Redemption – Volume 1: Sacrifices

Redemption: Volume One – Sacrifices

by Lord Goodfella

This series uses a combination of characters, situations, and vehicles based upon the Star Wars and Star Trek sagas, Earth: Final Conflict, JAG, the WWE, and characters of my own creation, the Sanders family. All characters and vehicles used are for the sole intent of storytelling and not for profitable gain for myself.  All of the characters except for the ones created within the established premise are the sole property of the individuals listed below.

Many thanks to George Lucas, Gene Roddenberry, CBS officials, and Vince McMahon for creating a host of wonderful characters that will live in the hearts and minds of fans for years to come.

Rated PG for some mild language.  This is a crossover series melding the Star Wars and Star Trek universes together in possibly the largest joint fan-fiction series ever.

Redemption – Volume 1:  Sacrifices

Summary

The year is 2035. Earth is on the brink of a climatic battle with a terrifying enemy from an unknown galaxy.

The United States’ military, undermanned and outgunned after nearly twenty years of war with it foes, prepares for the worse. The enemy has entered Earth’s solar system, leaving a trail of destruction in its wake while pushing relentlessly toward yet another conquest.  Even if every nation puts aside their differences and join forces, Earth would have no chance.

Only one man has the power and ability to claim victory. A hero from the past, cryogenically frozen for a crime he did not commit, will return to a new world…a world in need of a miracle.

_____________

Prologue
————-

Four years earlier…

General James Dennison, a handsome, dark-haired man at fifty-five, looked up from the book when the door to his office opened.  His aide poked his head through the door.  “Sir, Chief Warrant Officer Sanders is here.”

Dennison smiled as he dog-eared the page he was reading and closed the book, sitting it on his desk.  “Send him in, Ensign.”

The door opened wider, and CWO5 Michael Sanders, bedecked in his green Alpha uniform with barracks cover tucked under his left arm, marched into the office and stopped a foot short of the desk at attention.  He focused on a spot six inches above Dennison’s head.  “Sir, Chief Warrant Officer Sanders reporting as ordered.”

Dennison nodded and gestured to the seat to Sanders’ right.  “Take a seat, Chief.”

Once Sanders was situated in his chair, Dennison grinned.  “You are a sight for sore eyes, Mike.”

Sanders shot a grin back.  “It’s good to see you too, sir.  How’s Sandy?”

“Oh, she’s fine, though she’s running around like a chicken with her head cut off.”  He rose from his chair and walked around to the front of the desk where he took the second chair beside Sanders.  “Jessica’s getting married in a month.”

Sanders’ eyes widened.  “Really?  To whom?”

“An Air Force captain stationed at the Pentagon.  Bit of a crack head if you ask me.”  He reached for the humidor and pulled out two cigars and a lighter.  Passing one to the chief, he took the other and ran it under his nose before lighting it.

“I’ve always hoped that one day you and Jes would have hooked up.”

Sanders smiled.  “I’ve told you before.  I wouldn’t feel right having Jes as a wife.  She’s more my best friend than anything.  I want to keep it that way.”

He leaned closer to Dennison and spoke in a conspiracy-like tone.  “Besides, she’s not the only one who made the big decision.”

Dennison looked at Sanders like he was speaking upside down until Sanders held up his left hand, showing the general his platinum wedding band for the first time.  It was Dennison’s turn to be shocked.

“Well I’ll be damned.”  He set the cigar in the ashtray on the desk and turned to get a better view of the ring.  “Who’s the lucky woman?”

“Her name’s Alicia Coleman.  I met her at Pensacola last year.  A friend of mine who’s a JAG lawyer went to law school with her a few years ago.  He introduced me to her at a party she threw for her kid sister.”

Dennison smiled.  “And to think I knew deep down you would never marry Jes, but to think you would marry period?  This … this is incredible.  Why wasn’t I invited?”

Sanders accepted the lighter Dennison offered him.  You were in Yemen, remember?  I called you to ask what you were doing about a month ago.”

“Oh yeah.  I remember.”  Dennison laughed as he rose from the chair and went back around to his desk.  “Well, congratulations.  Jes and Sandy will be thrilled.  Where’s the lucky lady now?”

“Still in Pensacola, but she’ll be up here tomorrow.”  Sanders lit his cigar and tossed the lighter to Dennison, who caught it and placed it back in the humidor.

“Well, sir.  You got me up here in a bunch of secrecy.  What’s the scoop?”

Dennison nodded.  “You know the Federation is starting to augment Armed Forces members into Starfleet.”

Sanders nodded.  “Yeah.  I heard.  Steve Austin received a letter of commission but turned it down.  Said he hates space travel.”

“Don’t we all,” said Dennison.

Sanders did not reply, causing Dennison to sit up in his chair.  “You received one, didn’t you?”

“Yeah, I did.”

“And what did you say?”

“I haven’t decided yet.  The thing that got me was they wanted to give me a major’s rank, which doesn’t really match up with my time in service.”

Dennison held up a folder.  “Well, I saw that same letter you got and I sent it back to them with a nice note saying that they needed to get you a higher rank.  They agreed with me.”

Sanders took a nice pull from his cigar.  “So, what am I?  Lieutenant Colonel?  Colonel?”

“How about admiral?”

Sanders choked on the smoke he inhaled.  “Admiral?”

Dennison set the folder on the desk and tapped it with his forefinger. “We’re giving away a Medal of Honor winner and one of the greatest men who ever donned the uniform of a Marine.  You think I was going to let you waltz over to Starfleet as a lowly major?”

Sanders smiled as he took a more cautionary puff of his cigar.  “No, I didn’t think so, sir.”

Dennison leaned forward.  “I’d hate to lose you.  But I know you would rather be warping around the cosmos than hanging around looking into my ugly mug.”

Sanders laughed as Dennison rose from his chair and stretched out his hand.  “Congratulations on your appointment, Admiral Sanders.”

*********

Present Day.

Admiral Michael Sanders stood by a window outside of Courtroom One, slowly sipping coffee while staring at the Friday afternoon traffic going up Interstate 395 past the Pentagon.  He thought back to the day he received his appointment from the late Marine Corps legend.

If only the old man could see how I turned out, he thought to himself.

“Honey, are you all right?”

Sanders turned around and stared at his wife, sitting on a bench a few feet away; so quiet he almost forgot she was there. How could I, he thought. This is the love of my life. “I’m fine, Alicia. Just…just wishing I was far away from here.”

Alicia Coleman-Sanders got up and walked towards her husband. “I know. I was wishing the same thing — for both of us. Actually,” she said, smiling a little and looking down at her swollen belly, “I was wishing for all five of us.”

Sanders smiled, a genuine smile at his wife, his lover, and his best friend. He reached out to her midsection but stopped until his hand was less than two inches away. Slowly he closed his eyes and reached out again, not with his hand, but with the mysterious power he had.

He had no clue of what power he possessed until just after his twelfth birthday.  His father was working underneath a car when the jack gave way, pinning him to the ground.  The screams forced Michael to come out of the house running with tears in his eyes at the sight.

He immediately went to the jack but it was a mixture of broken gears and screws on the ground. As he moved his hundred pound frame to the front of the car in an obviously futile attempt to pick the car up with his bare hands, he visualized the car easing off of his father’s broken body.

The car eased off of his father’s broken body five feet into the air..

Michael was shocked at the sight. Shocked because he was not even touching the car.

As he dragged his father from underneath, he looked into his eyes. “Dad?  Dad?  Can you hear me?”

His father’s eyes fluttered opened. They slowly focused on Michael as they both rested on the ground together.

His father whispered something. Michael strained to hear the words.  “What did you say, Dad?”

His father smiled. “I knew you could do it, son.” He reached out for Michael’s hand and patted it one time before closing his eyes for the last time.

Michael did not know what his father meant for years, but he slowly began to understand and respect the power he had. The telekinesis.  The augmented strength.  The ability to see into the future and into the past.  His fighting ability.  The power to sense others like him.

Like his unborn children.

He could feel his daughter resting peacefully in her mother’s womb. Her twin sister was also resting quietly, but kicking slowly with her right foot.

But where is my son? He probed past his daughters to the back where — There he is, he thought with an inner smile. Back to the world, not caring about anything. The smile he felt on the inside slowly changed into sadness matching what he displayed on his face. I hope he turns out to be better than his old man, he thought.

“Admiral?”

Sanders shook himself out of his reverie and turned towards the sound of the voice. “Top, what is it?”

“Excuse me, sir, ma’am,” said Master Gunnery Sergeant Ronald “Rico” Torres, Judge Advocate General Chief, a veteran of the Persian Gulf conflict over twenty years ago, and one of the heroes of the Iraqi War that finally toppled Saddam Hussein last year. He was once considered for change of rank to sergeant major by the Commandant of the Marine Corps so he could be the top enlisted Marine. He turned it down, telling Sanders over a few beers one night that “with all due respect, I cannot in my right frame of mind take that Washington traffic every day for four years straight.”

Alicia, whether she was Force-trained or feeding off of her unborn children’s growing power, could sense something wrong in Top’s demeanor. “Ron, what’s wrong?”

Top looked at the Sanders, his face slowly searching for a way to pass his news, but Sanders slowly laid his hand on his shoulder. “Ron, it’s okay. Tell me.”

Top looked a little relieved, but it was still hard. Harder than the gold in Hussein’s underground bunker. “I got word back from Austin’s trial in Quantico. Guilty on all counts.”

“Oh no,” said Alicia. She put her hand to her mouth to cover her shock. “I thought his attorney was trying to work a deal with the JAG prosecutor.”

“Austin maintained his innocence, from what Commander Rabb just passed to me over my global,” said Top. “He was not hearing any deal, despite what his counsel and Colonel McKenzie was telling him”

Alicia looked up at that piece of news. “No new evidence?” She looked at Sanders. “I heard they were trying to submit those logs you kept of your briefings.”

“I don’t think so, but –” Top stopped as a beeping sounded off from Alicia’s purse. All three looked at each other in silence.

Alicia slowly reached inside her and drew out the culprit — her global communicator. She stepped away from her husband’s side and spoke softly a few feet away.

Sanders looked at Top Tyler. “What about sentencing? Are they going for life again?”

Top shrugged. “Harm told me that they’re holding off sentencing until after your trial. Probably waiting to see if they can kill two birds with one stone.”

Sanders clenched his fists together until his knuckles cracked. “I can’t go to the brig, Ron,” he said, a look of despair etched in his face while looking at Alicia, who was still conversing in a low whisper on her cell.

“Do you see that woman over there? She is carrying my children. Our children. Two girls and a boy. I have to be around.”

Top looked at his friend eight who was eight years his junior. “I know, Mike. I know. Your wife is not a pushover, though. She has done some amazing things in that courtroom that would make Matlock and Perry Mason spin.” He smiled, mustering a look of confidence. “As much as Harm and I were ticked you didn’t ask one of us for representation, we are quite impressed with the job Alicia has done in there. Colonel McKenzie’s impressed, too.”

“Well, I hope she is impressed,” said Sanders, angrily shaking his fist at his side. “Good impressions of felons’ wives as their lawyers are points in the felons’ favor. Right, Top?”

Top shot Sanders a look that would pierce the moon. “Don’t even start like that, Sanders. The colonel didn’t want to go after Steve because she knew of his history. The order came from above to bring him down.”

Alicia finished up her conversation and slowly put her global in her bag, her back still turned to Sanders and Top while looking out of the window. “Ron, could you excuse us, please?” she said.

“Sure, anything you say, Alicia,” said Top. He turned to Sanders. “I’ll find out everything I can about Steve and pass it on to you, okay?”

“Okay, Top. Thanks.” Top glanced at Alicia’s back as he turned and made his way down the hall to the cafeteria.

Sanders did not move towards his wife. With his power he could feel the emotions she was carrying inside of her. It felt a little different with his son and daughters’ spirits within her, but he was always able to recognize hers immediately. “Alicia, what’s wrong?”

Alicia continued to look out of the window. “Well, Commander Kidman called to let me know that the deal is back on the table, if you want to take it.”

“What do you propose?”

Alicia’s shoulders seemed to have drooped as she turned to face her husband.  “As your wife and mother of our three children, I would want to keep fighting to get you completely cleared.  As your counsel, I’d advise you to take it.  I still believe you have a chance to win, but with Austin being found guilty, I don’t know.”

Sanders looked down at her. Despite the love he had for the military, for the uniform he wore, and the rules that come along with it, he did not have a care in the world at this moment. No care except for the woman before him and the three delicate lives she carried within her. He simply wanted this to be over.

********

The courtroom was silent as Alicia Coleman-Sanders completed her closing statements and made her way back to her seat beside her husband. She was about to write on her well-worn notepad when she read up at the top…

You were great.

Alicia spared Sanders a quick glance and smile before turning serious again as Commander Eric Kramer began his closing statement. Time to pay attention to the mission at hand here, she thought.

Kramer, a tall, tanned, thirty-five-year-old Naval Academy graduate, stood before the seven general officers from the Navy and Marine Corps sitting before him. He looked each one in the eye before he began speaking, as if introducing himself by framing a mental picture in each officer’s mind.

“Ladies and gentlemen, Counselor Coleman-Sanders brought up a very good fact.” He turned to point at Sanders sitting at the far table. “Here we have one of the greatest warriors the military has to offer. A Yemen War veteran, recipient of the Navy Cross, captain of the Federation flagship, and a possible candidate for the Joint Chiefs in six years. Military veterans are already labeling him as the next Colin Powell.”

