlier, with my connections, the crew wouldn’t dare,” Kirsten smiled slyly. “Besides this crew is professional. The job comes first, personal feelings later. Also, I’m the CMO, someone you really want on your good side.”

“You’re the CMO?” Saehir’s eyebrows shot up. “Why haven’t I met you before?”

“You actually did,” Kirsten recalled. “Right after Josh rescued you from Quinterex V, I was the one who treated you. Not surprised you don’t remember; you guys had been through a lot.”

“Oh yeah,” a light bulb went off in the Romulan’s mind. “That was you? Sorry, but it’s all a bit hazy.”

“Don’t worry, I see so many patients that they tend to run together,” Kirsten laughed. “You stood out because a) Josh rescued you and b) you’re a Romulan, which is more than a little unusual. At least your physiology is very similar to Vulcan physiology.”

“Glad to be so accommodating,” Saehir sardonically replied. “So why haven’t I met you at any of the briefings?”

“I don’t go,” Kirsten shrugged. “Rarely do the briefings have anything to do with sickbay, so there really is no need for me to go. If my input is needed, Jon will make sure I’m there, but otherwise he and Josh let me out, much to my relief and their envy. If anything comes up that I should know Jon will fill me in.”

“Sounds like you are pretty well connected with the chain of command,” Saehir noted. “You seem to get out of a lot of paperwork.”

“Sickbay has its own evils, don’t worry honey,” Kirsten chuckled. “It keeps me plenty busy. But I will admit being married to the first officer has its perks.”

Saehir’s jaw hit the table. “You’re married to Commander Jonathan Jackson?” she gasped out in shock. “That means Captain Jackson is your brother-in-law.”

“The logic would follow thus,” Kirsten looked quizzical. “You didn’t know this?”

“No, I guess that little tidbit never came up in any of the briefings I’ve been to,” Saehir tried desperately to regain her composure. “I tried to kill your brother-in-law and you’re still nice to me. Why?”

“Because I seriously doubt that you still are trying to kill him and even if you were, I seriously doubt that you would succeed; because that’s in the past and because you’re a cool person,” Kirsten shrugged. “Because you needed a friend and no one else was offering.”

“I—” Saehir began before being cut off.

“Lieutenant Aelhih,” Josh’s serious tone emanated from her communicator, “report to the captain’s ready room immediately.”

“On my way captain,” Saehir acknowledged. “We are going to talk about this later. I’ve got to hear how you ended up with Commander Jackson.”

“Look forward to it,” Kirsten smiled warmly as Saehir headed towards the door.

************

“So what did you want to see me about?” Saehir demanded as she walked unannounced into Josh’s ready room.

“What in the world?” Josh shot up in his chair and whirled around to face her. “Do Romulans knock?”

“What is ‘knock’?” Aelhih queried.

“I guess not,” Josh did not directly answer the question. “What do you think the big button with a Starfleet logo on the side is for?”

“Uh, decoration?” Saehir posited.

“Try pressing it next time,” Josh growled.

“What does it do?” the Romulan questioned. “Wait, what do I care? What was it that you wanted to see me about?”

“You cover identity,” Josh resumed his all-business demeanor

“Cover identity?” Saehir was confused. “Am I going on some sort of intelligence mission?”

“No,” Josh answered. “As you ought to know, we are going to be reaching the Klingon on border in a couple of hours and I need you to pose as a half-Vulcan while we are in Klingon space.”

“Why?” Aelhih sighed, already knowing the answer.

“Because Klingons hate Romulans,” Josh rolled his eyes to explain. “If they knew that not only were we carrying a Romulan, but she was part of our crew, well let’s just say that I don’t want to start a war in both of my first missions.”

“Why not just have me off the bridge when we cross into their space?” the very concept of pretending to be a Vulcan was nauseating to her. Those cold-hearted, emotionless, cocky, and utterly useless morons.

“Unfortunately it’s not that simple,” Josh countered. “We’ll be escorted the two days across Klingon space, so we’ll be in pretty continuous contact with them. In addition a Klingon representative will be on board with us the entire time so it’s not like we can keep you hidden the whole time.”

“Couldn’t you relieve me of bridge duty for a couple of days?” Saehir asked.

“Because that’s not suspicious,” Josh snorted in reply. “What would I do? Randomly confine you to quarters for a couple of days?”

“I guess,” Saehir shrugged, “I don’t know.”

“Obviously,” Josh derided. “Look, for once in the time I’ve known, just do what you’re told, alright. It’ll be easier on everyone, especially me. Just act all stolid and everything will be fine.”

“Easy for you to say,” Saehir grumbled.

“Yeah, it is,” Josh rolled his eyes at her. “Part of being in Starfleet sweetheart is doing things that we hate or are even insulting to us. Consider it your initiation.”

“Yes sir,” Saehir mumbled back.

“Good,” Josh gave a sharp nod. “Just so we’re clear: that wasn’t a request; it was an order.”

“I know sir,” Saehir sighed.

“Don’t call me sir,” Josh added icily. “I hate that.”

“Aye, sir,” Saehir cocked an eyebrow. “Anything you say sir.”

Josh’s eyes narrowed, “You’re not going to make this easy for me, are you?”

“You’re not making it easy for me, so fair’s fair,” Saehir retorted.

“I should have you thrown in the brig,” Josh snapped.

“For what?” Saehir challenged. “For following Starfleet protocol? That’ll go over well.”

Josh just glared at Saehir, “Don’t you have work to do?”

“Beauty of being off duty,” Saehir smirked. “I have nothing to do.”

“Joyful,” Josh waved her off. “Well, you’re dismissed to do nothing.”

Saehir walked towards the door, but then stopped and faced Josh. For a moment, Josh ignored her, but finally looked up.

“Is there something else lieutenant?” Josh queried.

“Aren’t you supposed to be off-duty?” Saehir asked.

“A captain is rarely ever off-duty,” Josh cryptically replied.

“So I’ll take that as a sort of,” Saehir crossed her arms. “Let’s go grab a drink or play some ball-basket.”

Josh’s eyes went cold. “Perhaps I didn’t make myself clear,” Josh’s voice was low, “was there something of relevance you wanted to discuss.”

“Uh no,” Saehir admitted.

“Then I suggest you stop wasting my time,” Josh ordered. “Dismissed, lieutenant.”

Saehir opened her mouth to say something, but thought better of it and left.

*************

“How can you stand that jerk?” Saehir asked Kirsten in sickbay while the latter was tending to an injured engineer who had gotten hurt doing some martial arts exercises.

“That should do it,” Kirsten told the patient, momentarily ignoring Saehir’s ranting. The ensign, who was more than a little wary of Saehir, nodded and quickly scampered out of the room. Turning to Saehir, “Which jerk are we talking about now?”

“Josh,” Saehir growled. “Who else?”

“Josh? A jerk?” Kirsten looked quizzically. “I suppose that depends on how you look at it. He’s pretty ruthless in a fight, but other than that he’s not a bad person. A bit cold perhaps, but I wouldn’t classify him as a jerk.”

“A bit cold?” Saehir scoffed. “Deep space has more warmth than him. Please tell me Jon isn’t like this.”

“Jon is generally the more congenially of the two,” Kirsten still looked confused. “What happened?”

“When we are going through Klingon space, I’m supposed to pretend to be some half-Vulcan,” Saehir complained.

“Pardon me, but I don’t see the problem with that,” Kirsten hopped onto the bio-bed. “Given the Klingon’s feelings for Romulans, having a Romulan as part of our crew could be a complication.”

“I get that,” Saehir growled.

“Then what’s the problem?” Kirsten asked.

“It’s just that I’m tired of pretending to be someone I’m not,” Saehir sighed. “I had to spend like six months pretending to fight for Pelliad. Then Terrik left me to die because he thought I was a traitor. When I got here, I thought I could just be me, you know. But no, I have to play-act a Vulcan.”

“It’s only for a couple of days,” Kirsten still did not quite understand.

“You don’t get it,” Saehir groaned. “It’s just I’m sick and tired of people wanting to be someone else.”

“Ah, I see,” Kirsten finally caught on. “So did you tell Josh this?”

“I tried, but he didn’t care,” Saehir sourly told Kirsten. “When I tried to protest, he just waved me off and told me to do as he ordered. That’s what really pisses me off. I get that it’s necessary for the mission, but he could have at least cared to listen to my side of the issue, but no, all he cares about getting through to Starbase 123 intact. How I feel is of no importance to him so he won’t hear of it. He just summarily kicked me out.”

“Hmm,” Kirsten continued to listen to Saehir.

“Why does Josh hate me?” Saehir sighed. “I just don’t get it. After everything we went through, I thought that he’d be at least civil to me. But it seems that every time I try to hang out with him or talk to him, unless it has something to do with work, he’ll have nothing to do with me. And it’s not like he’s nice about it either; just tells me to leave him alone like I’m some sort of nuisance.”

“Well, from his point of view, you probably are,” Kirsten pointed out.

“Not helping,” Saehir snapped.

“Sorry,” Kirsten chuckled a little bit. “It’s not you. Josh treats everyone that way.”

“So he’s just a jerk then?” Saehir raised an eyebrow.

“Like I said, I wouldn’t call him a jerk per se,” Kirsten rebutted. “Look Saehir, the Jackson boys are, unique.”

“What do you mean?” Saehir questioned.

“That’s a long story, one that I don’t even know completely,” Kirsten explained. “I’m also not at liberty to tell the story. Let’s just say they never had a childhood.”

“They were never children?” Saehir looked dubious.

“Physiologically of course,” Kirsten answered. “But psychologically…. Well something happened to them that made them grow up in a hurry.”

“What happened?” the Romulan’s curiosity was thoroughly aroused.

“That is something only they know,” Kirsten shrugged. “Even Jon won’t tell me, saying he doesn’t want to dredge up old wounds, wounds he can do nothing about. From his point of view, there’s no point in talking about a past that cannot be changed. At any rate, whatever it was that happened to them profoundly changed them. They like few people and trust even fewer. They incredibly single-minded and focused. I dare say they rival Vulcans in their mental and physical discipline. Whatever task is before them, they focus on with unbending determination. Above all, they live to defend and protect the Federation at all costs. It might explain their ferocity in battle. The end result is that anything that deviates from this is viewed as an unnecessary distraction that they’ll have nothing to do with. It’s made them rather anti-social, but very good at what they do.”

“So it isn’t me?” Saehir clarified.

“You?” Kirsten chuckled. “Other than trying to kill Josh, no. It’s simply the way they are. They let very few past their guard, two that I can think of. Myself and Captain Gardner, but that is all. The rule with them is unless you have something of relevance to the mission to say, then say nothing at all and let them be. They highly value respect and privacy.”

“How did you get past?” Saehir wondered aloud.

“Good question,” Kirsten sighed. “I don’t really know. Maybe I was at the right place at the right time. Maybe there was something about me that let me through. Maybe I pushed hard enough to get in.”

“Maybe I should push then,” Saehir suggested.

“I wouldn’t do that,” Kirsten warned her. “Josh is liable to push back and you don’t want to face that, trust me. I’ve seen more than one woman badly burned because they pushed too hard. My advice to you is to leave him alone. Work with him where you can, but nothing more. Anything else could be risky to your health, to say nothing of your career.”

“But there’s got to be something I can do to get through to him,” Saehir groaned. “He’s someone like me, someone I can understand. I can’t tell you how much that means to me to have someone like that here, where everything is so strange.”

“He may not like you Saehir,” Kirsten put her hand on the Romulan’s shoulder. “But he does respect you. I know Josh well enough to see that. More than he trusts you and his trust is not something that is given lightly. Let that be enough for you.”

Saehir was about to say something in reply when Josh’s voice chirped from her communicator. “All senior bridge officers, report to the bridge immediately. We have arrived at the Klingon border,” it said.

“I gotta go,” Saehir sighed. “Thanks for listening.”

“No problem,” Kirsten smiled. “Let’s hang out later. Maybe we can improve your jump shot.”

“I’d love that,” Saehir shot Kirsten a rare smile and headed for the bridge.

*************

“You know what I really hate about Romulans?” Ras ranted on the bridge to the Klingon officer.

“Please enlighten me,” the Klingon was grinning from ear to ear, clearly enjoying this.

“It’s their women,” Ras supplied. “They have this cold, arrogant, holier-than-thou attitude that is just infuriating. Completely inapproachable. It’s not that their logical like Vulcan chicks, they’re just cocky. Plus they got this nasty vindictive streak in them. Kill you as soon as look at you. Won’t do it honorably either, like a Klingon woman. No, these bitches will poison you or have some hired phaser do their dirty work for them.”

“That sounds Romulan enough,” the Klingon nodded his agreement.

“Oh, but their favorite method is pure evil,” Ras cast a taunting look at Saehir. “From what I hear, if a Romulan chick is into you, run. That means she’s going to off you. See they like to seduce a man into bed with them, then slit their throat while they sleep.”

“Have they no honor?” the Klingon roared in disgust.

“Nope,” Ras confirmed. “But what would expect from a Romulan woman? Never trust a Romulan. First thing you learn at the Academy, right Saehir?”

“I find your banter illogical and pointless,” Saehir hoped that her struggle to remain calm and not strangle both the Klingon and Ras was kept hidden. “I would wish that you leave me firmly out of it.”

“Of course,” Ras smirked. “So how many Romulans have you killed.” With that, the Klingon began enlightening the crew to some of his battles against the Romulans. Saehir knew that some of her friends would have been in those battles. This she did not have the stomach to listen to.

“Captain, may I have a word in private with you?” she asked calmly.

Josh seemed shaken out of his thoughts. “I suppose,” he shrugged. “My ready room?”

Once inside, Saehir broke character. “I can’t stand this,” she wailed to Josh. “I have to put up this crap all day long. Right now you would do me a favor by confining me to my quarters. After this, I may never come out again.”

“What exactly are you referring to?” Josh asked from behind his desk, his visage emotionless.

“Where were you?” she railed at him. “Did you not hear Ras continuously insult and belittle me and my people for the last hour?”

“I believe he was simply making conversation,” Josh shrugged.

“Oh, and was it making conversation when he told Ensign Peck to keep his distance because ‘you never can know what that Romulan whore will do.’ Was that just ‘making conversation’?”

“So are you saying that Ensign Ras has been bigoted and derogatory?” Josh questioned.

“You’ve got to be joking?” Saehir shot the captain an incredulous look. “It’s not just Ras, but your entire damn crew. I would feel more loved and accepted floating in space.”

“So you’re not fitting in and have personal issues with some of the crew?” Josh wondered.

“You could say that,” Saehir confirmed.

“So what do you want from me?” Josh cocked his head.

“Get them to back off, to cut me some slack,” Saehir couldn’t believe how dense this guy could be.

“Sorry, but I can’t do that,” Josh rejected.

“What?” Saehir’s jaw dropped.

“Look, ship operations, tactical procedures, crew placement and replacement, interdepartment feuds and the like are within my jurisdiction. People’s interpersonal relationships, not so much.,” Josh explained. “I don’t ask my crew to like each other; just work with each other. As far as I can tell, my crew is working well together. So if you have a problem with some, that is your problem to deal with.”

“So you’re not going to do anything?” Saehir was shocked.

“I can’t fight your battles for you,” Josh shrugged. “That wouldn’t be wise. Is there anything else?”

Tightening up her face, Saehir forced out, “No captain, that is all.”

“Very well, dismissed,” Josh didn’t even look up.

*************

“I’m going to kill him,” Saehir growled to Kirsten two days later as she laid a swift roundhouse kick to the pad that Kirsten was holding, knocking her back several feet.

“You might want to tone it down,” Kirsten caught her breath. “The people around here are liable to take you seriously, given your history.”

“I’m not really going to kill him,” Saehir grunted as she landed a series of punches to the pad. “Tempting as it might be.”

“Josh can be infuriating at times,” Kirsten agreed with a sigh. “How bad has it really been?”

“Since I’m an emotionless Vulcan, I can’t respond to any insults or jabs that the crew throws my way. A fact they have taken full advantage of,” Saehir answered with a vicious punch.

Kirsten felt her heart sink. For all the rhetoric about equality and acceptance that the Federation preached, there could be some real prejudice among her members. Starfleet officers were apparently not excluded. “What’d they say?” Kirsten asked, certain that she did not want to know the answer.

“I believe the favorite nickname I’ve garnered is ‘Romulan whore’,” Saehir replied with a definite edge to her voice. “Others would include ‘Traitor’ and ‘Turncoat’ and ‘Witch’ and ‘Benedict Arnold,’ whatever that means.”

“He was a traitor during the American Revolution six centuries ago,” Kirsten automatically explained. “Sorry, that’s not really the point, is it? Who’s behind this?”

“Who isn’t would be an easier question,” Saehir snorted. “I guess Ras has been the most ruthless.”

“Figured,” Kirsten shook her head. “He’s taken Mark’s death pretty hard.”

“Were those two good friends?” Saehir rocked on the balls of her feet, preparing for her next strike.

“As good of friends as you can be in four weeks,” Kirsten supplied as she absorbed Saehir’s routine and gestured to switch. “He blames you for Mark’s death. Rio too.”

“And most of the crew, I would suppose,” Saehir sardonically pointed out. “It’s not like I asked them for help.”

“That’s not how they see it,” Kirsten kicked the pad. “Which of course is not helping you. I’m sorry for how the crew has been treating you. It’s not what the Federation is about and not all of us are like that.”

“I know,” Saehir smiled at her friend. “You’ve been a real friend, one I’ve needed.”

“It’s odd that Josh or Jon haven’t done anything,” Kirsten noted. “This is not something that they would tolerate.”