“I respect Admiral Sanders for the service he and General “Stone Cold” Steve Austin have given this country. They would have been revered as legends in the next thirty years. They still might.”

Kramer paused as he slowly looked over the jury before starting again. “Admiral Sanders and General Austin are also aware of the Uniformed Code of Military Justice, as I am, and you all are, I am quite sure.

Kramer turned to face the Sanders’ table as he continued. “On November 1, 2009, Yemen was attacked, with General Austin leading the ground assault, while Admiral Sanders led the aerial attack with Mantis X-14s and the Rattler-class vessels.”

“The mission was two-fold: first objective was to provide a air COC in case Austin needed support, and also to maintain a vigil on Iraq’s neighbors to the south, in case they came to assist. The second objective was to pummel the area where the late Saddham Hussein’s underground bunker was located.” Kramer turned to face the jury. “Not to say you are ignorant of the issue here, but I said late.” He smiled. “I’ll talk about that in a minute.”

Kramer walked over to a poster-size map with the layout of the Iraqi conflict. “Admiral Sanders was to hold aerial reinforcements eight miles south of the location here,” he said, pointing to a spot south of the bunker. He had two orders from the JCS. One, women and children were not to be
harmed, and two, Hussein was to be brought in alive.”

Kramer moved his finger to a position two squares north of Sanders’ aerial location. “General Austin landed and proceeded up towards Hussein’s bunkers with mortar and Howitzer capabilities. They could have done their job with pinpoint accuracy from as many as two miles out without risking any of our Marines. Yet somehow –,” he moved his finger until it was practically on top of the bunker. “Austin and Sanders’ troops were out for blood, and ignored their orders and proceeded to not only kill our main prize,” he turned to face Sanders. “Saddam Hussein, but also one hundred and forty-six, one, four, six, people. Innocents of a killing spree by two men who obviously overstepped their bounds.”

Kramer went to his table where a young lieutenant handed him a piece of paper without being asked. Kramer slowly read it before continuing.

“This is Exhibit H, a list of Marine casualties on November 1. On this list I do not see one hundred and forty-six dead or wounded. I don’t even see 14. I see seven Marine casualties on that day. Three KIA’s and four MIA’s.”

Kramer kept speaking as he handed the copy to the judge. “Yes, they were wounded. Yes, we lost Marines, but did it justify breaching the peace by killing nearly 150 souls?”

Alicia could feel the blood boil within Michael. She reached over to grab his hand. Partly for reassurance.

Mostly for restraint. Just in case.

“General Austin was convicted of breach of peace, conduct unbecoming, and disobedience of a direct order from the President of the United States, one step below treason,” said Kramer. “Admiral Sanders is facing these same charges. He is facing these charges because he believed the dead had weapons. We found no evidence to support this fact. Rules are made to be followed, not broken.”

Kramer strolled over to the defendant’s table until he stood next to Alicia. “Admiral Sanders has three children, triplets on the way. Dozens of men and women in Iraq are facing the rest of their lives without their children because he took parents from children or children from parents.  He destroyed families.  While I am not proposing to destroy his family, as the old law states, “An eye for an eye, and a tooth for a tooth.”

***********

“All rise.”

Michael and Alicia immediately stopped their conversation and rose to their feet as Brigadier General Joseph Monroe walked into the courtroom and made his way to the bench.

The sergeant who sounded off for the admiral’s arrival waited until he was seated before saying, “Be seated.”

The courtroom followed the ordered of the sergeant and regained their seating as Gen. Monroe asked the jury foreman, “Have you reached a verdict?”

A vice-admiral, an Iraqi War veteran by the black and tan striped ribbon he wore, rose from the jury, a folded piece of paper in hand. “We have, Your Honor,” he said. He gave the paper to the sergeant, who delivered it to the general.

Alicia looked at Mike as he stared at the general. She held on to his hand for support, not knowing what he was thinking or feeling, but could tell that the emotions he is feeling inside are overwhelming even him.

Mike’s head suddenly dropped.

Alicia looked at him. “Mike,” she whispered. “What’s wrong?”

Mike slowly turned his head to where he can see his wife. “You’ll see.”

The paper has made its way back to the jury foreman. The judge then addressed the defendant and his counsel.

“Will the defendant please rise.”

Mike looked again at Alicia before rising from his chair. As he got up, some transformation was made. Where he looked sorrowful just seconds ago, he changed into the warrior he was known to be. Shoulders up, stomach in, head straight.

Like he wanted to be remembered.

The general turned his attention to the foreman. “Jury foreman, please read the verdict.”

The foreman rose and addressed the courtroom. “Admiral Michael J. Sanders, on the charge of murder, first degree, one hundred and forty-six counts, the court finds you…guilty.”

“On the charge of breaching the peace, the court finds you…guilty.”

“On the charge of conduct unbecoming an officer, the court finds you…guilty.”

“On the charge of disobeying a direct order from the President of the United States, the court finds you…guilty.”

The judge finished signing paperwork at the bench and addressed the jury. “Ladies and gentlemen, this court thanks you for your diligence in this matter. You are excused.”

The seven officers rose and made its way to the side doors leading out of the courtroom. The judge waited until the doors were closed before speaking again.

“Sentencing will be held at 0800 tomorrow morning,” he said while looking at a piece of paper in front of him.

He then looked up at two armed Marine military policemen in the back. “Sergeant, take the admiral into custody.”

Alicia was up out of her chair before the admiral even finished speaking. “Your Honor, I would like to appeal the verdict.”

General Monroe looked at Alicia like she was crazy. “On what grounds?” said the judge.

Alicia stood her ground. “Your honor, my client and General Austin have said time and time again that their troops were being fired upon. I have brought forth evidence saying there was a videotape that would make their claim true. Somehow between Iraq and Washington that tape came up missing. Prosecution has not denied knowing it exists, even though I admit he has not viewed the tape.”

She slowly moved away from behind the table. “The evidence exists, Your Honor, and if it ‘mysteriously disappears,’ this court has to admit there is some sort of conspiracy here that is aiming to convict my client.”

Commander Kramer now rose from his chair and made his way to the front. “Not so, Counselor. I admit the tape exists, Your Honor, but I do not have it. I have not seen it. No one has seen it except for whoever was in Iraq, and those two have just been convicted.” He glanced over his shoulder at Admiral Sanders who was still standing, with the two sergeants standing close by. “There is no way that even if this tape was here, it would exonerate the admiral.”

General Monroe steepled his fingers until they pointed at Alicia. “Do you have any idea where this tape is?”

Alicia’s shoulders drooped slightly, but Mike felt his wife’s pain as intense as if he was standing close to a fire. “No, Your Honor.”

“Then this trial is over,” said the judge. He signaled to the sergeants who were trying to stay hidden in the back and not be noticed by the 6′ 6″ admiral.

Mike stood at attention until the closest sergeant reached him with handcuffs. “Sir,” he said, “if you please…”

Mike looked at the sergeant, who looked like he lost his best friend. “Give me a minute.” He turned to his wife, who moved closer to her husband as if it would be the last time they would be together.

“You put up a good fight,” said Mike. He wiped a tear from Alicia’s cheek, shaking his head, conveying the unspoken message to his wife. No emotion. There is peace. We do what we must.

Mike then turned to the two sergeants waiting behind him and slowly raised his hands together.

“I’m ready.”

********

“I still don’t think life will do it.”

Commander Kramer looked up from his notes at the Marine standing by the window, looking out at the bugler signal Taps from the flagpole. “I don’t want to kill them, sir,” he said. “Hell, I didn’t even want to pursue the prosecution. Did you see The Times today?” He held up a copy of the front section of the newspaper. “In the editorial section several Marines who don’t even know Sanders or Austin wrote that what was done in Iraq was necessary, and that a conviction would only state that the military’s uses are limited to the government’s pleasure.”

Colonel Thomas “Mad Dog” Knight, Chief of Staff for the Commandant of the Marine Corps, turned around from the window to stare at Kramer for what seemed like a lifetime. Kramer stared back evenly.

Finally Knight spoke. “Commander, I don’t want to hang Admiral Sanders or General Austin out to dry.” He walked to a closed door separating the upstairs foyer from the office of the Commandant. “Do you know what he’s doing in there now? He is talking to the Secretary of Defense about what to do with them, while at the same time preparing for any repercussions from Iraq’s allies.”

Knight walked over and picked up the newspaper Kramer laid down beside him on the leather antique sofa, left as a gift to the oldest continually used building in Washington by the last Commandant, General Walter Stillman.

“These comments our Marines stated are true,” said Knight. “Believe me when I say what Austin and Sanders did had to be done. I believe them if they said they were fired upon with weapons not initially identified in Intel reports and our recons.”

He dropped the newspaper back on the sofa. “However, we have our orders. We must think of the safety of our nation first, and try to repair the damage that has been done.”

“And that is exactly what we plan on doing, Tom.”

At the first sign of the new voice, both Knight and Kramer both turned to its direction and snapped to attention, Kramer spilling his notes to the floor in the process.

General Raymond Tucker, leaning against the doorframe of his office, raised his hand before they finished. “Not necessary, gentlemen. You’re in my house, remember?”

Both men dropped the stiffness from their stance as Tucker turned and led them into his office. A television beside the large oak fireplace was set to Washington’s local news station, describing the latest developments on the Austin-Sanders case.

Tucker went to the bar and poured himself a drink while Knight and Kramer, scattered notes under his arm, settled themselves into chairs in front of the commandant’s desk.

“I just got off the phone with Secretary Wesley,” said Tucker as he dropped two ice cubes in his drink. He turned and walked behind the desk, dropping lazily into his armchair.
“This entire case is ridiculous.”

Colonel Knight looked at Commander Kramer before speaking. “I agree, sir. However, it places the U.S. in a bad spot. Should we sacrifice two men to appease a nation we really have no positive dealings with in the first place?”

The general took a generous swig from his tumbler. “I don’t want to do it,” he said. “I have the honor of serving with General Austin on numerous occasions. He is an honorable man. For Admiral Sanders to be associated with him, that speaks volumes for his integrity.”

Commander Kramer slid to the front of his seat. “I know, sir. However, they were both convicted by a jury of their peers.”

Tucker looked at his glass. Time for another refill. “Yes, Commander. The secretary is aware of that.” He got up to go to the bar. “Therefore, we shall discuss sentencing.”

Knight and Kramer glanced at each other. “Of course, sir,” said Kramer. “I am going to suggest tomorrow that they are sent away for sixty years.”

Tucker filled his drink. “No.”

Knight was stunned into silence. “Begging the general’s pardon, but…”

Tucker waved off the rest of Knight’s reply. “No, I am not going to send them in front of a firing squad, either.” He moved, fresh drink in hand, back to his desk. “Here we have two men, ‘warriors,’ who have done this country a great service numerous times, and they have been found guilty of crimes against the government.”

A fax machine behind Tucker began printing a transmitted document. He turned and glanced at it, sighing with a look of resignation before pulling the copy from it.

“This generation has given up on them. Perhaps a new generation can use their talents in the future,” he said, as he passed the copy on to Knight.

Knight read the copy, looking at Tucker with a surprised expression before wordlessly passing the paper to Kramer.

Kramer had only to read the top half portion of the paper to realize what Tucker was talking about.

From the office of the Secretary of Defense.

To Gen. Raymond Tucker.

Ray;

The President and I have discussed what to do with Gen. Austin and Adm. Sanders, and while I pushed for a total dismissal of all charges and basically telling Iraq to go “screw themselves,” the President felt some course of action must happen to smooth relations between the U.S. and the Middle East.

However, he is not about to forget the service these two men have given this country. Their actions will forever be remembered, and if there no evidence exists that justifies their actions of a year ago, then we have no choice but to do this.

They will be cryogenically frozen for no less than fifty (50) years on the International Space Station. Iraq will be notified of their “executions” after the sentence has been carried out.

While I believe the actions taken by these men were justified, the President feels this course of action will lead to a calm peace between the U.S. and the Middle East.

V/R,

Jordan A. Wesley

********

At this point Mike Sanders did not care where he slept. After all the in-processing, the fingerprinting, the outfitting, he just wanted to go to sleep.

Stripped of his Alpha uniform, and wearing an orange jumpsuit, he was escorted down Processing Block by two MPs, carrying his blanket, pillow, and hygiene gear. Prisoners in their cells for the night looked through the bars, whispering amongst themselves why a living legend like Mike Sanders was in the brig.

Biggest thrill for them in weeks.

The MPs took him to the last cell on the end of the hall. It was already open and had one cot, a sink, toilet, and shelf. Nothing else.

Sanders started to walk in and stopped at the cell door. The MPs tensed, fingers itching for their tasers.

“Relax, Marines,” he said, feeling through his powers the tension both MPs felt. He walked in and dropped his gear on his cot. “This isn’t a post-trial confinement’s cell.”

One of the MPs, a lance corporal, responded, sounding a little relaxed by the admiral’s cooperation. “No, sir,” he said. “Because you’re getting sentenced tomorrow, we’ve been instructed to place you and the general in these cells for the evening.”

Sanders’ eyes lit up. “The general?”

A voice boomed from behind the MPs. “That’s right, the general, you fake squid.”

Sanders looked around the MPs to see a familiar sight. “Well, well, well. Noose didn’t fit that big red neck of yours?”

General Steven Austin stood up and looked through the bars of his cell, right across from Sanders’. “Nope,” he said with a smile. “They figure they’ll stretch it out for the both of us tomorrow.”

Sanders smiled, glad that even in these tough times, a familiar face was close by. It almost made him forget where he was.

“Excuse me, sir?”

Sanders looked down at the lance corporal for two heartbeats before he realized what he had done. He had practically stepped between the two MPs while talking to Austin.

“Oh, sorry,” he said with a sheepish grin. He stepped back into his cell.

“Thank you, sir,” said the lance corporal, exhaling a relieved sigh. He pulled a control pad from his utility belt and touched some keys. The cell door slid shut, separating
Sanders from Austin, and Austin from Sanders…and both from a long hallway of freedom.

Sanders sat down on his cot, holding his head in his hands, listening to the footsteps gradually descending in the distance. After the steps stopped for what seemed like an eternity, he spoke. “How’re you doing, Steve?”

Austin stood by the cell doors, arms hanging out. “Don’t worry about me, brother. I have no family. The only family I have is, well,” he snickered sarcastically. “is in the brig with me.” He looked down on the ground, as if looking for a crack in the dry cement. “The question is, how are you doing?”

Sanders did not look up. “I’m worried about Alicia more than you, more than me, more than anything right now.”

Austin looked up from his cell inspection, eyes of concern trained on Sanders. “How did she take the news?”

“She was still fighting the verdict as I walked out of the courtroom,” said Sanders. He finally looked up to look at the wall of his cell. Pieces of dried leftover tape were hanging from the walls, as well as inscriptions of past cellmates, claiming their innocence, sexuality, and violent nature. “I had time to wipe a tear, get handcuffed, and get out of there.”

Austin snorted. “Well, at least you had time to do that. Me, they had the handcuffs out before the verdict was even handed out.” He slid down to the floor beside the bars. “Face it, Sanders. We were set up.”

Sanders rose to face Austin, separated by two sets of bars. “I know, Steve. The thing is I can’t prove it.” He retreated slowly to the back of his cell. “That what bothers me.”

Austin stared at Sanders across the row, silent. “Is Alicia planning an appeal?”

“Yeah, because of that missing tape. The thing is, there’s no telling where it is.” He stared through the bars at his oldest friend as if imaging a space large enough for him to slide through. “If it’s destroyed, we’re finished.”

*********

Jennifer Coleman has never experienced pregnancy. After spending two weeks with her older sister, she made up her mind to be celibate for the rest of her life.

Almost from the second she stepped off the plane at Reagan-Clinton International Airport and met her sister, she could tell the past several weeks have been hell on her.

For two weeks, Jennifer had fielded from 0800 to 1800 as many as fifty telephone calls from publishers, reporters, and other Marines wishing the family well. Today the only phone call was from the correctional facility supervisor, telling Alicia she could bring her sister to view the cryogenic process.

At first Alicia played the gracious sister/host, welcoming Jennifer with open arms at the airport gate. She showed her the house and the new nursery, just completed before Mike was sentenced, and they sat in front of the fireplace and ate roasted marshmallows, Alicia listening as Jennifer describe her first semester at the University of North Carolina on a four-year ride for soccer, laughing hysterically that Mike would have thrown a party when they won the national tournament.

Jennifer noted that Alicia did not retreat into herself whenever Mike’s name was mentioned. She began to think her sister was holding up well.

0630 the next day signaled that was not the case when Jennifer, finishing her three-mile run, was past by her sister in her SUV on the road in front of the house without so much as a wave out of the window. Jennifer called her sister on the cell phone as soon as she stepped into the house.

“Jennifer, I honestly forgot you were here,” said Alicia. Jennifer was dumbfounded, but actually believed her.

And so it was like that for nearly two weeks. Alicia spent most of her waking hours between Quantico, the Pentagon, and her office in Alexandria, working on a new appeal for her husband. If Jennifer ever hoped to see her, it was late at night when Alicia strolls in, tired from another day of fruitless litigations.

Jennifer conveyed all of this to her mother in Florida, who quietly thanked her for being there for her sister.

“Your sister is not ignoring you on purpose,” said Maggie Coleman. “She is going through a tough time right now, and I’m confident she’ll make it. Mike was a pillar of strength in that house. Now you have to be one for her. Let her feed off of you.”

Now as they left the car in a lot overlooking the Anacostia River, Jennifer noticed a resounding calm in her sister, the first time since she flew into D.C.

“Al?” said Jennifer, calling her by her nickname. “Are you all right? You’re…different today.”

Alicia was lost in her thoughts during the walk. Finally she stopped and looked at Jennifer. “Jen, was I a total bitch the entire time you were here?”

Jennifer looked up at her big sis. “No, you weren’t.” She reached to pull Alicia’s long blonde hair from inside her jacket’s collar. “You just forgot family’s here with you in all of this, that’s all.”

Alicia smiled, and hooked her arm in Jennifer’s, and they continued on to the facility, a three-story former museum. “I know, and I’m sorry.” She sighed, as if a great weigh was about to be lifted from her shoulders. “My husband and I are about to be parents for the first time. You are about to be an aunt.”

Jennifer looked up at Alicia as she continued. “We always dreamed of having kids, watching them grow up, watching them have kids, be successful. Now he’s about to be frozen for a crime he didn’t commit for fifty years.”

“We may never see each other again. Our children will probably be grandparents by the time he’s released. He’ll miss a large chunk of their lives. He’ll live longer than they will, too.”

Alicia stopped again, this time less than a block from the facility’s entrance. News reporters, photographers, and cameramen are gathered out front, awaiting word of the sentence. Jennifer stopped as well, looking at her with a puzzled look.

“Mike is somewhere in there, wondering the same thing,” said Alicia. “It will break his heart if he sees me hurting.”

A shout rose up from the group of media, as they spotted the two Coleman sisters on the sidewalk. A few broke from the pack, heading in their direction.

Alicia looked down at the ground as the media mob came closer, and then looked at her younger sibling with a look of determination.

“Today I’ll be his pillar of strength…as you were mine.”

*********

Teri Tanner, beat reporter for Channel 4, the local NBC affiliate in Washington, was reading her statement for her live broadcast. She approved the text for transfer to the teleprompter, and stood by the news van looking at the gathered crowd outside the correctional facility

The sentence was slated to be carried out at 11 a.m., and barring any problems, the cases containing the bodies of Admiral Sanders and General Austin would be moved by armed escort to Andrews Air Force Base twenty minutes away. From there they would be transported to Cape Canaveral, Florida, where the next available space shuttle will take them to the ISS for storage.

From the van Teri watched as Counselor Coleman-Sanders and a younger woman with long red hair walked out of the building, escorted by two Marines to their vehicle. Alicia paused long enough to hand a tall, handsome Naval officer a folded sheet of paper before departing.

“Teri, we’re on in two minutes,” said the cameraman, jumping out of the van and double-checking his tripod mount.

“Okay, thanks,” said Teri. She reached through the passenger door window for her notepad sitting in the seat, preparing to go over last minute notes.

“Excuse me, Miss Tanner?”

Teri turned around at the sound of the voice. It was the same Naval officer she saw not even two minutes ago. “Yes, may I help you?”

“Yes you can,” said the officer. He reached into the inside of his jacket and pulled out a folded piece of paper, possibly the same paper Coleman-Sanders gave him.

“I have here a statement from the Sanders family. Mrs. Sanders noticed that you were here reporting, and she requested that you be given the chance to read this before it’s released to the rest of the media this afternoon.”

Teri unfolded the piece of paper. It barely covered a quarter of a page, typed, and single-spaced. “Um, Captain…”

“It’s Commander, ma’am. Commander Rabb.  I’m a friend of the family”

“Commander, maybe you can do something for me?”

The cameraman rushed up to Teri with a microphone in hand. “Fifteen seconds, Teri.” He thrusted the mike in her hands and went behind the camera.

“What can I do, ma’am?”

“Teri?” said the cameraman, a little nervous.

“Get me the exclusive with Alicia Sanders,” said Teri.

“Ten seconds.”

“She didn’t rule out talking to the media at a later date. I’ll have to relay your request to her.”

“All right.”

Teri turned around as the cameraman was counting “Five, four, three, two …”

Teri flashed a smile to the camera.  “Thanks, Paul. I’m standing less than a block away from the Naval Correctional Facility at the Washington Navy Yard, where the sentence has just been carried out on General Steve Austin, 36, former commanding general of the Second Marine Expeditionary Force out of Camp Lejeune, and Admiral Michael  Sanders, 33, former commander of the Federation Fleet, and Director of Personnel.

Both men were convicted earlier this month of nearly one hundred-fifty counts of murder in the so-called fiasco in Iraq last November, and three other charges.

Both men met with Father Clayton Ridges for prayer one hour before being escorted to the cryogenic chamber. General Austin, originally slated to go last, opted to go ahead, saying the admiral deserved a few more moments with his family.

General Austin was pronounced stabilized in suspended animation at 11:06 a.m. Admiral Sanders was prepared and stabilized in suspended animation at 11:18.

Sanders’ wife, Alicia Coleman-Sanders, could not be reached for comment, but she did leave a statement with me to read to our viewers. This same statement will be released to all this afternoon but this station is the first to have this on the air.”

Teri unfolded the paper and began reading silently to herself before looking up at the camera.  “This seems to be from the admiral himself,” she said.

“For over a year now I have been largely thinking when I went into Iraq, I went in and did the job to the best of my ability.

Many people did not like the way I did that job. I can’t say I liked it myself. I did not like it because Saddam Hussein’s death pushed our efforts to take over Iraq back three years.

Still, if I had an opportunity to do my job again, the only thing I would change is the fact that all of my Marines would have made it back. I would have gave the order myself for all the forces so Gen. Austin would not have to be in this predicament with me.

To my children; Alexandria, Alicia Nicole, and James Robert. I’m sorry I won’t be there to see you grow up into the special human beings I know you will be.  To my beautiful wife, my lover, my best friend. Watch over them.”

********

Three months later.

“Well, at least she picked a great time to come in,” said Dan Coleman, taking another swig from his Corona while looking at his youngest daughter. “Hardly anybody’s here.”

The two were sitting in a bar across from Gate 23A at Reagan-Clinton International Airport, awaiting the arrival of Alicia from yet possibly another fruitless trip to Yemen. This was her third one in two months, each time leaving with another clue that she hope would vindicate her husband and release from his prison in space, only to return empty-handed.

No one in the family knew Alicia was gone until three days ago, when Alicia sent a telegram to her parent’s house in Florida asking her father to meet her in Washington. Dan relayed the message to Jennifer, who just started preparing for her soccer season at UNC-Chapel Hill, and she decided, with her coach’s permission, to hitch a ride with her father to Virginia for the weekend.

Jennifer looked up from her study notes at her father with her “What the hell are you talking about” look that Dan has come to recognize and understand. “Dad, it’s 3:00 in the afternoon. This is the bewitching hour for travelers. A time when two or three hundred people at the same time decide
“This is when I want to fly.””

Looking out at the main passageway where streams of men, women, and children were either leaving a gate or heading towards one, all at high rates of speed, she rolled her eyes towards the ceiling of the bar. “This place is packed.”

Dan looked around as well, but not as interested as Jennifer was. “Yeah, I guess.” He turned his attention to his beer bottle, now almost empty.

“You got another ten minutes before her plane lands, Dad,” said Jen, glancing at a clock over the bar. “Go ahead if you want.”

Dan slid the beer bottle away. “It’s not that.” He turned to look at Jen. “Do you think she found something this time?”

Jen cocked her head to the side in thought for a few seconds. “I don’t know,” she said. “This is totally unlike her, though. The first two times she told people where she was going and had all her cards laid out on a table. This time we didn’t know jack.”

Dan nodded. “That’s right, and I don’t think she would put the babies in danger if she didn’t have some type of clear-cut evidence that would get Michael off.” He turned his attention to the crowd outside the bar. “She’s almost due, you know.”

“Yeah, I know, but I’m thinking that something is totally different about this whole trip.” Jen closed her study notes and placed them in her backpack. “Her housekeeper said she didn’t even notice any evidence of clothing taken, except a small backpack.”

Dan’s eyes widened in surprise. “That’s it?” he asked.

Jen nodded. “Yep, and she also told me that the day she left, she was going through some mail for about an hour. The housekeeper was outside smoking a cigarette when Alicia ran out of the house like a bat out of hell saying, “I’m going to the airport.” She thought she was going to pick up somebody.”

Dan heard the announcement on the loudspeakers blaring out the arrival of Flight 1030 from New York JFK to Washington — Alicia’s flight. He pulled out his wallet and fished out a five-dollar bill for his tab. Jen gathered her things as he placed the bill under the Corona bottle. Then he turned to his daughter.

“I hope, for all the risks she’s taking right now, that this time, this trip was worth it.”

Jen said nothing as they walked out of the bar and practically fought to cross the mass of people to get to the gate. By the time they had made it, the flight announcer had just opened the gate door where the first of the plane’s passengers began disembarking.

Dan scanned each face walking through the door until he focused on one he recognized. “Alicia!” he exclaimed.

Jen and Dan waited as Alicia, looking healthier than she ever looked in months, rushed up and grabbed them both in a tight embrace. “Oh my God, I didn’t think you would make it,” she said to her father as he reached down to kiss her cheek. She then turned to Jen. “And what are you doing here? I thought soccer was starting up soon.”

Dan saw the look before it even started forming on Jen’s face. “What do you mean, “What am I doing here?” Do you realize that you took off on one of your crazy trips three weeks away from your due date and without letting anybody know? Are you crazy?”