“I doubt they know,” Saehir braced herself for Kirsten’s punch, “or care.”

“They do,” Kirsten told her. “I know Josh does, more than you can guess.”

“Then why doesn’t do anything?” Saehir’s face began to look despondent.

“I cannot begin to speculate on Josh’s motives or reasons,” Kirsten shook her head. “I do know this: he’s got his reasons and if there is one thing I know about Josh is that he’s always two steps ahead of everyone else.”

“Right, like anyone’s that smart,” Saehir scoffed.

“They both are,” Kirsten countered. “Trust me; I’ve been in battles with them when it seemed like everything was falling apart, but they stood there cool as ice. Then, just when all seemed lost, they pulled complete victory from nowhere. They did this because they were two steps ahead. Everything that the enemy did that appeared to be crucial blows to us was really playing right into their hands.”

“That just means that they’re good tacticians, nothing more,” Saehir growled.

“This is how they live their lives,” Kirsten explained as she did a punch-kick combination. “Look, if you don’t trust them, trust me. It will be okay in the end. If he didn’t believe that, he wouldn’t let this go on.”

“Alright, I—,” Saehir sighed.

“—All senior officers report to the bridge immediately,” Josh’s flat voice called over the comm.

“On my way,” Saehir sighed. “Thanks for the workout.”

“Any time,” Kirsten smiled. “Hey, hang in there. Things’ll work out.”

“I’ll try,” Saehir turned to the door.

************

Chapter 3:

“What’s going on?” Saehir asked as she dashed onto the bridge.

“Your uniform is wrinkled,” Rio icily commented from her station. “What took you so long to get here?”

“Last one here, rumpled uniform, out of breath and hair a bit out of place,” Ras counted on his fingers. “I think it’s quite obvious what our resident Romulan turncoat has been up to. Who was it this time?”

Saehir shot a glance at Josh, who merely shrugged and resumed looking at whatever it was that he was dealing with. Clenching her jaw, she walked stiffly to her station and took over tactical.

“What’s going on?” she asked again through clenched teeth.

“We’ve received a distress call from freighter and we’re moving to intercept,” Jon informed her. “The transmission was pretty garbled, but from what Rio pulled out, we managed to pieced together what happened. Essentially, the freighter hit something that fried their warp coils, leaving them dead in space.”

“Just a bunch of fried warp coils and we’re going off to help them?” Saehir raised one of her eyebrows. “Don’t we have to deliver pointy-ears here?” she gestured to the Vulcan ambassador.

“That would be Ambassador Pointy-ears to you lieutenant,” A’ral dryly commented, drawing a chuckle from some of the others in the room.

“Starfleet protocol dictates that we answer all distress calls,” Josh spoke for the first time. “If it is necessary, we can dispatch the Ambassador on a shuttle to complete his mission.”

“That is not necessary captain, thank you,” the Vulcan motioned off. “My mission is not time sensitive, whereas these merchants’ plight is a little more so. Thank you for your concern, Lieutenant.”

Saehir saw Ras visibly bristle at the compliment she received, which brought a smile to her face. Silence reigned over the bridge as they waited to arrive at the freighter’s position.

“Ras, all stop!” Rio suddenly barked out. Without waiting a moment, Ras brought them to a sudden halt, pivoting the ship on the tip of the dagger-head, throwing them from their places, depositing two of the bridge staff on the floor.

“Care to explain why you felt like tossing us around like that?” Saehir snapped at Rio as she picked herself up off the bridge floor.

“She doesn’t have to explain herself to you,” Ras came to his comrades defense.

“After that ride, I thinks she owes us a bit of an explanation,” Saehir crossed her arms and glared down at the helmsman.

“What the hell did you guys do up there?” Ax’s voice came over the comm. “You just about fried the inertial dampers and gave one of my engineers a concussion.”

“Peace,” Josh held up his hand. “Rio isn’t going to subvert the chain of command and toss us around like a salad for no reason, though I am dreadfully curious to know what that reason is.”

“Hold on a second,” Rio held up her hand as she bent over her readout. “Five hundred meters off our bow is a subspace rift. I’m guessing that’s what damaged the freighters warp coils.”

“And if we had hit it, we would have been in the same boat as them,” Jon finished with a nod. “Good catch Rio. Can we go through it with impulse drive?”

“I think so,” Rio answered. “I’m sending the data to Ax; he can tell you better than I.”

“Got it,” Ax’s voice came over the com. He paused for a moment before answering, “Yeah, it shouldn’t be a problem, so long as we don’t go to warp. How far is the freighter?”

“Five hundred thousand kilometers from our present position,” Rio informed. “My guess is that they hit the rift and then basically drifted to a stop.”

“Alright Ras full impulse, Ax get an engineering team ready, Saehir get a security team ready,” Jon ordered. “You’ll be with me.”

“Aye,” was echoed throughout the bridge and they went about picking their teams.

“Captain, we’ve cleared the rift,” Rio informed Josh.

“Excellent,” he nodded to Ras. “Hail them please.”

“Aye Josh, hailing,” Ras sent the communication. A moment later, a Markalian face appeared on the view screen.

“I’m Captain Joshua Jackson of the USS Oregon,” Josh stepped forward. “We received your distress call and have come to lend a hand.”

“Thank you Oregon,” the Markalian responded. “I am Captain Tosh of the freighter Anslem. We seem to have hit a subspace rift that you luckily avoided and have lost warp drive. We are on a tight schedule to make this delivery captain so any assistance that you could offer would be most welcome.”

“I’ll have my engineering team beam over right away along with my first officer,” Josh gestured to his brother, which caused the Markalian to do a double take.

“We would be most grateful Oregon,” he bowed. “I’ll have my crew ready to meet them.”

Oregon out,” Josh cut the communication. “Okay people, you know your jobs. Hop to it.”

As people bustled about, Saehir checked her tactical display of the ship. She had done a quick scan of the ship, just in case they were not friendly. Their weapons were of no concern, but there was something unusual about her readings.

“Rio, what is their cargo?” she asked.

“I don’t know, why?” Rio shrugged.

“Could you run a scan of them real quick? Something doesn’t seem quite right,” Saehir told her.

“What do you mean?” Rio did not move.

“There seems to be some kind of weird energy field around their hold,” Saehir explained.

“Why not,” Rio snorted and did a quick scan. “It’s just a dampening field, probably to prevent sensors from reading what’s inside.”

“Isn’t that odd?” Saehir queried.

“It’s not normal, but not necessarily out of place,” Rio answered. “Especially out here. This is a hot bed for pirates and raiders, so some freighters put a dampening field around their cargo to hide from prying eyes.”

“Can our sensors penetrate it?” Saehir did not like people hiding things. It made her uncomfortable.

“Not legally,” Rio cocked her head at Saehir. “In the Federation we believe in individual privacy and rights. Without a reason or a warrant, I can’t just scan their ship. If they want to hide their cargo, then that is there business, not mine. Being a Romulan, you probably have no grasp of that concept.”

“I—” Saehir began to respond, but Jon cut her off.

“Hey Saehir, let’s go,” he called to her from the turbo lift.

“On my way,” she turned and stalked off.

************

“Thank you commander,” Tosh, the Markalian captain, was talking to Jon as repair teams were busy around the engine room.

“It’s what we do,” Jon shrugged. “Commander, how much time?”

“It’s not pretty Jon,” the Royadanian looked up from his PADD. “I’m guessing six hours at best.”

“Six hours!” the freighter captain gasped. “That long?”

“Yeah, your warp coils are completely shot and need to replaced. Plus you’ve blown half your EPS conduits and your anti-matter containment units are damaged and probably need to be replaced,” Ax explained with a sigh. “Six hours is the best we can do, unless you can spare some of your people.”

“Unfortunately not,” he sighed in response. “We are cleaning up our cargo after we hit that rift. It’s scattered all over the hold.”

“My security detail could assist you with that,” Saehir offered.

“Thank you, but no,” he hastily rejected. “My people can handle it.”

“But we could speed up the process,” Saehir countered.

“I appreciate the offer, but we must respectfully refuse,” the Markalian refused more forcefully this time. “We’ll make due. Thank you again commander. If you’ll excuse me, I have some business to attend to,” with that, the captain turned on his heal and headed for the cargo hold.

Saehir watched him suspiciously. “Something isn’t right here,” she said pointedly to Jon.

“You’re probably right,” Jon eyed her carefully. “But what can we do? Our job is to fix the warp drive and move on. It isn’t like we could sneak into the cargo hold and find out what they’re carrying. That would be illegal.”

“I guess you’re right,” Saehir pursed her lips as an idea formed in her head.

“Parkinson, you’re in charge,” she waved over one of her subordinates. “There is something I need to do back on the Oregon.

“What’s she up to?” Parkinson scrunched up his eyebrows as Saehir beamed away.

“It’s probably best if we don’t know,” Jon smirked and turned his attention back to the work going on in front of him.