Alicia looked at her younger sister unfazed. “Yeah, but you will — ”

Jen was not done. “You’re carrying my nieces and nephewwithin you, Al.  Triplets.” By now she had pulled out of Alicia’s embrace and stood with her hands on her hips, squaring off.  “I know what you’re doing, but if you think for one second that I’m going to let you jeopardize their lives.”

“I got the proof,” Alicia blurted out.

Dan was still staring at Jen when Alicia managed to slide those words out, and the expression on Jen’s face shook him out of his reverie. He turned to Alicia. “You found it?”

Alicia nodded proudly.  “The one piece of evidence I’ve been needing for six months that no one could, or would come up with.”  She patted the large backpack she had slung over the shoulder.  “The surveillance footage for the Yemen stronghold.  It proves that Mike and Steve were in the right after all, and that they were fired upon first.”

Dan hugged his daughter, careful not to accidentally bump her swollen belly.  “How did you do it?”

Alicia glanced at her sister, still standing a few feet from them in shock, before replying.  “I made a contact on my first trip to Iraq back in December.  He used to work as an assistant to the chief of staff at the stronghold.  He wasn’t a witness to the battle because he was evacuated before the main fighting began.  He did remember that there was a security system that initially was supposed to deal with a small crowd, but we’re talking nearly two thousand people that day.  He’s been working to set up a new office space for the ambassador when he came across it.”

At that remark Jen spoke up.  “Wait a minute,” she said. “You had this tape for a week, and you’re just now getting home? What were you doing all this time?”

For the first time since she got off the plane, the eternal smile momentarily dropped from Alicia’s face.  “I’ll tell you all about it later.  I promise. And I’m sorry for worrying you, sis.”  She turned to her father.  “I’m sorry, Dad, but I got that letter in the mail saying we might have the evidence, I had to make sure that I saw it for myself and get it back here safely.  I took some other precautions just in case if I didn’t make it back, the evidence will still here.”

Alicia turned back to her sister, dropping her backpack to the floors as tears began welling up in her eyes. “It’s my dream to have my husband back here to see his daughters and son born. Born, Jen. Not when their kids are having kids. Not when I’m almost dead. No, he will be here when I give birth.”

Jen eyes lowered to the floor, and for a minute Dan saw his daughter exhaled sharply and sniffed a little. He knew that Jen was the tougher of his two offspring in terms of keeping their emotions in check, but it looked like she was finally going to crack.

Jen’s eyes abruptly rose to meet her sister’s gaze. “I’m sorry, Al. I just worry about you and the kids and all. I just want you to take time for yourself.”

Alicia smiled. “I’ll have plenty of time to do that once my husband is with me.” She reached out her hand, which Jen took, and they pulled each other in an embrace. Dan grasped one shoulder of each of his daughters and gave them a reassuring squeeze.

An unknown pair of eyes was watching them from the bar that Jen and Dan vacated earlier. He sat near the exit, slowly taking everything in as he sipped on coffee, and mentally storing it away. From the point when the Colemans walked into the bar. When they left. Sanders’s annoying bitch of a wife getting off her plane. Tapping her bag as she spoke.

The bag.

He pulled out his global and keyed a frequency. A two-second pause before he started speaking. Descriptions. Man, early fifties, grayish black hair, very tall. Wearing gray slacks, black turtleneck, and black overcoat. Young girl, probably nineteen, decked out in North Carolina Tar Heels sweat gear, with a black leather back pack. Long red hair pulled in a ponytail. Older woman, no older than thirty, long blonde hair. Very pregnant, but still has a shapely figure. Wearing jeans, gray turtleneck, and flannel jacket. The object is the large green backpack she is carrying

Man is driving a black Cadillac Escalade EXT with Florida license plate number COLE1.

The man listened for a few seconds before hanging up. Finishing his coffee, he left a few dollars besides the mug before rising from his chair and exiting the bar, giving the Colemans one last glance before walking towards the escalators for the upstairs level. Satisfied with the knowledge that Alicia Coleman-Sanders, her father, and sister will be dead by tomorrow, and fifty years from now, Admiral Michael Sanders will awaken to only find a plot of graves.

*****

“I forgot how cold it was here,” said Alicia, as she carefully made her way across the ice to the parking garage, holding her sister’s arm. Dan was following closely behind with their backpacks. “Dad, you all right back there?”

“Yeah, I guess your housekeeper wasn’t lying when she said she didn’t think you took that much clothes,” said Dan. “The heaviest thing is your sister’s bag.”

They crossed over to the parking garage to where Dan had parked his truck, when Alicia stopped suddenly “Damn!”

Jen turned to her sister. “What’s wrong?”

Alicia pointed. Two spots down from her father’s truck sat her Durango, possibly the cleanest vehicle in the entire garage considering it was inside during the snowstorm three weeks ago. “I forgot I drove myself down here. Now how am I gonna get it home?”

Dan made it up to them. “Already thought about it, which is why I parked here. Jen, drive your sister’s car. Alicia will ride with me.”

Alicia pulled out her keys and passed them to her sister. “Don’t worry about the gate. I know the guy in charge here. When Dad pays his bill…”

“Wait a minute,” said Dan, “if you know some guy, and if you’re riding in my car, then I shouldn’t have to pay as well, right?”

“I’m just joking, Daddy,” said Alicia, giving Dan’s cheek a playful pinch. “I’ll tell him you’re both with me.”

Dan had already started his truck with an automatic starter, opened the back door of his truck to place both bags there, and then walked around and opened the door for his oldest daughter to get in. Jen got in the Durango and cranked it up to get it warm.

Once Alicia got settled, he closed the door and walked over to the driver side of the Durango. Jen rolled down the window.

Dan was all of a sudden attacked by loud, blaring music that he couldn’t hear over the roar of the engine when the window was up. “Can you turn that down for a second, PLEASE?” he screamed.

Jen quickly turned down the music as Dan continued on. “Much better. Now, I know you have driven her car before, but just pay attention to the roads and keep close to us, OK?”

“C’mon, Dad, please, I’ve been driving all over this side of the country for a while now, okay?” It was the sound of a grown woman, Dan thought, but it was also the sound of thanks for caring.

“Okay, sweetheart. We’ll see you at the house.” Dan smiled and started to turn away before Jen grabbed his arm.

“Dad, can I go get a pizza for dinner?”

Dan looked at her. “There’s food at the house. Why do you want a pizza?”

“Dad, the Butcher of Soccer, Coach Pizella, has all of her players on a strict diet. No sweets, no junk food, and eight hours of sleep a night. I have withdrawals.”

Dan mulled it over for a minute, and slowly nodded. “I can’t believe I’m contributing to the Tar Heels’ losing season, but go ahead. Just don’t take too long.” He pulled out his wallet. “There’s a Pizza Hut just down Route 1 about a mile south of the airport,” he said as he handed her a twenty-dollar bill. “You can go there.”

Jen took the money and reached out to kiss her father on the cheek. “Thanks, Dad, I won’t be long.” She returned to the inside of the truck and rolled up the window.

Dan walked to his truck and got him. Beside him, Alicia was lying with the seat tilted back, her eyelids closed. He nudged her gently, and her eyes fluttered opened. “You okay?”

Alicia stifled a yawn and raised the seat to a more level position. “Yeah, it’s been a tough three months.” She smiled and rubbed her swollen tummy where her offspring rested.
“But it was all worth it.”

Dan smiled and shifted the truck to drive, and slowly pulled out of the parking spot, heading towards the exit. In his rearview mirror, he noticed his daughter pulling out and following closely behind.

The cars made it out to the parking garages gates and without incident, though it took a minute to find Alicia’s friend to wave them through. Once Dan made it out of the airport’s perimeter and turned on Route 1, he picked up a little speed.

“Are we in a hurry, or are you racing Jen again?” said Alicia.

Dan drove through a green light, reaching for his global to dial Jen. “No, she’s going to get a pizza right there,” he said, pointing at the Pizza Hut on the right side of the road. “She’ll meet us at the house a little later.”

The global made a connection, and a second later a slight beeping can be heard coming from the back seat. Dan turned around and groaned. “Her global’s in her bag. I hope she sees it.”

His fears quickly diminished as he spotted her in the rearview mirror flashing her right turn signal and pulling into the parking lot. He refocused his attention on the road.

“Shouldn’t we wait for her?” said Alicia. “I don’t know if she remembers her way back from here.”

“No, she’ll be all right. I know she has her wallet, and she has directions there, plus phone numbers in case she does get lost,” said Dan, as he pulled up to a red light.

For the first time, he noticed that there was no traffic out on Route 1, totally unheard of if anyone is familiar with the layout of the District of Columbia/Metropolitan area. Route 1 connects with I-395 to go north through Washington, and stretches as far south as Richmond, Virginia. Thousands of commuters travel the road everyday, even on the weekends.

But why not today? No traffic going north past them, and none following them going south. All that was behind them was an old, dilapidated van.

Oh, no.

Dan reached underneath his seat and pulled out a zippered pouch. Alicia watched as with expert finesse, he unzipped it and pulled out a Glock 19 pistol with an extra clip. “Damn, I wish she had her global.”

Alicia started to rise with alarm. “Dad, what’s wrong?”

Dan pulled the charger back to cede the first round, and placed the pistol in his lap. “I don’t know sweetheart, but hang on!”

Dan slammed his foot on the gas and peeled out into the intersection, and the action took less than a second before he slammed on the brakes to avoid hitting another van speeding from the right side of the intersection, cutting off their path.

“Shit!” whispered Dan through clenched teeth. From the gear the driver was wearing in the second van, he knew this was an ambush. He threw the truck into the reverse, but even before he could begin to turn around to see where he was going, the van behind him rammed him, hitting the truck on the back-left side. Not enough to push him clearly off the road, but sent in enough of a direction to not hit the van in the intersection.

By the time the truck came to a stop, six men, dressed from head to toe in black military gear, were standing in the intersection, each armed with MK117s, laser-sighted automatic machine-guns. They stopped ten feet from the truck and waited for signs of life.

The driver, a man in late forties, early fifties, slowly rose in view, obviously knocked to the side as the truck was hit from behind. Dazed, he looked around before focusing on the six figures in black.

One of them, the leader from his built and stature, took one step forward and raised his rifle. At that signal, the other five raised theirs also.

Dan looked down at his daughter, knocked unconscious but alive, beside him. A tear fell from his eyes, knowing that her hard work to get her husband back led to this.

*****

Jen had just ordered her pizza and went outside to enjoy the cold February air. Large stuff-crusted sausage and pepperoni. She knew she’ll pay dearly if her coach ever finds out.

She reached into the inside of her jacket pocket for something else she knew she’ll pay for if her family finds out. Fishing the pack of cigarettes she has been craving since yesterday, she opened it up and pulled out one, and also the pack of matches in the plastic. She struck the match against the cover and quickly brought the flame to the cigarette before she heard a spray of audible “pops.”

Growing up with a highly placed retired Central Intelligence Agency operative for a father and possibly the most decorated Federation officer in history for a brother-in-law, you learn a couple of things, such as recognizing the sound of gunfire.

Frowning, she went all the way to the sidewalk parallel of Route 1 and looked north towards the airport. Puzzled as to the lack of traffic on a mid-Saturday afternoon, she turned to face south.

She thought she saw a black truck less than a mile down. A truck that looks just like her father’s. She could make out two vans, one directly in front of the truck, and another one behind and to the left of it.

She thought she could make out one or two figures walking around the truck, the back end with the look of a train wreck.

Shots rang out again. Jen ducked down instinctively, coming to a grim realization.

“Oh, no.”

Jen threw her cigarette down and ran to her sister’s truck. She prayed that what she was looking for was still in the back where Michael left it.

The satchel he brought back from Mexico to hold his weapons collection was in the back. Without even thinking she grabbed a Beretta and slapped a magazine in the well, and decided to throw one of Michael’s special weapons up front. She was pulling the charging handle back to cede the first round as she made her way to the driver seat and cranked up the truck. She knew that she could never get off accurate shots with her left hand but she could probably run whoever is up at that intersection away from her father and sister.

The truck leaped out of the parking lot, knowing that somehow traffic was being held off for a reason, and cut the car sharply right, accelerator pressed to the floor.

As she got closer, she could see the black figures more closely and in detail, each dressed like some military organization with combat gear. Some with their rifles at the ready while others were pointed at the ground, momentarily shocked at the site of another vehicle on the road flying in their direction.

No matter. Jen steered with her right hand as the left guided the Beretta out of the window, trying to remember her father’s training when it comes to shooting out of a moving vehicle.

Her first two shots obviously had an effect, as she saw one member of the team jerked his head back and fell on his back spread eagle to the ground, hands slowly rubbing his head. The second shot made the others jump back a foot or two and rethink their strategy of standing in the open.

Well, almost all of them had a second thought.

The largest one slung his rifle over his shoulder and reached for a long, silver tube, about two feet long, hanging from his hip. From Jen’s point of view, it looked like a shiny, but simple metal bar.

Jen involuntarily glanced at the smaller “shiny, but simple metal bar” sitting in the passenger seat beside her. To an ordinary being, it will look simple, but only a select few know the artistic and dangerous value of a lightsaber. It will cut off a hand or a leg and cauterized the wound at the same time. It can slice through just about anything known to man. Even a Jeep Durango.

Jen slowed down almost to a dead stop to get a better aim at the black-masked figure, but the man stretched out his hand and the pistol was snatched out of Jen’s hand and thrown twenty feet away. Jen looked at her empty hand in shock before it hit her. This guy has Mike’s powers!