*************

Inside the lavatory next to the cargo hold, a bluish light shimmered, dissipating to reveal Saehir dressed in a tight black jumpsuit with a ninja style mask. Reaching underneath the head, she attached a small device that began blinking green, demonstrating that it was transmitting. She grasped the grate overhead that led to the ventilation system, removed it, and crawled in.

A minute and a half later Saehir removed a second grate and slithered through, dropping to the floor inside the cargo hold and hid between a large crate and a wall. Inside the large hold were a dozen or so crewers of various species working about, picking up the pieces from their crash.

Wow, Aelhih mused to herself as she observed the mess spread out before her, they must have hit this rift hard. Deciding that she probably didn’t have a lot of time to site-see, Saehir looked around gathering as much visual information as possible.

The accident had fortunately wreaked havoc on their cargo, throwing it all over the hold. It was all the same, Saehir observed. About thirty centimeters in height it had a pyramidal base with six centimeter or so sphere affixed to the top of it. The object was eerily familiar, but she couldn’t quite place it. Saehir’s suspicions were at an all-time high at this point, but she didn’t have enough information to present a case to Captain Jackson. She needed to know what exactly this thing was.

Testing the crate she was behind, she found it loose and then gently, quietly opened the lid. Sure enough, inside was a stack of the strange objects. With lightning-quick speed Saehir reached in and grabbed one of the objects. For a moment she hefted the object in her hand and examined it.

“Hey, Anthony, go pick up those things in the corner over there,” Tosh’s voice ordered one of his men. Looking up, Aelhih saw a human sauntering her direction. Melting into the shadows, she slipped back up into the ventilation duct, replaced the grate, and retreated back the way she had come. A minute later, she was back in her quarters on board the Oregon. Sighing relief, she sat down and looked at the stolen object in her hand.

What are you? she silently asked herself.

*************

Chapter 4

“Hey, could you give me a hand with something?” Saehir asked Rio on the bridge.

“Aren’t you supposed to be helping out with the repairs on the Anslem?” the Bajoran questioned.

“I was, but something came up and so I had to leave Ensign Parkinson in charge. Don’t worry,” she held her hand up, “he’s fully capable of handling security. Besides, my department, my decisions. But this does bring me to what I need your assistance on.”

“What do you need?” Rio sighed.

“I need you to do your sciency thing and tell me what this is,” Saehir produced the object.

“I’ve never seen something like this before,” Rio frowned as she examined it.

“I have, I just can’t place it,” Saehir sighed.

“Where did you get it?” Rio continued to scrutinize it.

“Uh, it might be better if you didn’t ask,” Saehir looked away.

“Please tell me you didn’t steal this from their cargo hold,” Rio sharply turned her gaze on Saehir. “You did, didn’t you?” she surmised angrily. “Do you have any idea how wrong that it is? No, of course not. After all, you’re a Romulan so the idea of personal privacy and rights is a completely foreign concept to you. And do you have any clue how much trouble Josh could get in? Oh, but wait; nothing would make you happier than to see him suffer, wouldn’t it? I have no time for selfish, conniving bitches.”

“Will you put your damned prejudice aside for just one moment and listen to me,” Saehir hissed. “I’ve seen this thing before and you haven’t which means that it is probably Romulan.”

“Enough lieutenant,” Rio cut her off. “I will have no part in this. Now get off the bridge.”

“As you wish, lieutenant,” Saehir nodded and stormed to the turbolift.

*************

It was several hours later when repairs were finished and Ax was available. He was tired and about to call it a night when Saehir entered main engineering.

“Ah, lieutenant, what can I do for you?” he greeted her with his usual cheer.

“Can you tell me what this is?” she handed him the unusual object.

“Hmm, looks like a compositor of some kind,” he rolled at around in his big hands.

“I’ve seen it before, but I can’t quite place what it is,” Saehir added.

“Really?” Ax cocked his head to one side. “And where did you get this?”

“Uh,” she stammered.

“I see,” Ax turned his red eyes on her. “You are aware that that is illegal.”

“So I’ve been told,” Saehir inwardly winced as she remembered her conversation with Rio on the bridge. “They were just too suspicious and secretive. I had to know what they were hiding.”

“Well I suppose that couldn’t be helped,” Ax shrugged. “And seeing as how we got whatever it was they were trying to hide, we might as well take a look. If it’s nothing, no harm no foul, right?”

“Uh right,” Saehir nodded, not entirely sure if she understood what he was saying.

Ax took out his tricorder and scanned the object. “Hmm,” he scratched his chin and looked at the readout. “There seems to be a lot of tetryon particles built up in this thing.”

“Tetryon compositor!” Saehir slapped her forehead. “Of course, why didn’t I see it sooner?”

“Tetryon compositor?” Ax looked quizzical. “Aren’t those used in cloaking devices?”

“Yeah, it’s one of the central components,” Saehir nodded. “I don’t know exactly how it all works, but the compositor is kinda what makes it go, I think.”

“Interesting,” Ax frowned as he looked at the object again. “So why would these shippers have a cargo hold full of tetryon compositors?”

“Good question,” Saehir agreed. “They’re even designed perfectly for a cloaking device. See here, the base is the right size and shape to slip into the proper slot one a Romulan device.”

“Are you sure?” Ax asked again.

“Yeah, I’ve seen these things hundreds of times. Even replaced a couple when they burned out,” she shrugged. “That’s probably why I couldn’t place it. It’s so routine that you don’t even think about it, it was just unusual to see one here in Federation space.”

“Burned out?” Ax asked.

“The tetryons eventually build up inside and fry the circuitry,” she explained. “It’s like having to replace the warp coils or dilithium crystals. Compositors need to be changed after a certain number of hours otherwise the cloaking device could explode, which really doesn’t go over very well.”

“I can imagine,” Ax snorted. “Can you think of any other reason why you would use a tetryon compositor?”

“I suppose if you were doing experiments with bending the EM spectrum maybe, but you wouldn’t want compositors of this design, at least I’m guessing. Besides, I doubt you would need so many. There were about 100 plus crates with about 200 of these suckers in them. That’s a lot of compositors.”

“You need to tell Josh,” Ax told her. “Immediately. Smuggling stuff, especially military stuff, to the Romulans is tantamount to treason.”

“And also could be a problem when we inevitably face them in a war, yeah I know,” Saehir added. “I don’t know if I feel comfortable about this. After the tongue-lashing I got from Rio, going to Josh might be less risky than walking out an airlock.”

“You might be surprised,” Ax countered. “Josh is pretty cool with stuff like this. He’s a bit of a maverick himself and if you have something important, he will listen. He is interested in results far more than how you got there. Besides, sneaking into that ship wouldn’t rank very high on the illegal things he’s done throughout his career. You should check out his service record sometime. It’s a tale, that’s for sure.”

“All the same, if you could come with me as some sort of back-up, that’d be great,” Saehir asked.

“Sure, no problem,” Ax assented. “But you’re going to have to face him on your own someday, you know that.”

“Just not today,” she retorted.

*************

“Ever been here before?” Saehir asked Ax when they reached Josh’s door and hit the chime.

“You kidding?” the lizard snorted. “I value my hide.”

“Why is everyone so scared of him?” Saehir asked no one in particular.

“Because he values his privacy more than our lives,” Ax explained. “If you have something important to say, then he’s happy to listen. But he hates it when people bother him about trivial stuff. I’ve seen more than one person chewed out by him, including Ras. And he’s not above giving you a wicked schedule for revenge.”

“Why is he so anti-social?” Saehir asked as she pressed the chime button again.

“Who knows?” Ax shrugged. “Jon, Kirsten maybe, but the likelihood of them sharing that secret is slightly below zero.”

“Computer, locate Captain Jackson,” Saehir request of the computer after chiming a third time.

“Captain Jackson is in his quarters,” the computer chimed back.

“Open door security override code Sigma-3-89-3-Alpha,” Saehir ordered.

“Are you insane?” Ax gasped as the doors opened obediently. “He’ll kill you.”

“Not if I kill him first,” Saehir smirked as she stepped in.

“Do you not get the concept of go away,” Josh roared from the backroom coming in wearing a pair of shorts and nothing more.

For a moment Saehir and Ax gawked at Josh. His muscular torso was a web of scars of varying colors. He almost looked like a science experiment gone wrong.

“Well you got me up, so what do you want?” his icy voice brought them back to reality.

“Uh, this,” Saehir took the compositor from Ax and handed it to Josh.

“And this is?” he prompted.

“It’s a tetryon compositor,” Saehir answered and then pointed Josh. “What happened?”

“Klingons, Cardassians, Dominion, Borg, Romulans, Breen, and probably another dozen species I’ve pissed off throughout my career,” Josh’s visage didn’t change. “So why is a tetryon compositor worth kicking me out of bed in the morning.”

“According to Saehir and my understanding of cloaking technology, this particular compositor is specifically used in Romulan cloaking devices,” Ax explained.