Before she could reach back for another weapon out of the satchel, Jen felt the truck lurched upwards with a violent yank. She looked out of the window and saw the ground below her at least twenty feet, and the single masked figure, hand outstretched, in total control. All around her, she could see over buildings and stores, and she also had a better view of her father’s truck, but could detect no movement inside from her vantage point.

“Bastard!” was all Jen could say through clenched teeth. Mike never mentioned that there were more people out there just like him. She climbed into the back seat and grabbed the satchel, eyeing a grenade temptingly, but decided against it, remembering the telekinetic ability that monster has. She spotted a phaser pistol and grabbed it.

As the vehicle began spinning left to right slowly to where she could aim directly out of the window, she fired.

The deadly-hot stream, despite Jen’s lack of aim, headed towards the man in black. Jen thought she had him dead to rights but the man brought his tube level with the ground and twin beams ejected from both ends, a meter long from shaft to tip. He immediately spun the double-edged saber like a baton and the bolt deflected away from him, redirected back at the truck. The entire action took less than a second.

The beam hit the front end of the truck with the force of a megaton bomb, slamming Jen against the back of the driver seat. She screamed in pain as her right shoulder connected with it at an awkward angle, and felt it snap like a twig. She managed to maintain a grip on her phaser, and despite the pain she was in, she raised herself up to fire again.

Before she could gain her bearings, everything not strapped down in the truck began rushing up as though they were being tossed in the air by a large group. The buildings were rushing pass, and….

***********

Jen knew she was in trouble as soon as she opened her eyes.

The truck was obviously totaled, both by the phaser blast and the twenty-foot drop from nowhere. Her right shoulder felt worst than ever, but her back was overwhelming even that unwelcomed pain.

Somehow she had did major damage to her back before landing on the backseat. Judging from the massive headache she had, she figured her head collided with the door, forcing her to black out.

Merciful.

Thankfully, the truck had landed upright, but now a little lower than it was when she was driving. No doubt the tires were all flattened by the impact. All of the glass in the truck had shattered. The sunroof and a good chunk of the rook were torn away.

And that was when she saw him.

Standing tall, black hood and mask concealing all but his yellow eyes, and carrying his deactivated double-edged saber, was the mastermind of this entire plan. He looked down on her from the hood of the truck, eyes unblinking, uncaring.

Jen, despite the amount of pain she was in, tried to sit up. If she was going to die, she wasn’t going to die lying down. Her back screamed in torment, and she conceded, instead taking the satisfaction of staring back defiantly at her family’s assailant.

The masked figure stared back for a moment, and finally spoke. “You fought with honor, young woman.”

Momentarily surprised, Jen was brought back to reality by the memory of her father’s truck still in the intersection. “What did you do to my family?”

The man said nothing. He reached into a trouser pocket and pulled out a global.  He tossed it down to Jen.

“Call yourself an ambulance,” he said as he jumped off the truck.

“Wait!” Jen screamed, but she received no response. Groaning with agony, she picked up the phone, and with clammy hands, began to dial. Her initial instincts told her the phone might be a bomb, but now or later, if she does not get medical attention, it will not matter.

As she heard the squealing of tires, she reached over her head and grabbed the door handle for the back seat. As she did that, a flash of pain overcame her, knocking her into unconsciousness once more.

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

A gloved hand reached into the truck for the global, still clenched in Jen’s left hand. He pulled the phone free, and checked Jen’s pulse. He stayed like that for a minute, head cocked to the side as if remembering an old song from a time long ago.

Satisfied, he opened the global and pressed a button. “Arlington County 911,” the female operator announced through the speaker.

“Yeah, I just rolled up here on Route 1 past the Interstate Shopping Center, and this Durango looked as if it was dropped from the sky,” said the man, in as much of a hippie voice as he could muster through his mask. “All the windows were shattered, the tires — what tires? And there’s this girl sitting in the back seat. She’s alive, but barely.” He closed
the phone up before he could be asked any questions.

The man threw the global back in the truck and turned around to walk to the van pulling towards him. Already the sirens could be heard in the distance, coming closer, and a few cars were making their way from both directions to the intersection. He jumped in the passenger seat, and the van, instead of going north or south, headed straight through the intersection as if that was its original destination before the shootout.

The man looked back at his work, nodding with satisfaction but sorry that he had to kill three defenseless people. Correction, two defenseless people, he noted, as he remembered the fiery young redhead who while no match for him, managed to take out one of his men a hundred feet away in a moving vehicle, and almost managed to take him out with a phaser. It was probably a mistake to let her live, but it was the honorable thing to do, he thought, as he took one last glance in the rearview mirror at the carnage he left behind.

What he failed to notice was the small hand slowly reaching out of the passenger side through the window. Blood shining in the afternoon sun, it paled in comparison to the reflection from the diamond wedding on her left hand.

**********

Master Gunnery Sergeant Raymond Torres, USMC, returned to his house covered in a sheet of sweat, despite the 35-degree weather. The scowl on his face became even more evident every time he looked at his stopwatch. “Four seconds under my normal time,” he muttered as he stepped into the kitchen. “I need a new damn watch.”

Anita Torres was already in the kitchen. A slim, petite woman with long, dark hair, she was standing by the coffeemaker in a long silk bathrobe, waiting on the first pot of the morning. “You took long enough,” she said, not even looking at him. “I thought you got kidnapped.”

“Ha ha, very funny, senorita’,” said Torres. “When the java’s gonna be ready?”

Anita had just picked up the pot and begun pouring into two mugs waiting on the counter. “After you take your shower.”

Torres came up behind her and slowly massaged her shoulders and neck. “Only if you scrub my back. You know I have problems with that.”

Anita snickered. “Well, aren’t you greedy? Wasn’t last night good enough for you?” She turned around and handed him a cup of coffee. “That’s why your three-mile run was so slow today.”

Torres took the cup with a thoughtful expression on his face. “Well, that tears it. No more sex for me.”

Anita laughed and handed him the television remote, giving him a peck on the cheek. “I’ll revoke the shower for now, but I’m going to get breakfast started soon.”

Torres took the remote and coffee and moved to the kitchen table while Anita started going through the refrigerator for breakfast items. He thumbed the remote and turned the channel to the news.

The newscaster was talking about something that happened yesterday afternoon on Route 1. He turned the volume up and moved to get some sugar from the bowl beside the coffee maker.

“No witnesses were found in the apparent ambush. One survivor, 18-year-old Jennifer Coleman of Pensacola, Florida, is in critical but stable condition. Her sister, Alicia
Coleman-Sanders, wife of convicted Federation officer Admiral Michael Sanders, is in serious condition. The fate of her unborn children, triplets, is unknown at this time.”

Anita was engrossed in her work until she jumped at the sound of glass breaking against the floor. She turned around with a start and looked at her husband.

Torres was standing, facing her, coffee mug now shattered on the kitchen floor, totally shocked. He turned to the television as the newscaster continued.

“Coleman-Sanders, a famous attorney who has gained prestige as her husband’s defense council several months ago, had just returned from a trip to Yemen yesterday before the attack. Local authorities are investigating with the cooperation of the military. Once again, one dead, and two critically injured in what was obviously an unprovoked attack.”

Anita watched as Torres moved to the home monitor and started dialing in a well-dialed frequency. Silence ruled for just a second before he started speaking. “Harm? it Ray. I’m sorry to bother you but something terrible has happened.”

*********

Commander Harmon Rabb, USN, Judge Advocate General office, rushed into the emergency section of the hospital in street clothes, looking left and right for any face that he would recognize until his gaze fell on Raymond Torres.

Torres was standing by the emergency ward section talking with a doctor Harm didn’t recognize. He saw Harm and waved him over.

“Harm, thanks for coming,” he said, shaking his hand.

“Thanks for calling,” said Harm, turning to the doctor. “Commander Rabb, JAG Corps.”

“Commander Wyatt,” said the doctor, looking as if he has done double shifts and in no mood for pleasantries. “Commander, the master guns can fill you in. I have to get back to my patients.” He nodded and went back into the ward.

Rabb turned to Torres. “What happened?”

Torres turned and pointed outside to a Arlington County sheriff’s patrol car sitting outside, its two occupants barely distinguishable inside. “The first one on the scene in
Arlington is here. I barely had a chance to talk to him before the doctor came out, but from what the deputy told me, it was a war zone out there.”

Harm stared at Torres in disbelief. “But why? And who?”

Torres shrugged his shoulders. “I have no idea, but Alicia left me a message a couple of days ago to meet up with her today at noon at her house. She said she had something that might clear Mike and General Austin.”

Harm weighed all of this, piecing everything together. “Any witnesses?”

“Jennifer, but she was banged up bad. Broken back, right collarbone broken, left leg broken. She was driving Alicia’s car.” He fished a picture and passed it to Harm. “Here’s what it look like.”

Harm winced at the sight of the photo. “What the hell happened? Was Alicia in that car?”

“No, she was riding with her father.” Torres paused before continuing. “Dan Coleman is dead, Harm.”

Harm looked up from the photo back at Torres. “What? I didn’t even know he was up here.”

“Me neither. I didn’t know until I asked the staff, because they had said on the news that one was dead, and I didn’t know who that person was. I barely was able to catch the entire segment.”

Torres turned away from Harm to stare outside for a few seconds before continuing. “They frame my best friend, send him off in a ice cube for fifty years, and now his father-in-law is dead, and they don’t expect his wife to survive.”

Harm reached out to give his friend a reassuring squeeze on his shoulder. “Ray, we’re going to find the people who did this.” He shook Torres gently until he turned around to look each other in the eye. “I promise you, we will find them.”

Harm looked around and saw the two Virginia officers walking into the hospital. “Get as much information from these two as you can,” he said, pulling his wallet out. “I need to make a phone call.”

**********

Ow, thought Jen as she awoke to a bright light. It was not the same bright light as it was when the masked character was standing over her…

With a start, she looked around and saw that she was not sitting in the backseat of the Durango, and that the bright light was the fluorescent bulbs from the ceiling.

And that the handsome man sitting in the chair at the foot of her bed was not the masked man.

Harm got up and walked to the side of her bed. “Hi, kiddo,” he said, softly brushing a strand of hair from her eyes. “How are you feeling?”

Jen looked back with a dumbfounded look on her face. “Harm?” She looked around again before focusing back on him. “Where am I?” Jen tried to sit up, but a shooting agony rode up and down her spine, forcing her back down again.

Harm rested his hand on her shoulder. “You need to take it easy and rest. Your injuries are quite severe. The doctor didn’t know if you were going to pull through at first.” His hand moved from her shoulder to her left hand. “I’m glad you’re all right, though,” he said, giving her hand a reassuring squeeze.”

Jen looked back at Harm, calmed down but with obvious questions. “Harm, answer this question for me, and no joke. Where are my father and sister?”

Harm looked at her for a minute struggling with his words, but decided to tell the truth. Jen was not one to fool with, and this was the time to be straightforward. “Alicia is falling in and out of a coma. She has major internal bleeding and the doctors are racing to stop it. The triplets, as far as they know, are safe.”

Jen closed her eyes and exhaled softly, but then opened up back up and continued to look at him expectantly.

Harm stared back until he could do it no more and lowered his head. “I’m sorry, Jen. Your father didn’t make it.”

Harm’s head remained lowered, not able to look at Jen’s face until he felt a squeeze on his hand from her. He raised his head.

Tears were beginning to form up on the rims of Jen’s eyes, but he knew they would not form while he was in the room. Not yet. “Has anyone called my mother?”

“Ray Torres did about an hour ago. Colonel McKenzie is in Florida right now, so we’re making arrangements to fly your mother and a few of your relatives here to Virginia on Mac’s plane. You’ll be able to see your mother by this evening.” He paused for a second, not sure how to frame what he wanted to say to honor her father, but he continued, hoping the words would sound stronger than he felt saying. “If it matters much, your father sacrificed himself by taking the brunt of the shooting. He saved Alicia.”

Jen seemed to be staring through Harm by now. “Thanks, Harm.” She slowly pulled free from his grasp to rest her free hand by her immobilized one, sitting in a sling across her chest. “Can you do me a favor and get me a global?”

Harm did as she asked, pulling his out of his pocket and sitting it in her hand. “If there’s anything else you need, I’ll be here,” he said as he moved towards the door.

Jen nodded. “Thanks, Harm. Thanks for everything.”

When Harm closed the door, the tears began to flow.

***********

“No, Commander, you did the right thing,” said Admiral A.J. Chegwidden, USN, JAG Corps, global in hand as he stepped off the elevator to the passageway leading to the Office of the Federation Supreme Commander. “You and Colonel McKenzie knew them better than most of us. Plus despite the circumstances, Admiral Sanders is technically still a part of the armed forces, and every courtesy should be extended to his family during these times.”

He continued listening while strolling past paintings of past Federation commanders and officers, pausing at one portraying his long-time friend and comrade, James T. Kirk. A sadness he had not felt in a long time crept into his being.

“Sir?  What’s wrong?”

“What? Oh, nothing, Commander. Just reminiscing a little bit,” he said, continuing to his destination. “Listen, I’m at the Supreme Commander’s office right now. Give me an half-hour and call me back with whatever word you have.”

“Aye, sir.”

Chegwidden shut down his opening the door to the office.