“I see,” Josh stared hard at the object for a moment. Then he turned on his heal, “You have ten minutes to put together a briefing. Computer alert the senior staff to a meeting in ten minutes,” Josh ordered.

“Don’t you want to know where I got it?” Saehir asked.

“Why ask questions I already know the answer to?” Josh called back.

“It doesn’t bother you that what I did was illegal and possibly unethical?” Saehir was confused.

“I don’t care how you get your results; just that you do,” Josh replied. “You had a hunch, explored it and it panned out. That’s called doing your job. Now get your briefing ready.”

“That’s about as close to a compliment as you’ll ever get,” Ax shook his head as they left the captain’s quarters. “I suppose we have work to do.”

*************

“What’s going on?” Ras moaned sleepily as he took his seat next to Rio.

“Your uniform is wrinkled,” she whispered to him.

“It’s 0200, sue me,” Ras growled.

“Alright people,” Josh called the meeting to order. “Saehir and Ax have found something that needs our immediate attention. Saehir.”

Saehir place the tetryon compositor on the conference table.

“Isn’t that the object you stole from the Anslem?” Rio gasped. “Captain?”

“Let her explain,” he ordered calmly and gestured back to Saehir.

“During our repairs, I became increasingly suspicious that the Anslem’s cargo was less than legal,” Saehir began to explain.

“So you decided to break into their cargo hold and steal their cargo, which is definitely illegal,” Ras snapped at her. “Captain?”

“Enough of the interruptions,” Josh growled. “Let her finish. This is important.”

Both Rio and Ras slouched in their chairs and glared. “Yes, I did,” Saehir admitted. “As it turns out, it was a good thing that I did. I found this, which Ax has helped me identify as a tetryon compositor, which as most of you ought to know is primarily used in Romulan cloaking devices. Since I have served for quite some time on Romulan starships, I am quite familiar with them and this is the design used in D’deridex and Valdore class warbirds.”

“So what, these guys were smuggling parts to a cloaking device to the Romulans?” Ras was dubious.

“That is the most probable explanation,” Josh confirmed.

“What about the Klingons?” Jon questioned.

“I already checked,” Josh answered for Saehir. “The Klingons have their own facilities that produce tetryon compositors.”

“So why does this mean the Romulans are getting these?” Rio posed. “Shouldn’t they have their own facilities?”

“No, those have been destroyed during the beginning of the civil war, courtesy of Admiral Terrik,” Saehir explained. “That has actually been a worry of both sides, or at least it was.”

“Why?” Rio was still a little lost. “Can’t they just replicate them? And why do they need so many?”

“For it to work in a cloaking device, it has to have a specific configuration,” Ax answered for Saehir. “There are two drawbacks to this design: one, they have a limited life span and burnout after about six months or so. I suppose it was only a matter of time before they ran out. Secondly, they cannot simply be replicated, but have to be carefully manufactured.”

“So how do we know that this is the Romulans?” Ras asked the question that most of them were thinking.

“Who else?” Josh answer with a question. “Who is going to have that kind of need? Who is going to have that kind of cash?”

“Plus,” Saehir tapped a few keys on the display, showing a ship’s flight path. “They’re heading to Romulan space.”

“What’s that?” Rio asked tersely.

“I planted a tracking device on their ship when I reconned the compositor,” Saehir succinctly replied.

Josh, remembering the layout of the ship, chucklingly asked, “Where exactly did you plant it?”

“Their bathroom,” Saehir shrugged causing Jon and Josh both to laugh a little.

“Still this is all circumstantial evidence,” Rio pointed out. “We have nothing to arraign them on. And Saehir definitely broke the law.”

Josh eyed the lieutenant coldly for a moment. “Lieutenant Aelhih followed up suspicious activity with an investigation, albeit unorthodox, and got results. In short, she did her job, which is more than I can say for you. I don’t give a damn about your personal feelings regarding Lieutenant Aelhih until they start interfering with us doing our job, which at this point is catching a ship full of traitors. Have I made myself clear?”

“Yes sir,” Rio dropped her eyes under Josh’s glare.

“Should we even arrest them?” Jon piped up. “What’s to say that these compositors are going to Pelliad? If they’re going to Terrik that’ll give him a huge boost, one we want.”

“No,” Saehir countered with a shake of the head. “It has to be Pelliad behind this. Terrik would have used Captain Gardner, or at least alerted him, if he was going to run an operation like this. But more than that, Pelliad has the old families, the ones with money, backing him. Terrik simply does not have the funds to pull of an operation of this caliber.”

“There’s still the problem of proof,” Rio reminded.

“True point,” Josh turned back to the screen. “As a Romulan, where are they going?”

Saehir regarded the map for a moment. “Here,” she pointed, “the Carraya system. It is uninhabited by a warp civilization, close to the Neutral Zone, and far away from both starbases.”

“Ax, could the Beta section beat them there?” Josh asked his engineer.

“Easily,” Ax shrugged. “That’s a pretty old freighter.”

“Okay then,” Josh swiveled around to face his staff. “Jon, you take the Beta section to the Carraya system and hide there and wait. Catch them in the act and then transmit their trajectory back to us. We’ll set up a subspace rift to trap them again, arrest them and go to our new home. Sound good?” His proposal was greeted with nods of approval around the table.

“Okay good,” Josh dismissed them. “Jon, your crew?”

“Right,” Jon scanned the room for a moment. “Ras, Saehir, you’re with me. Let’s go.”

*************

Chapter 5

“I can’t believe Josh is going along with this,” Rio talked to Ras as he headed to the second bridge. “I mean this is a clear violation of protocol.”

“You know Josh,” Ras shrugged. “Results are what matters, not how you get there. Besides, he’s broken more laws than we’ve probably heard of, so it’s not he can complain. That’s why I like him; as long as you get the job done, he stays out of your way. And he gets the job done. With the strong likelihood that these guys are traitors, we’ve got to follow up, no matter how unpleasant it is.”

“I suppose his maverick streak has gotten us out of more scrapes than I’d care to remember,” Rio admitted. “I just hate it that he’s making you take her with you.”

“That pisses me off too,” Ras agreed. “But it’s Jon’s decision. Besides, whether I like to admit it or not, she’s good at what she does and we might need her.”

“I suppose,” Rio sniffed. “Do try to come back in one piece. Whenever she’s around, it seems like my friends end up getting killed. And watch your back; I don’t trust her.”

“Who does?” Ras shrugged. “We’ll be fine. It’s a simple spy mission, no big deal.”

“Right, just a simple spy mission,” Rio repeated.

“I’ll be back in time for dinner,” the Andorian smirked and sauntered off.

Across the way Josh was giving his brother last minute instructions. “Remember Jon, your job is to get the smoking gun, nothing more,” he was saying. “Whatever you do, do not engage the freighter or the Romulans. We’ll handle that.”

“No worries,” Jon laughed. “I’ll bring her back in one piece. Just make sure the trip wire’s ready.”

“Already on it,” Josh clasped Jon’s shoulder. “Take care, alright.”

“I will,” he smiled back. “I’d hate to think of what Kirsten would do to you if anything happened to me.”

“Me too,” Josh chuckled. “See ya.”

“See ya.”

***********

Six hours later, the Beta section of the USS Oregon was hovering over the north pole of Carraya 3, the place Saehir tabbed as most likely for the transfer, if there was going to be one at all. They were all tired, having not gotten much sleep the previous night. It didn’t help that the Beta, as she was affectionately called, was operating with little more than a bridge crew and a couple of people in engineering. Saehir privately wondered how everyone who was normally here was coping being shoved off into a random corners of the Alpha and Gamma sections.

“Anything yet?” Jon asked for the eighth time that hour. He was less patient than Josh.

“Nope,” Saehir sighed from tactical, which was doubling as an ops station.

“Any chance you guessed wrong?” Ras asked from helm.

“That’d make you happy, wouldn’t it?” Saehir snapped. Admittedly, she was starting to second guess herself.

“Since spending six hours in a cramped bridge with you in the middle of nowhere is so exciting,” Ras retorted.

“Children, enough,” Jon held out his hand. “It’s been a long day for all of us. For your sakes, don’t make it any longer for me. Saehir?”

“Of course it’s possible,” she growled. “I was put on the spot to give my best guess, which is here. This is the most likely rendezvous point, but there are dozens of possibilities.”

“And of course we can’t track them all,” Jon sighed. “Well, that freighter was a hunk of junk. We’ll stay another hour before going hunting.”

“Good, ‘cause your chauffer doesn’t like sitting park all day,” Ras grumbled.

“We got something incoming,” Saehir called out from tactical. “Looks like our freighter, just like I said,” Saehir shot Ras a smug look.

“Yeah, yeah,” Ras waved off. “Still missing the Romulans.”

“And right on cue,” Saehir gestured to the screen which showed the shape of a Romulan warbird shimmer into view.

“Stay alert people,” Jon ordered. “We scanning them?”