The office had six desks spread throughout the area, with several small hallways leading to other offices and exits. A Marine lieutenant, impeccably dressed in a long-sleeved khaki shirt, blue trousers with the red blood stripe down the seam, sat at a desk closest to the double doors facing the outer lobby. He immediately rose to attention as Chegwidden stepped in.

“Good morning, sir. The Supreme Commander is expecting you. May I get you something to drink?”

“Whatever the Commander is drinking at this time, Lieutenant, thank you.” Chegwidden walked to the double doors and turned the knob to enter.

The office was long as it was wide. Sofas were lined on either side of the long rug stretching from the door to the two chairs and the desk at the other end.

The occupant of the desk rose from his chair while talking on the telephone. He waved Chegwidden forward while conversing with whoever it was on the other end. He tried to pay as little attention as possible to the conversation, but it was hard to ignore the number of times “sir” was said.

“Fine, sir. I’ll make sure all of the necessary people are made aware of your directives … Thank you, sir.”

The man hung up the phone, at which point Chedwidden allowed the looseness to fall out of his posture and came completely to attention, but the man waved it off. “A. J.,” he said with a wink in his stare. “It’s Sunday.” He gestured to a chair just behind Chegwidden.

Chegwidden nodded and sat down while the man took his seat being his desk, staring at the admiral. “I appreciate you coming on such short notice, A. J.”

“Well, sir, if it’s one thing that I know the Supreme Commander likes to do is to get all the crap out of the way quickly, so we can waste our time with the stuff that matters.”

John Franklin Knox, a fit, middle-age man with the look of no-nonsense authority mixed with the gray of fighting wars on battlefields and behind desks, nodded once at Chegwidden. “My feelings exactly. I’m in the middle of writing a speech for an dinner engagement I have tonight, but I have some sort of writer’s block. Tom had better … oh, here he is.”

The Marine lieutenant walked into the office with two tumblers of a dark brown liquid. He gave one first to the Supreme Commander and the other to Chegwidden. “Will you be needing anything else, sir?”

Knox looked at his watch. “No, thank you, Tom. I’m going to be ready to leave in about an hour, so make sure security is aware of that. No later than 1415.”

“Yes, sir. By your leave, gentlemen.” The lieutenant walked out of the office, closing the door behind him.

Chegwidden took a sip of his tumbler. Jack Daniels’. “Writer’s block drink, sir?”

Knox grinned. “Anything to form a sentence on paper, A. J.” The grin slowly faded. “I know why you’re here.”

“So you’ve heard about what happened.”

“I saw the news flash this morning. A damn shame. My heart goes out to the family.” Knox got up and stared out of his window overlooking the edge of Arlington National Cemetery. “The first thing I thought about is the first thing you and your people probably thought about, too.”

Chegwidden couldn’t resist any longer. He had to know. “Sir, were you talking to the President?”

Knox turned to look at Chegwidden. “The President called me. Seconds before I could pick up the phone, Tom walks up in here saying that he’s on line two for me.”

“What were the results of the conversation, if I may ask, sir?”

Knox turned and looked over his shoulder out of the window for a second before returning his gaze on Chegwidden. “Sanders stays where he is.”

Chegwidden stared back at the Supreme Commander in disbelief, speechless as Knox continued. “The President feels, as I do, that if Sanders was released temporarily and finds out what happened, he will want to find who did this to his family and become a flight risk. It’s been three months since he and Austin were sent up there. Things are still touchy overseas. It’s too big a chance to take.”

Chegwidden set his drink down on the desk and looked at Knox. “Sir, this entire country owes it to this man to at least inform him that his family was brutally gunned down. I can’t believe this!”

Knox stared at Chegwidden. “I fought with the President for almost a half-hour about it, A. J. Believe me, if I can get him out of that block of ice, I’ll fly up there in a shuttle and bring him back myself.” He sighed. “The President’s points are sound, however. We cannot afford another incident from that man.”

Chegwidden nodded and stood up at attention. “Sir, professionally, I concur with the decision made by the President, and endorse your approval. Personally, I think it’s a damn shame.” He turned and walked towards the door with Knox staring at him. “A damn shame indeed.”

**********

Lieutenant Col. Sarah MacKenzie, USMC, JAG Corps, walked into the emergency ward’s waiting area, dressed in her Service “A” uniform. A tall woman with short blonde hair, wearing a black overcoat over a white sweater and tan slacks followed her.

Mac looked around the room; nearly empty saved the staff at the front desk. She almost walked up to the desk when the door to the ward opened, admitting Commander Rabb and Master Gunnery Sergeant Torres.

“Rabb,” said Mac. She and the older lady walked over to the men. “Any news?”

Rabb nodded, looking at the lady behind Mac. “Maggie, I can’t say how sorry I am about Dan.” He took her hand in both of his as he kissed her cheek.

“Thank you, Harm. Ray.” She looked around at everyone gathered around her. “And thank you all for getting me up here so fast. I really do appreciate it.”

“It was the least we could do.” Harm looked at Torres and Mac before continuing. “We really need to talk…about Alicia.”

Maggie’s eyes widened slightly but Rabb quickly continued. “She’s still slipping in and out of a coma, but there’s a decision to be made about the babies.” He gently took her arm and led her to a chair away from Mac and Torres who started talking about something else. They both sat down.

Rabb looked at the floor for a second before focusing on Maggie.  “Alicia has internal bleeding. The doctors have been working for hours to try to stop it, but no luck. They’re saying it’s a miracle she’s still alive.”

“How are the babies?”

“The babies are safe. So far. The womb was penetrated by a bullet, which is why they’re working to keep it from becoming infected.” Rabb paused. “They’re not giving her a good chance to survive labor.”

Maggie slowly took all of the news in. “What are our options?”

“Emergency C-section. Unfortunately, that will involve a great loss of blood.  The doctors don’t give her a great shot of surviving that, either, but it gives the babies a chance.”

“Can I talk to her?”

Rabb glanced over at Torres, who was standing with Mac and Commander Wyatt. “Commander, is she conscious?”

Wyatt looked back. “Yes, she is. And more coherent, too.” He looked over at Maggie. “Are you her mother, ma’am?”

“Yes. Can I see my daughters?”

“Follow me.”

***********

Maggie walked into the room alone, Rabb choosing to stand just outside the door. She slowly stepped up to the bed where her oldest daughter rested.

Except for the constant chirping of the machines encompassing the bed, Alicia almost looked like she was asleep. There were no bruises on her face, and her blonde hair looked longer than the last time she had saw it. The only disturbing reminder of her predicament was the tubes running up and down her arm, and under her gown.

Maggie slid a chair close to the bed and sat down, reaching through the side rails to grasp her daughter’s hand. She bent her head and cried.

She felt the hand move slightly, and looked up. Through her tears, she saw Alicia staring back at her. “Mom?”

“Yes, baby, I’m here.” She got up and reached over to kiss her on her temple. “I came as fast as I could.”

“I’m going to die, am I?”

“Of course not, dear. You are not going to die.” Maggie shook her head. “I will not lose you. You have so much to live for.”

Alicia closed her eyes for a second, and Maggie thought she fell back into a coma again, but they reopened a few seconds later. “No, the kids come first, Mom.” Her voice lowered to a whisper. “Tell the doctor to do the C-section.”

“Alicia, there has to be another way.”

“Mom, please.”

Maggie looked at her oldest child for a lifetime. “Alicia, in the blink of an eye I lost my dear husband, and my two children were nearly killed. I cannot afford to lose you.”

“You won’t, Mom.” Alicia smiled and squeezed Maggie’s hand. “Not while you have these.” She glanced at her belly. “Please, Mom. Don’t do this for me. Don’t do this for Mike. Do this for them.”

Maggie looked back at Alicia, remembering all the memories she had stored up of this bright young woman. Her first step. Her first birthday. The day she broke her arm riding a horse for the first time. Her first date. High school graduation. Law school. Whirlwind romance with a Federation officer and war hero. Announcing the engagement. The wedding. Her pregnancy.

“I love you so much, sweetheart.”

“I love you, too, Mom.”

**********

“So they’re not going to release him?” said Jen as she was wheeled to Alicia’s room. Torres was pushing the chair, Mac following close behind.

Torres nodded. “I just talked to the Admiral a while ago. He had just gotten offline with the Commandant of the Marine Corps trying to drum up support for this, but no such luck. Obviously the Joint Chiefs and Starfleet Command doesn’t like the idea, but they’re not about to tell the President that.”

“I see the President’s point in all this, and it is a valid one,” said Mac. You have a man who was convicted of causing an international incident. He was sentenced after being tried. If he’s let out and finds that his entire family was gunned down because of him, he will want to find those who are responsible. Mike is a human wrecking machine. He will probably cause another incident which will have serious ramifications.”

Torres glanced back at Mac. “So he stays on ice for five decades, get out and walk up to a plot in Arlington where he can find his family.” He turned his eyes forward. “Ridiculous.”

The group rounded a corner and found Rabb squatting, trying to comfort Maggie, sitting in a chair, crying hysterically.

“Mom!” yelled Jen.

Maggie looked over at Jen and got up, quickly covering the few steps to gently embrace her daughter. “Oh, baby. I’m sorry I didn’t go to see you. Are you all right?”

“I’m fine, Mom, and I would have sent you out of my room if you hadn’t seen Alicia first.” Jen looked past Rabb at the door behind him. “Is she in there?”

Rabb nodded. “Sorry, kiddo. She’s being prepped for surgery.”

“Surgery? What–is something wrong with one of the kids?”

Rabb walked over and laid a hand on Jen’s wheelchair armrest. “No, we’re hoping something will be right.”

**********

“Negative, Bud. You stay right where you are. Colonel MacKenzie and Commander Rabb are there, as well as Master Gunny Torres. They have all the support they need for now.”

Chegwidden continued to listen as Bud continued speaking while trying to pour a glass of water for himself in the process.  “Would it be all right if we sent some flowers to the hospital, sir?”

“Of course you can send flowers. I’m quite sure the family would appreciate that…. Bud, I’m going to have to let you go. I have another call on video conferencing. We’ll talk tomorrow. Tell Harriet I said welcome back. Good night.”

Chegwidden walked over to the videoconference stand and pressed a button before placing the receiver in the cradle. He pressed another button and the text “Bethesda, Maryland” appeared for a few seconds before it faded into a visual of what appeared to be a waiting room. A familiar face stared back at him.

“Commander,” said Chegwidden, sliding into a chair for a better view.” How is everybody holding up?”

Rabb stared back at him, voiceless for a few seconds before replying. “An emergency C-section was done, sir. Maggie Coleman gave it the green light. We also managed to track down more of Alicia’s plasma for the surgery. The babies are healthy and safe, but…” Rabb’s voice trailed off.

Chegwidden leaned closer. “Commander, what’s wrong?”

Rabb backed up a few steps, allowing Colonel MacKenzie to step into view. “Good evening, Admiral.”

“Mac, what’s wrong?”

Mac looked back at Rabb, who by now had started crying. Torres was sitting beside him, patting him on the shoulder. The admiral could not see what was going on but can obviously hear it. “Sir, the babies are safe and sound. Unfortunately, there were some complications with the surgery which were expected. Alicia lost a great deal of blood, and the doctors have lost all hope. Jen and her mom are in there now…saying goodbye.”

Chegwidden sat back, dumbfounded. “Colonel, you do what needs to be done for Maggie Coleman. The three of you take tomorrow off. Bud and Harriet are back in town and can cover for you two.”

“Yes, sir. Anything else, sir?”

Chegwidden paused before replying. “Tell them how sorry I am. Tell them that for me.” He pressed the disconnect button before the tears came.

***********

Mac could not believe she couldn’t find a parking spot close to the chapel despite her early arrival. Then she saw them.

At least twenty news trucks, parked all the way up to the gate leading to the cemetery, were in full swing to get ready for airing the funeral. Reporters were already in front of cameras talking about the circumstances that led to Alicia’s death Sunday night. Of course no one should know that because the doctors gave their word no news would leak out.

Somebody broke that word, it seems.

Mac finally found a clear patch of spots behind the chapel. As she pulled in one and cut the car off, another car, an Escalade SUV, pulled in beside her. The admiral’s car.

She got out, placed her cover and adjusted her uniform while Chegwidden walked over to her side. As soon as he was in view, she snapped to attention and salute. “Good afternoon, sir.”

Chegwidden returned the salute. “Colonel, what the hell is going on out there? Why is the media circus here?”

“Admiral, I swear to you, I have no idea, but I’m going to find out.” Mac started to walk around to the front of the chapel but Chegwidden stopped her.

“No need. I’ve talked to the chaplain on my global and he assures me that no media will be allowed inside. You can do me a favor and called the admin folks at the cemetery to let them know the situation and tell them no media within a hundred yards of the gravesite.”

“Consider it done, sir.” Mac started to walk away as another car pulled up, a somewhat familiar woman driving to the other side of Chegwidden’s. Mac looked at the admiral, who shrugged.

The car shut off and the driver side opened and closed. The person stepped into view with a smile. “Colonel MacKenzie. How nice to see you again.”

Mac rolled her eyes to the sky. “Teri Tanner. I hope you don’t think you are going to the funeral with your camera crew because you have another thing coming.”

Teri held up her hands in the defensive. “Colonel, you think too low of me. Actually, I was hoping you would be here. I need to talk to you about something. Something I think only JAG would be able to handle.” She turned to Chegwidden. “I’m also not here to cover this story, but to actually attend the funeral.  Commander Rabb was kind enough to invite me. Alicia was after all my friend, even for only a short amount of time.”

Chegwidden looked at Teri in silence, but Mac spoke up. “What is it you need to talk to me about?”

“Well, Alicia called me last Thursday night from the airport where she was flying out of. She told me she found evidence that could prove Admiral Sanders and General Austin’s innocence.”

“We know that already. Alicia’s sister Jennifer said that she brought it back with her, but it was obviously taken after the shooting.”

“No, that was a recording. Alicia pulled a disc of different footage on it and brought that with her just in case.” She reached into her purse and pulled out a disc and a folded piece of paper. “This is the original. I got it in the mail yesterday with this note.” She handed Mac both items.

Mac unfolded the paper and read the note. “Well, this would explain what Jen was talking about when she said that Alicia found the footage a week before she left Yemen, but she spent the time making a dub and sending it to you.” She passed the note to Chegwidden and examined the tape. “Have you taken a look at this?”

“No, which is why I’m giving it to you because you will know how to follow up on this.”

Mac passed the disc back to Teri. “You hold on to it, then. When we’re done here, you can come back to JAG and watch it there.” She looked at Chegwidden. “Is that OK?”

Chegwidden nodded. “We will need some experts to collaborate the events on the tape, but I think the master guns can gather them up for us.”

Mac nodded. “All right.” She and the admiral started walking to the front, and noticed that Teri was still standing there. “Hey, I thought you were going to the funeral.” She waved her along.

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

“We are here today, united, to celebrate the life of Alicia Renee’ Coleman Sanders,” the chaplain said. “We are not mourning her passing, or remembering the circumstances for why we are gathered in this place. We are here to remember the person that was Alicia.”

Mac, Teri, Rabb, Torres and his wife Anita, and Chegwidden sat in the row behind Maggie and her younger sister Sandra and her husband David, who flew in from California the day before. Jen sat in a wheelchair in the aisle beside her mother, holding her hand.

“We will now have testimonials by some of her friends, the people who knew her best. Commander Rabb.” The chaplain gestured in Rabb’s direction.

Rabb stood and walked to the lecturn, pausing briefly by the silver casket in front of the pulpit.  A picture of Alicia, in her wedding dress as she stood beside her father, rested on a stand. He touched it lightly before climbing the steps to the vacated lectern and faced the crowd, briefly glancing in the direction of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, sitting on the opposite side of the chapel, and his gaze fell on a face he thought he would not see here.

The President of the United States.

Rabb quickly gathered himself and focused his attention on the crowd. “Alicia and I went to law school together,” he said. “We became good friends when she was having a rough time with our corporate law series. I took the time to help her out with that. I looked at her as my little sister.”

Maggie and Jen looked up at Rabb as he continued. “When I made the decision to accept a Navy commission and become a pilot, she took one look at me and said ‘So you have to live out your Top Gun fantasy, huh?’

The crowd laughed at that remark. Even Maggie smiled briefly. “So I signed up, and started going to flight school in Pensacola. Since Alicia was from Florida, we hung out a lot. A lot of people ask why we never married. I always told them I can’t marry my little sister.”

“During my training, I met a Federation officer by the name of Michael Sanders. Probably the best friend a man could ever have. He was going through simulation training for space fighters they were putting on several starships. I brought him to a party Alicia was throwing to celebrate Jen’s soccer championship.”

“That decision was one I never regretted, because there were things I knew I could never give Alicia that I knew Michael could, and they were a perfect match from the start. I was happy that they were engaged, I was happy that they were married, and I’m happy that because of that union, they have three healthy, beautiful children.”

“But unfortunately, I’m not happy today. Two people separated forever for crimes they committed. One is lying before us in this casket. The crime? To free her husband. The other is frozen a million miles in space. The crime?”

He stared at the President as he spoke. “To keep this country free.”

The President stared at Rabb in silence as he stepped away from the lectern and walked down the steps towards his seat, stopping long enough to whisper an apology to Jen and Maggie before walking to the back of the church, pushing the door to the outer lobby area.

He stood back there as one of Alicia’s former associates stepped to the lectern but his attention was more focused on his pacing from one side of the lobby to the other.

“Commander?”

Rabb turned to the voice’s direction. The Secretary of the Navy stood at the door, having slipped in so quietly Rabb did not hear him.

“Good afternoon, sir. Sir, if you excuse me…”

“A moment of your time, Commander.” The Secretary stepped fully into the lobby, closing the door softly behind him. “If you please.”

Rabb sat down on the small cushioned bench indicated by the Secretary, who sat down beside him with his fingers steepled, pointing to the marble floor. “Commander, I know you are upset about the fact that Admiral Sanders was not released, but I just want you to know that you got the wrong guy.”

“Sir, with all due respect, the President issued the order to Supreme Commander Knox. Admiral Chegwidden was there when he told him.”

“Yes, he did. He did so at my request.”

Rabb sat back at this revelation. “Why, sir?”

“The President was all ready to release Sanders for forty-eight hours under constant guard. I was also, but early last week we received Intel reports of Yemen terrorists in the area. We didn’t know of their intentions until Sunday when we learned of the shooting. At that time I advised the President that Admiral Sanders should not be released. At least for now.”

“Their intentions?”

“Whatever Mrs. Sanders brought back with her on that trip, they wanted back. Evidence that would clear her husband.”

“Oh, that. Well, sir, we have the evidence.”

The Secretary looked back at Rabb in disbelief. “But from your report you filed with A.J., I thought it was taken at the time of the shooting.”

Rabb shook his head. “That was correct, sir. But a reporter friend of Mrs. Sanders was mailed the real disc. After the funeral we’re going to check it out.”

The Secretary looked at the far wall with a thoughtful expression. “This changes things, then.” He turned his gaze to Rabb. “I trust JAG’s judgment, Commander. Do you think that this tape is legit?”

“From what Jennifer Coleman said about the “extra precautions” her sister talked about last Saturday, Alicia did something over there that ticked somebody off, and she caught wind of it. She did what she had to do. Unfortunately, whoever killed her and her father planned ahead here in the States where she would feel…protected and safe. Her guard would be down.”

The Secretary rose to his feet. “I need to get back, Commander, but I just thought you ought to know that if you want to direct some of your anger, direct it to me.”

Rabb got to his feet and crossed his arms. “No, sir. I have no anger now. I actually have pity.”

The Secretary gave him a quizzical look. “Pity?”

“Yes, sir. Pity for anyone who gets in Mike Sanders’ way.”

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

Admiral Chegwidden sat back in his seat and folded his arms as Teri Tanner pressed the eject button on the disc player. “Well, that tears it. Sanders and Austin were in the right all along.”

Rabb and Mac sat in chairs in front of the admiral’s desk as Tanner took the disc out and set it on the desk. “How are you going to work it?”

“From the commander’s conversation with SECNAV, the powers that be are aware that we hold Sanders’ key in our hands. It cannot be denied. However, I have to agree with the Supreme Commander on this one. I wouldn’t have if I hadn’t heard anything about terrorists in the country. It would be best to keep him up there until the threat has been neutralized.”

“Or forgotten, which is what they might want to do with it, sir,” said Rabb.

“No, Commander, I don’t think so. Remember, we haven’t had a terrorist attack on our soil since 9/11. The government has worked very hard to make sure something like that is never repeated.”

Tanner took the conversation in with a gradual look of disgust growing on his face. “Excuse me, but with all due respect, we have the evidence to prove the innocence of two of our greatest war heroes. Why are we talking like we’re going to sit on it?”

“Because, Ms. Tanner, those same two war heroes, especially one who just lost his father-in-law and wife to a well-planned assassination attempt, would become reanimated, learn of this news and will want revenge.” Chegwidden leaned over and tapped the disc with his finger for emphasis. “The damage they by themselves would cause would make this tape look like a cartoon.”

The intercom buzzed on Chegwidden’s desk. “Excuse me.” He pressed the button. “Yes, Tiner?”

“Excuse me, sir. Lieutenant Singer has the information you were looking for, and request permission to bring it in.”

“Granted, Tiner. Thank you.” Chegwidden released the button and grabbed the disc as if to put it in his desk, but then pressed the intercom button again. “Tiner, could you come in here for a second, please?” He released it as the door opened and Lieutenant. Lauren Singer walked in, followed closely by Petty Officer Jason Tiner.

Singer walked past Mac and Rabb without a greeting and placed a folder on the admiral’s desk. “Here is the list of possible terrorist sightings in the past two weeks, sir. I was able to pull photos on four of them. It’s not a big list.”

Chegwidden thumbed through the list and sighed. “Thank you, Lieutenant.” He looked at Teri Tanner. “Ms. Tanner, this is one of my JAG attorneys, Lt. Singer, and my yeoman, Petty Officer Tiner.”

Singer looked at Tanner with a sense of recognition. “Ms. Tanner. You are a reporter, correct?”

“Yes, Lieutenant. I am.”

Singer smiled. “Excellent. That is a great profession. Perhaps you would like to do a story on JAG someday? I’m quite sure officers like the admiral and myself would make excellent subjects.”

Rabb and Mac looked at each other. Mac rolled her eyes to the ceiling.

“That would be an excellent idea, Lieutenant. I’m quite sure the admiral would allow that to happen in the near future, wouldn’t you agree, sir?”

Chegwidden looked at Singer. “That will be all, Lieutenant, thank you.”

Singer smiled at the admiral and moved towards the door. Tiner stepped aside to let her pass and moved to the desk as the door closed. “You wanted to see me, sir?”

Chegwidden handed him the disc. “Yes, find two recorders and make a copy of this disc for me. Bring Gunny Galindez or Top Torres in on it, but other than the people in this office, those two men, and Lt. Roberts, no one else should see what’s on it without my consent. Understood?”

“Yes, sir.” Tiner looked at Tanner. “Excuse me, Ms. Tanner? May I have your autograph?”

“That will be all, Tiner.”

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

Jen sat in her wheelchair by the front door leading to the MAC flight airport, taking a big drag off of a cigarette. She realized that she had never smoked the one she lit before…

No…

Fighting back a sniffle, she took another drag as a second car pulled in front of the airport. A somewhat familiar Naval lieutenant got out of the driver’s side and went to the back door to permit Admiral Chegwidden and Commander Rabb to exit
the car.

Rabb looked around before seeing Jen and started walking in her direction, but stopped when he saw the cigarette. “Uh, Jen, what are you doing?”

“Don’t start, Harm. This is about the only thing that keeps me sane, OK?” She took another drag. “I had to hear the riot act from Mom for an hour last night.”

Rabb nodded, knowing that she is not going to heal overnight. “How long did the doctor say you’re going to be off your feet?”

“For about a month. Then I start rehabbing, but I think I’m going to do my rehab at Chapel Hill. Mom said that after everything’s settled she’s going to come and stay up there with me for a couple of weeks, maybe months. Who knows?” She sighed. “I’m wondering what she’s going to do with the kids. Trying to keep them straight and help me at the same time. It’s going to be a pain.”

“You have each other, and that’s counts,” said Chegwidden. “You two need each other now more than ever.” He looked at his watch and nodded at Roberts, who smiled at Jen as he went inside the airport. “Bud’s going to see if your flight is ready, and also to make sure everything’s loaded up and ready to go.” He left out the part of her father’s body being loaded in the cargo section of the plane.

The airport front door opened and Maggie Coleman exited the building, followed by her sister. “Harm, Admiral. You didn’t have to drive all the way up here.”

“Well, we’re sorry that we can’t go any further with you, Miss Coleman, but we want to let you know that all of JAG will be thinking about you during this trying time for you and your family.”

“Thank you, Admiral. I really appreciate it very much.” She turned to Jen, who had just put her cigarette out in the ashtray beside her. “Are you ready, Hun? They’re going to put you on first.”

“Yeah. I’ll be there in a minute, Mom. I need to talk to Harm in private.”

Maggie nodded, and she and the admiral walked into the building. Harm squatted in front of Jen. “What’s up?”

“Harm, are they going to release Mike?”

“Well, we’re going to have to wait and see. Those same terrorists that went after you are still out there, and if Mike was on the street, well, I’ll feel bad for the poor soul who pissed him off.”

Jen nodded once and held her arms out. Harm sat up and gently embraced her. “I’m going to miss you, Harm.”

“I’m going to miss you, too, kiddo. When I find out anything, you and your mom will be the first to know.”

An audible beep sounded from Rabb’s jacket pocket. He pulled himself away from Jen and reached for his global. “Hmm.  Mac never sends me a text message.”

Jen looked at Rabb as his face fell to one full of fury. He closed it up and replaced it in his pocket. “Dammit!”

“What’s wrong?”

“I’ll tell you as soon as I find the admiral. C’mon.” Harm went behind Jen’s chair and grabbed the handles, pulling her backwards into the building. Once he was clear of the doors, he swung the chair 90 degrees so Jen was now in front. Quickly he steered the chair over to where the admiral was standing with Bud and the Coleman sisters. The stroller holding the triplets was mercifully silent for the moment.

“Admiral, you’re not going to like this,” said Harm as he drew closer to the group.

“What’s on your mind, Commander?”

“Mac just sent me a message. Webb’s at the office.”

“So? Webb’s always there, usually with a trick up his sleeve or if he wants….” Chegwidden’s voice trailed off as his eyes widened.

Rabb nodded. “He’s there for the disc.”

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

“Webb, you are crazy. What makes you think that recording is going with you?”

Lieutenant Col. MacKenzie stood in front of the admiral’s office with her hands on her hips. Her gaze bore down hard on the man standing in front of her, an equally penetrating stare returned to the Marine.