“Of course,” Saehir answered. “Patching through transmission now.”

“You’re late,” a cold and calculated voice came over the com system.

“Had some engine trouble,” the Markainian captain explained. “Some Starfleet ship came around and helped us out otherwise we wouldn’t have made it at all.”

“Starfleet!” the Romulan’s voice jolted. “Did they search you? Do they know?”

“Don’t be ridiculous,” Tosh snorted. “They were their courteous selves. Didn’t pry or ask, just fix us up and go. Simpletons.”

“Be more careful,” the Romulan chided. “Are you ready to transport?”

“One moment,” Tosh replied. “Here you are.”

“We have received the shipment,” the Romulan. “Your payment is commencing.”

“We’ve got it,” Tosh’s voice smiled. “Pleasure doing business with you.”

“Until next time,” the Romulan replied. “Tell your employers that I expect promptness from them if they wish to keep our business.”

“Will do,” Tosh replied and then cut the transmission.

“Romulan’s cloaking,” Saehir

“That’s the smoking gun folks,” Ras smirked. “So what now?”

“We trail them long enough to get a fix on their trajectory and leave the rest up to Josh,” Jon shrugged.

“They’re preparing to warp,” Saehir reported from her station. “And… WHAT THE HELL?!” she yelled in astonishment.

The bridge crew’s collective heads snapped to the view screen just in time to see the warbird decloaked directly in front of the freighter and fired. It happened so fast that no one had time to react. One moment the freighter was there, the next there was only a burning wreck and a disappearing warbird.

“I take it Romulans don’t like paying their bills,” a stunned Ras whispered.

“Usually we’re pretty cool about it,” Saehir’s eyes were wide.

“Let’s get out of here,” Jon slammed his fist into the console. “Damn it Josh is going to be pissed.”

I’m pissed,” Saehir snarled.

“Setting return vector,” Ras growled. “Ready on your mark.”

“Maximum warp,” Jon ordered. “En—”

“Warbird decloaking!” Saehir cut him off, raising shields.

“Evasive action!” Jon immediately ordered. In response, Ras banked a hard left to dodge the hail of green disruptor bolts that grazed the shields.

“Good thing this thing can move,” Ras commented as he kept banking them around.

“Firing disruptor beam,” Saehir informed. “Direct hit. Shields down to 57%. Regenerating.”

“What?” Ras asked. “I thought our shields were stronger than that.”

“They are,” Jon answered, “when we are all together. We’ve thirded our shield strength, so shots hurt more.”

“Incoming,” Saehir called out again. “Ras do something about that beam.”

“Why don’t you shoot the damn thing?” Ras retorted from the conn. “That’d make my job a hell of a lot easier.”

“Bring us right 87 degrees and keep us away from those damn disruptor cannons,” Jon ordered. “Saehir target their disruptor beam. Fire!”

Saehir lit up the warbird’s shields by rotating through phaser arrays as Ras rolled them to help Saehir line up her shots.

“Cut their shields in half, but the disruptor beam is undamaged,” Saehir reported. “Line up rear torpedo tubes.”

“Lining up,” Ras acknowledged.

“Firing,” Saehir reported, sending a pair of blue orbs racing towards the top of the warbird. At the last moment, the warbird lifted its nose and the front shields absorbed the punishment.

“Front shields down to 20%,” Saehir reported. “They’re firing all weapons.”

“Taking evasive action,” Ras didn’t bother to wait for an order as he threw the Oregon-Beta into a violent downward spiral, evading the disruptor bolts and most of the beam fire.

“The photon has a lock,” Saehir reported as the red dot trailed them.

“I can’t shake it,” Ras tried jinking to lose their unwanted tail, but to no avail. The photon torpedo persistently closed the distance.

“Ras got to full impulse and arc us around and up 180 degrees,” Jon ordered as his brows furrowed.

“Aye,” Ras pulled at them with the hard turn.

“Torpedo still on our tail,” Saehir reported anxiously.

“Set collision course with disruptor beam,” Jon ordered as Ras rolled away from disruptor bolts.

“Jon!” Saehir gasped.

“Tactical prepare aft torpedoes to fire and lock phasers on the beam,” Jon ignored her protest.

The disruptor beam fired as did a second torpedo the raced directly towards them. Saehir took manual control of the phasers and with a precise shot, blew the torpedo apart, to the astonishment of them all.

“Warning: collision in five seconds,” the computer warned.

“Fire phasers,” Jon ordered sharply. “Pull up hard and fire torpedoes…NOW!”

In the space of a few breaths, the crew flawlessly executed their commander’s orders. The end result was a warbird that had a gaping hole in its head.

“Report,” Jon demanded.

“Enemy down shields down to 10%,” Saehir reported from tactical, taking a deep breath. “One more shot should…Damn it. They’ve cloaked. They’re gone, Jon.”

“It’s just as well,” Jon sat back down into the center chair. “They’ll catch hell for it with their superiors, I’m sure. Ras, take us home.”

“Gladly sir,” Ras punched in the coordinates. “And Saehir, good shooting,” he shot her an approving grin.

“Good driving,” Saehir nodded back.

************

Chapter 6:

The next day, just after they had dropped off the ambassador, Saehir with a sigh went to the main lounge. She walked in, expecting the same routine: suddenly hushed conversation, followed by awkward stares, and finally her scurrying off to some corner for peace.

“Hey Saehir, over here,” Ras’s blue hand caught her attention. Saehir looked confused, but Ras beckoned her over again.

“How’s it going?” he asked with a patented Andorian grin.

“Uh, fine,” Saehir looked dubious. “You okay?”

“None the worse for wear,” he shrugged. “So I was just telling the gang here about you shooting a photon out of the sky. Not sure if even Jon could have done that.”

“Actually he has,” Rio corrected. “Twice.”

“Whatever,” Ras waved off. “Point is, it was a hell of a shot. Oh hey let me introduce you. This is Askan of Moria,  Ridan of Bajor, my fellow Andorian Sacks, Tim of Earth, and of course you know Rio of Vulcan and Bajor simultaneously.”

“Nice to actually meet you,” Saehir cocked a dubious eyebrow. “Pardon my asking, but why are being nice to me?”

“Look Saehir,” Ras’s face grew serious., “I’m really sorry for all that crap I gave you. I blamed you for Mark’s death and then you took his place, plus you kept trying to kill the captain and, well I’ve been taught to distrust Romulans that I really never gave you a chance.”

“Us too,” Tim spoke for the rest.

“Seriously?” Saehir’s suspicion meter was running.

“Seriously,” Ras looked her in the eye. “I know it wasn’t really your fault. And from what Josh’s said, it looked like you wanted to die. Point is, after what you did at Carraya, I had to give you a chance. Truth is, you’re a damn good officer and I’m glad you’re on my side. I guess I just needed to see it for myself.”

“You did?” Saehir looked quizzical.

“Yeah and you passed with flying colors,” Ras grinned. “A toast to Saehir Aelhih! The best damn tactical officer in the fleet!”

“Here! Here!” the others, even Rio, raised their glasses in salute.

“Thanks guys,” Saehir joined her glass to theirs. Something Josh had told her tickled the back of her mind.

“Sorry guys, but did Josh tell you to be nice?” she asked.

“No,” Ras raised his eyebrows and smirked, “not his style. Believe me, this is real.”

“Yeah, thanks,” Saehir’s voice was distant. “I’ve got to go. I’ll see ya later.”

“Sure, no problem,” Ras nodded.

“Computer, locate captain Jackson,” Saehir demanded on her way out.

***********

“You’re an ass, you know that, right?” Saehir accused walking into the holodeck.

“It’s been remarked once or twice,” Josh didn’t bother to turn around. Instead he took another shot at the hoop. “And what do you want now?”

“I want to talk,” Saehir answered. “For real this time.”

“Anything important to talk about,” Josh amended tiredly.

“Yeah, me,” Saehir jumped in front of Josh and stole the ball.

“I would appreciate you giving that back now,” Josh glared.

“You’ll have to earn it,” Saehir gave him an evil smile.

“Fine, I give,” Josh sighed. “Talk.”

“So you knew exactly what was going on, didn’t you?” she asked.

“What do you mean?”

“Oh don’t give me that ignorant bullcrap,” Saehir snorted. “You knew all along how Ras and Rio insulted me, derided me, and treated me like crap in general.”

“With all your whining, how could I not?” Josh retorted.

“I only complained once,” Saehir corrected. “For most of the last week, I’ve had to sit there and take it. But you did nothing.”

“Like I said,” Josh answered, “personal relationships are none of my affair.”

“Oh but they are, dear captain,” Saehir smirked. “You see, I realized that personal relationships are going to necessarily bleed over into professional ones. Yet you didn’t lift a finger.”

“Guilty,” Josh sat down on the bleachers and motioned Saehir to join him. “Here’s the deal: You’re a Romulan, you’re the reason Mark, who was for some unknown reason popular, is dead, then you took his place. Add to that you tried to kill me, that’s a lot of prejudice built up against you. Plus, you’re like me without being in charge. You’re stubborn, independent, follow your instincts regardless of the rules, and you have a sense of integrity. In addition, you’re having to adjust to a new culture. That’s a lot to overcome.”

“And you did nothing,” Saehir growled. “How helpful.”

“I couldn’t, no matter how much I wanted to,” Josh sighed.

“You wanted to help me?” Saehir was more than a little dubious.

“Shocking I know,” Josh chuckled. “Truth is I don’t like bullies and what Ras was doing to you was being the worst kind of bully. But I couldn’t do anything because that wouldn’t have helped.”

“I know, now,” Saehir agreed.

“You know?”

“I’m not an idiot Josh,” Saehir flashed a smile. “If you had told them to play nice, they would have on the surface. But underneath they would’ve never accepted me; their resentment would’ve sooner or later boiled over. You knew that. You knew that they would never have simply accepted me as part of the team; it was something I had to earn. So you made me earn it.”

“Yeah,” Josh leaned back. “It would seem that you did. Good shooting from what I hear, by the way.”

“Thanks,” Saehir grinned. “From what I hear, I’ve been put in some rarefied company.”

“You’ve earned it Saehir,” Josh sincerely told her. “And for what it’s worth, in my mind you’ve already earned your place on this crew. There’s no one I’d rather have a tactical than you.”

“That means more than you can imagine,” Saehir’s heart glowed.

“Now can I have my ball back?” Josh held out his hand.

“Got to beat me for it,” Saehir smirked and took off towards the hoop.

 

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ST: Beta Part 1

Part 1

Dabo-Tables. They are a phenomenon in the Galaxy. It doesn’t matter if you’re on a mining facility in a gaseous giant, floating in zero-g on a heavy space orbital or in deep space on some remote Y Class planet, somebody, somehow knows where the nearest table is. And would be happy to point out the way, for the right price.

The Ziggurat 3 was such a vessel in a far off place and was unknowingly part of said phenomenon. Although it couldn’t understand why, even if you tried explaining it very slowly because, you see, this junky old mining vessel was part of a Dabo wager and and its unfortunate Captain spoke a language no ship for a thousand Light years could understand. English.

I mention this in past tense because the Ziggurat 3 was minutes away from being totally obliterated by a planetary defensive system.

The ‘Zig’ sat in orbit over a barely Class M planet whose number was escaping the Zigs Captain at the moment, this was due to the fact that vicious bipedal baboon looking creatures in sleek military battle fatigues were firing Plasma bursts over his head.

Captain Aldus Banks, had been a space Captain since his early teens. The story of how he came to be such a man in such a position and in soo far distant a place from his own kind is a great mystery to those who’ve crossed his path over the years. The air of mystique had indeed penetrated deep into the Beta Quadrant. The tales of Aldus reach even the Klingon Empire, Some ships tell stories of the Earth Orphan, as the legend says. The tale varies depending on which Klingon War ship you are on. It starts with a family of earthlings, who set out into the deepest space hoping to find a new planet to call their own. Hopelessly, and inevitably they land on the nearest habitable planet, half starved rationing every meal, no sooner do they arrive do the troubles begin, as with any tale of people stuck starving on a ship and shortly there after coming into prosperity. Fighting over power and hoarding materials nearly rips the society apart. The Earth Orphan, depending on who you ask becomes the only survivor of that group. The HOW is where all tales loose their similarity, every variation you can imagine has been told. From him killing off the entire colony in a dispute over a bad harvest, a lack of attractive HU-MAN females, to him valiantly defending his people from some horrible invading party and being left the only one still alive. One thing IS true, and that is nobody knows the real answer. Banks learned early on in his nefarious space fairing days that a legend about you has more weight than any blood line or sir name. And he liked it that way.

But back to the issue at hand. The air in front of his face was being burnt by the release of green plasma bursts.  It made breathing a medal worthy exercise. Banks was lying flat behind a low but solid metal bulkhead in the main corridor of the Zig. He was stuck in this position for two reasons, one his friends with the guns were only able to get part of the upward sliding door open and had to crouch down to fire. And second, he woke up that way.  The last thing he remembered doing was running to the blast door controls which was directly above him now. He guessed that he must have been hit by some Biological EMP judging by the fading paralysis in his limbs.

The Metal blast door creaked a bit as the Tahlese Soldiers began lifting it up from the otherside. Banks laughed at the attempt at first, but quickly noticed the door started to shift upwards and his smile fell.  He realized this would be as good a time as any to grab for his modified Carbon welder which he converted to a full blown disruptor. But the bulk head didn’t offer enough height and he’d surely lose a hand in the process. Considering he hadn’t lost any limbs thus far he wasn’t about to start.

Again the blast door nudged upwards. A second volley of fire came at him this time hitting just over his toes. “Shit” he said to himself; swearing he’d never abandon a ship again, just because somebody wanted him dead. But this was getting rediculous. He’d done something horribly wrong this time. Who knows why or how. He looked over at his side. The conduit panel opposite his corner of the corridor was a false one. Inside it the previous owner constructed an escape pod which was cleverly hidden inside the ship. If only he could reach the latch and tear off the panel at the same time.

For a split second he thought about using the Wrist Wrench that was fastened around this right hand. It resembled a wrist watch band but the face was more rectangular in shape, it was slim, tightly engineered and perfectly ergonomic. Inside, the pod held three metallic prongs that shot out like alien antennae though the worked just like extended fingers. He doused the thought of risking his wrench because them getting shot was not only as painful but far more expensive to replace.

He gave up, half form impatience and half from fearing his only life. The split was 60/40. He didn’t even bother thinking the odds of survival when the thought struck him that the previous owner of the vessel was all to likely the man behind the attack. Banks should have known better, Dabo winnings always seem to go sour. Which was the more universally agreed to phenomenon.

Trust was something he and the Zig never had. Banks spent months trying to teach the ship English, but couldn’t retain the simplest verb no matter how many times Banks shouted it. It was, stupefyingly simple. After a while they both found mutual ground with what Banks refered to as “Bleep Code” a universal syntax all ship designers built into mainframes of space traveling automatons like Zig so navigation can be controlled while operating inside a larger structure or space station. Because Zing and Banks could only communicate over this machine language he converted the entire system to display and speak in Bleeps and Chrips. The visuals resembled a large grid of black and green pixels forming patterns and its voice was like a Modem attached to a loud speaker.

Banks knew there was only one way out. A regrettable one that involved pissing off the planets Defense system to the point of him losing 100% profitability on the Zig. He slapped the communicator on his belt and the computers Bleeping Chirping responded happy as ever, clueless about the pirate vessel that just drilled a hole in its hull. “Fucking moron”, Banks thought, “doesn’t even know when somebodies drilled it a new asshole”. He tapped some buttons and twisted some knobs to activate the mining laser but the machine kept buzzing a repulsive negative response. Finally he shouted at it “Commence Mining, Please”.  It paused as if to contemplate his words for a moment. Suddenly the old familiar sound of the ships mining laser started rotating its motors. He could hear the coils heating up. Banks laughed at the pitiful timing of his stupid ship. It gave him one last hopeful chirp asking for permission to begin.  Banks calmly replied “Yes the large planet below. Thank you.” ‘chirp?’ it replied, “Yes, Commence” Aldus ordered.

The mining laser would start as soon as it finished warming up. Banks noticed the Tahlese  stopped firing for a moment. He could hear them whispering to each other from behind the wall. Banks took a chance and pulled his Carbon Disruptor from his side and twisted his arm slightly to pull the firing mechanism forward until it locked into place. He waited still as a corpse even after the drill began firing. Knowing that the defense system would respond with a phaser blast across the bow at first then land a burst directly on Zig’s hull to let it know ‘it means business’.

A warning shot ripped across the front view screen alright, sooner that he expected and close enough to bathe the main corridor in a bath of blood red light. Its all down to timing now, he thought. The second volley came, this time it hit the hull what felt like next to his head and Zig lunged out throwing trash and creature alike off their footing.

Banks swung out his Disruptor and fired a shot at the latch which depressed into the wall, immediately flipping open the false panel leading to a clean brushed metal box inside. He noticed this especially because nowhere did the ship have clean brushed metal, anything. Before the Tahlese had time to react Banks was up and blindly firing bursts at the blast door as he ran to the tiny box.

With its cargo safely stowed the panel closed by itself and the floor panel released dropping Banks down a shaft and into a pool of G-Force sensitive Shock Gell. The tanks ceiling closed in over him the moment he was submerged. A light came one which bathed the tank in a slimly greenish tint. As the gel forced its way into Banks esaphagus chocking out the remaining air, he reflected on his situation and thought it would have been wise to test out this high tech version of a panic room before putting it into full effect. The smaller escape vessel aptly named on hits main hull plate: Ziggurette blew off the hull shield plate and was hurdling toward the planets surface.

Aboard the Zig, its invading party had pushed open the blast door enough to squeeze through and were already at the helm. They wrestled over taking turns on the main panel unable to figure out how to to stop the ship from doing what ever the hell it was up to. As misfortune would have it the Bleep Code as Banks had become so familiar with, was a complete mystery to Tahlese Army grunts and they were left dumbfounded. Adding insult to injury the Planetary Defence system seemed uncaring about its destructive force and continued its assault and concentrated all of its phasers at once, obliterating the Zig into a million pieces of monkey flesh and rusted metal.

In all the chaos, Bank’s escape ship fell through atmosphere unnoticed by the planets defences. About several hundred feet above sea level the mini ships engines kicked in and brought it from free fall to coasting arc. It finally came to a stop just inside a coast line north of the equator. A serene looking topical planet completely devoid of any signs of sentient interaction.

The ship coasted to a stop, hovering a few feet off the ground until it safely rested on its landing gear.  Inside the Ziggurette a circular shaft about four feet in diameter lay against a box inside the ships mini hull, the box went from floor to ceiling and seemed to be a more recent addition.  The Shock gel around Banks turned to liquid and started to recess through a grate at the bottom of the tank. The Circular rings opened, into the hull allowing him to crawl out coughing and spitting out the liquid in his respiratory system.

Banks sprawled out on the Mini-Zigs hull floor amazed he’d survived another ridiculous escape attempt. It was such a common occurrence that he now thought of it as a job. One that paid in adrenaline withdrawal on the weekends.

A soft female voice came into his ears. It was a Y’thulian womans voice he thought at first, then realized it was the computer best attempt at one. She asked him again very politely “Would you like a refreshment Captain?”

Captain Aldus Banks, gave out a sigh of relief and rested his head on his hands. Wearing a jumpsuit covered in goo and a shit eating grin from ear to ear.

END PART 1

~thanks for reading.

I’ll keep posting stuff on my tumblr: https://setphaserstofun.tumblr.com/

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Data Murders Wesley Crusher

“Wesley Crusher – on behalf of Starfleet, I want to thank you for your service as a boy genius on board the Enterprise,” Admiral MacIntyre gushed as thousands chanted Wesley’s name. “As a token of our appreciation, we hereby grant you this completely believable promotion to acting captain of the Enterprise.”

“Aw, gosh, you mean it?” Wesley giddily exclaimed as a big wet spot appeared in the crotch-area of the weird jumpsuit he was wearing (which was considered very stylish among 24th century teenagers).

“We sure do, Wesley!” Commander Riker smiled as he ruffled Wesley Crusher’s hair. “You know, I taught him everything he knows!”

The crowd laughed. That’s our Commander Riker!

“Captain Picard, even though you have decades of experience and are considered one of Starfleet’s greatest captains, I hereby grant you an honorary demotion to the rank of acting Captain’s Assistant. From this point forward, you will report directly to young Mr. Crusher,” the admiral continued.

“Why it’s about time!” The captain replied in an unusual jovial display.

“And finally, it is my honor to inform you that Counselor Troi has begged for you to marry her. Of course you, Wesley Crusher, boy genius, could have any woman you want, so I’ll let you decide if you accept her proposal.”

“Oh, gosh yes!” Wesley cried as Counselor Troi embraced him and kissed him passionately as the massive crowd wildly applauded.

Wesley Crusher giggled to himself while rolling around in his now very wet bed sheets, slowly returning to consciousness as his wonderful dream slipped back to fantasy land. He raised himself up into a sitting position, frowning as he noticed he wet the bed – again. He was 17 years old and he was getting way too old to be wetting the bed each night. Luckily he had super awesome futuristic self cleaning sheets and they would be dry in a matter of minutes. He took a moment to reflect on his wonderful dream when he noticed a dark silhouette sitting at the foot of his bed.

“Computer, lights!” He shouted as the the cloak of darkness subsided and the mysterious figure was revealed. “DATA? What the heck are you doing in here?”

Data stood up in a very mechanical manner – what one would expect from an android. Wesley’s eyes were still blurry with sleep as he noticed Data was holding something in one of his hands. Data smoothly lifted up the object – a big white rabbit.

“Commander Data – what is this? What are you doing in here?” Wesley cried as the confusion slowly gave way to fear.

Data didn’t speak. He pulled out a phaser and Wesley’s self-drying sheets were back to square one.

“Wesley Crusher to security!” Wesley screamed as he tapped his com badge. The badge didn’t greet him with its standard beeps and was as lifeless as the android standing at the foot of his bed. Wesley decided to go with plan B.

“MOMMMMMMM!!! MAAAAHHHHHHMMMMMMMMMM!!!!” His mother didn’t answer. She was probably with the captain in his quarters. She was always with the captain in his quarters.

Data suddenly fired the phaser and the rabbit vaporized. Wesley started to cry hysterically as the bunny went “poof!” Data then calmly pointed the phaser at Wesley while adjusting the settings.

“No no no no no, please don’t Data! Why, Data? Why?” Wesley sobbed.

Zap!

—–

 Wesley woke up a few hours later, flying out of his bed and running around in a few, awkward circles as he desperately scanned his bedroom for Data. His head throbbed and his muscles ached – a side effect of being shot by a phaser.

“Security to Wesley Crusher’s quarters! Security to Wesley Crusher’s quarters!” He wailed as his com badge worked flawlessly this time.

—–

“Mom! I’m telling you – Commander Data was in our quarters last night! He killed a bunny with a phaser!” Wesley exclaimed to the senior staff,  including his mother, as she examined him in sickbay.

“I’m not showing any sign that he was shot with a phaser,” Doctor Crusher responded, clearly embarrassed by her crying son.

“But, but, but…” Wesley tried to gather his thoughts before being cut off.

“Wesley, Data was on bridge duty all last night,” Captain Picard interrupted. “He never left his post.”

“I know what I saw!” Wesley replied.

“It was just a nightmare, Wesley,” Commander Troi added.

“Yeah, Wes – you know Data would never hurt you,” said Geordie.

“No – it was real!” Wesley cried as he started to sob again. “He murdered a bunny!”

“Dammit Wesley!” Commander Riker yelled for good measure.

Just then, the sickbay doors opened and Data walked in. Wesley let out a hysterical scream that made Captain Picard extremely annoyed.

“Bunny killer!” Wesley shouted as he ran and hid behind a surgical table.

“Dammit Wesley!” Commander Riker yelled again.

“Bunny killer? I do not understand. Have I upset you Wesley?” Data calmly inquired as Wesley trembled with fear.

“Keep him away from me! You’re a freak you stupid robot!” Wesley, feeling empowered by the presence of the senior officers, told Data who remained unmoved by his harsh words.

“Wesley Crusher!” His mother Beverly shouted as everyone in sickbay looked at the young acting ensign with disbelief. In the future, calling an android a robot is like using the N-word. “You apologize to Data, right now young man!”

“No!”

“I am sorry if I have offended you Wesley. I have always considered you my friend,” Data, giving a programmed look of puzzlement, replied.

“Well I’m disappointed in you Wesley,” Captain Picard somberly stated. “Until you come to your senses I am hereby relieving you of your acting ensign duties.”

“What? No! He watches me when I’m sleeping! He kills bunnies!” Wesley cried to no avail.

“Dammit Wesley!” Commander Riker yelled again.

The senior staff slowly cleared out of sickbay and when it appeared that he might be left alone with Data, Wesley quickly left and headed for the turbolift. He needed to clear his head and so he went to Ten Forward where he could work on some math problems. When he arrived in the Enterprise’s main hangout, he was given a dirty look from Guinan who like the rest of the ship had heard that he called Data the R-word (robot).  Wesley tried to ignore all the staring as he walked over to the replicator and ordered his usual breakfast – a jumbo bowl of chocolate puff cereal, six chocolate chip pancakes with triple syrup, a 48 ounce glass of fruit punch, a large bowl of peppermint candies, a 24 ounce jar of strawberry cake frosting, a 24 ounce jar of raspberry jam, a large bowl of yellow M&Ms, 17 fruit rollups, a three-pound bag of gummi bears, and a jumbo bowl of chocolate-banana ice cream.

Wesley immersed himself in his math problems as Ten Forward slowly cleared out after the breakfast rush. He quickly finished his breakfast and ordered four more 48-ounce cups of fruit punch when he noticed someone was staring at him from the bar. A chill went down his spine as he saw Data gazing at him with his deceptively vacant android eyes. Wesley, trying to stay calm, picked up his computer pad and walked out the door as it whooshed shut behind him.  The Enterprise seemed unusually empty as his footsteps echoed in the quiet halls, supplemented by the hum of the starship’s engines. Wesley soon realized that he wasn’t alone as heavy footsteps seemed to follow him.

Read the conclusion at https://www.lyingaboutthetruth.com/2011/09/tng-fan-fiction.html

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