Clayton Webb has been a participant with and against JAG in some of their games. Obviously he was willing to play this one. “Colonel, I understand what you are doing and you can stop being the bouncer for one of those clubs in Georgetown. I’ll be more than happy to sit and talk to Lieutenant. Sims or Tiner until the admiral returns.”

“No, you will sit and talk to me in my office.”

Webb sighed. “Very well.”

Mac waved him forward ahead of her. “Don’t think I’m letting you out of my sight.” She looked toward Tiner, Lt. Sims and Gunnery Sgt. Galindez who were gathered in the center of JAG’s administration section. “No one goes into the admiral’s office without my permission.”

“Yes, ma’am,” said all three in unison.

Mac turned and went into her office. Webb was already seated in one of the chairs in front. She closed the door and sat down behind her desk. “Webb, what is all this about?”

Webb leaned forward. “Mac, I like Mike Sanders just like anyone else, and I feel bad for what happened to his family. I really do. When I first heard about this disc, I was for one ready for some payback to be done.” He reached into his jacket pocket and pulled a folded piece of paper out, which he held out to Mac. “Then I got this.”

Mac took the paper and unfolded it, but didn’t even need to read anything else except the top of the page. “A search warrant?”

“The government is not taking any chances, Colonel. In order to smooth over relations overseas, they will risk having a few terrorists running around here for a few days, and risk the displeasure of Mike Sanders…in less than fifty years. They want that disc.”

“This is ludicrous, Webb. The government needs to own up to the fact that two innocent men need to be released.”

“It doesn’t matter, Colonel. Even if you get a new trial with the evidence, the government will make a motion to suppress it for the good of the nation.” Webb leaned back in his chair. “I’m sorry, Mac, but like it or not, I have to leave here with that disc.”

The intercom buzzed on Mac’s desk. She pressed the button. “Yes, Tiner?”

“Ma’am, the admiral and commander are back. They’re waiting for you and Special Agent Webb in the admiral’s office.”

“Thank you, Tiner.” Mac released the button and rose from her chair. “We’ll have to see what the admiral thinks about this.”

Mac rose from her chair and led Webb out of her office back to where they faced off minutes ago. Tiner, sitting at his desk, nodded at the colonel as she walked by. She knocked on the door and pushed it open.

Chegwidden stood behind his desk, with Rabb standing beside the fireplace, not acknowledging the newcomers. On the admiral’s desk laid the disc.

Mac’s eyes widened in shock. “Sir, you can’t!”

Chegwidden held up a hand. “Colonel, we have no choice. I was on the phone in great length with the Secretary of Defense, the Secretary of the Navy, and Webb’s boss at the CIA. Their orders stand.”

Chegwidden lowered his hand to pick up the disc and held it out to Webb. “Mr. Webb, is this what you’re looking for?”

Webb walked over and accepted the tape. “Admiral, for what it’s worth, this is over my head, too.”

“I know, Webb. Wouldn’t be a first time, huh?”

Webb started to reply but decided against it. He nodded to the admiral and Mac and looked briefly at Rabb, who still ignored him. Shrugging slightly, he turned around and exited the office.

As soon as the door closed, Chegwidden sat down. “Commander, you can drop the act now.”

Rabb looked at the admiral and grinned. “How did I do, sir?”

“You performed admirably. Colonel, you too.”

Mac looked dumbfounded.  “Excuse me but did I miss something here?”

“Probably, Colonel, which played to our advantage. You remember when I asked Tiner to make a copy of the disc?”

Mac thought back and then smiled. “So they can have the original, then?”

“The original? No, we want them to think that they have the original, but all they have is the copy.” Chegwidden pulled a side drawer opened and reached in, pulling out a disc
similar to the one Webb left with. “We still have the original.”

Mac smiled. “All right, so what are we going to do now, though? If we try to come forth with a new trial, the government will simply suppress the evidence for the sake of national security.”

Chegwidden nodded, looking at Rabb with a smile. Rabb smiled back.

“We’re going to take it underground. Let the small political newsletters, the internet sites, the freelance reporters, anyone who is in for the importance of it, and not the money.”

Chegwidden stopped when an audible knock was heard at his door. “Come.”

The door opened and Teri Tanner entered with a stack of manila folders and a data pad cradled in her arm.  Not to mention the smile on her face. Chegwidden rose and pointed at her.

“And she will be the one to do it.”

FIN

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

In the second story, “Redemption – Volume 2: Awakening,” the Federation, twenty-five years later, finds itself under constant attack from an unknown enemy, but not before making an unexpected and historic discovery.

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Angel’s Legacy

SUMMARY: What was going through Dukat’s mind in the period between Ziyal being shot, up to when he gave Sisko his baseball back?  Based on the seventh season episode “Sacrifice of the Angels”

 

DISCLAIMER: I don’t own Star Trek, have never owned it.  That honor goes to Paramount and the Roddenberrys, and whoever deserves the credit.

 

AUTHOR’S NOTE: Yes, I know, Dukat was intended to be a purely evil character.  However, he was also the most rounded out because through that evil, he had this love for his daughter.  It was mainly a loved based on the fact that Ziyal was no more than an extension of himself, but it was fatherly love nonetheless.  The way I interpreted his character arc was that he really began to go insane after Ziyal’s death.  Again, it’s only my interpretation, I’m not saying that it’s cannon.

 

Deep Space Nine: Angel’s Legacy

By Sonia Wong

 

He had seen many things; he had felt many things before, but never anything like this. Whatever intense emotion he had felt before was nothing compared to what he felt now. The loss of his daughter was more than he could bear. She had been lost and found and he had found her and kept her because he could not kill her.

 

He could not kill her because she was of his flesh; she was a product of his strength and passion for all things beautiful. She was a part of him, she had his blood. His blood and that of a Bajoran comfort woman. Yes she was his bastard daughter, but it didn’t matter. She was his daughter, she was of his blood, and in her, he felt more joy than with his own legitimate children.

When his family found that he took his bastard daughter home, they all left him. Only Ziyal stayed. It had warmed his cold heart then, melted the ice around the organ that let him live. She stayed with him out of love and curiosity. Being a father was something he had never known. He had come to find that the bond between father and daughter was the strongest bond of them all.

But that bond had been cut. He watched, eyes wide with terror as Ziyal melted away from him, shot by Damar, the man he trusted the most in a world of founder shape-shifters, violent Jem’Hadars, and syrupy Weyouns.

 

Damar. How could he do this? How could Damar do this to him, the legendary Gul Dukat? Legends had feelings too. He felt rage at his former friend. As he held her body, as he wept his grief as he was deluding himself and her with assurances of comfort and joy of the future, he was thinking of ways to avenge her. He was thinking of how to kill his friend.  He was thinking of every known poison, starting with the most agonizing ones. He was thinking of slicing Damar’s throat and crushing the life out of him with his bare hands. But one look at his daughter’s shuddering chest, those thoughts stopped. He knew. He knew that his rage was only a cover to what he really felt, sadness and pain.

 

As the realization that Ziyal would never come back to him alive dawned upon him, a slow burning fire coursed through his veins. But the feeling abruptly stopped as he looked upon Ziyal’s face.  It was the face of a sleeping babe, calm and peaceful. She wasn’t dead, she really wasn’t dead. She was sleeping and she would awake at any moment. She would awaken and laugh for him and paint for him. She was anything but dead to him. Anything.

 

He was a Legate now. Legate Dukat of Cardassia. He was equal to anything in the universe; he was probably superior to all. He was Legate Dukat. He was the one who brought glory and victory to the Cardassian Empire. He was Legate. He could give his daughter her heart’s desire.

 

He held Ziyal and pressed her to his heart, as if the beating organ could beat life into her. Somehow, to his mind, it worked. To his mind, it was a father giving live to his child, a child whose life was more precious than his own was. In one arm he held her to him, her sleeping face looking up at him. In another arm, another hand clutched a strange object Sisko called a baseball. Clutching the ball hurt, but he didn’t feel it. He was too busy reassuring Ziyal that everything would be all right, that once they got back to Cardassia they would be together—forever. He began to assure her. He rocked her in his arms and told her that he would build her a castle on Bajor, he would build a statue in her name. Her art would be preserved and immortalized forever. All in the universe would know her name and rightly so. Ziyal was a princess of Cardassia, his princess and no one else’s.

 

He never even knew what happened next. He never even knew when Starfleet returned and took Ziyal away from him. He only knew that when he realized that Ziyal was dead, truly dead, he felt only grief and remorse. He looked down at his hands. One hand clutched a baseball that was well worn and belonged to someone whose respect he desperately sought to have. The other hand was cold and empty. That hand held nothing. That hand hours before held his most precious treasure, the treasure that had been stolen from him.

 

He stayed sitting and looking down on his hands until he heard a familiar step and saw a familiar figure. It was tall, dark, and bald: Sisko. The expression that Sisko bore was that of pity, not respect. Deep inside of himself, Dukat was enraged. Did he fight all these battles and all these wars just to be looked upon by Sisko with pity? No, he didn’t. But Dukat did realize that Sisko felt sorry for him because he lost something that no one should ever have to lose. He lost a child.  Dukat could accept that. He could do nothing else. He might have felt the same in Sisko’s position. There was only one thing left to do. He gave the ball back.

 

“I forgive you too,” he said and he meant it. He forgave Sisko and Weyoun and Damar and everybody in the war. It wasn’t really what he wanted, but it was what Ziyal would have wanted. Peace. He did it so that her soul would rest in peace. He wanted her to rest, safely, with the knowledge that her father was not the monster that people thought he was. He wanted her to rest in peace so that he could feel at peace, so that all those close to her would feel peace as well.

It was what she would have wanted.

 

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Three to Beam Up

Name: LKillingsworth
Main characters: Kirk, Spock & McCoy
Summary: A missing scene from “the Empath”, after the Vyanns disappear with Gem, but before we next see Kirk, Spock and McCoy on the bridge.
Title: Three to Beam Up

Stardate 2269

“Well, I don’t know about you, but I’m glad that’s over,” Dr. McCoy sighed, slowly pushing himself up. Gem may have taken away the actual injuries, but he still had a hell of a headache and he ached all over.

In an instant, both Kirk and – surprisingly – Spock were at his elbow, lending helping hands. He batted them off, saying, “I’m all right!”

“You weren’t ‘all right’ a few minutes ago, Bones,” Kirk pointed out quietly. McCoy looked guiltily at Kirk. Truthfully, he hadn’t expected to live long enough to see Kirk or Spock’s reactions to his descision, and, now that he was alive, well, and standing before them, he suddenly felt like a guilty schoolboy.

“Jim – ” McCoy began, but Kirk waved him off. “Don’t,” Kirk said softly. “I don’t want to hear it. I…I understand, I do, honestly.”

“Well, in any case,” McCoy stressed, “I am sorry for knocking you out like that. You too, Spock.”

“You’re actions, though unethical, are highly admirable, doctor.” Spock replied in a low voice.

McCoy ducked his head, fiddling with his tricorder. “Well? Are we going to just stand around here all day?”

Kirk paused, gazing at his old friend, thinking on bygone days – these past two-and-a-half years on the Enterprise, their first meeting – God, could it be nearly fifteen years ago? He’d almost lost him, in a foolish, brash, wonderfully brave and selfless act. It was a quieting thought. And, considering what Bones had done, it was quite humbling also.

McCoy realized he was not only under the close, soft-eyed scrutiny of the captain, but Spock as well.

Spock didn’t want to admit to emotion, even now. He had trouble enough just around Jim, his best friend (even if he only admitted Jim to being so to himself, and even then it was in a deep, secret place hidden away in his human half). But around the doctor, who he still stoically refused to admit as a friend – at least not yet – and instead simply partook in the doctor’s frequent sparring matches with a liking and fondness that bordered on affection. However, the events of the past half-hour brought all this to head and even he had to bow to the fact he’d felt a great sense of loss and sadness when he’d told Jim that the doctor would die. Had he been completely human, it would have been impossible to say. Even when his Vulcan half said it, his inner human half cried at the words. Now…now, in that same secret place reserved previously for Jim and his parents – and Sybok – alone, he allowed the doctor in as well. And then he swiftly closed and locked away that secret place, back into the shadows, hidden, where it resided.

Uncomfortable with the stares of his two closest friends, McCoy asked again, “Well?!”

Kirk’s mouth quirked slightly, and though he grabbed his communicator, he didn’t open it quite yet. Instead, he reached out and, for a brief moment, embraced Dr. McCoy, blinking back tears and promising himself to no longer take things, like the steady friendship of the two men beside him, for granted. Who knows when fate and situations such as these could suddenly rip one – or, unbearabe as it was to think of, both – of them away from him?

Spock turned away slightly in respect for the captain’s sudden show of all-too-human emotion, but actually wasn’t bothered by it. He almost – almost – longed to do the same. McCoy, surprised at first, finally returned the hug for the shortest of seconds before stepping away, turning around so they couldn’t see him hurriedly scrub his eyes.

Kirk flipped open the communicator and said in a strong, clear voice that gave no hint of the emotional battles they’d all been through in the past thirty minutes, “Kirk to EnterpriseThree…to beam up.”

And Captain James T. Kirk, Spock of Vulcan and Doctor Leonard H. McCoy hoped there’d be “three to beam up” for a long time to come.

Finis.

 

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Union of Treks

Union of Treks

Captain’s Personal Log, Stardate 48192.3:
We are approaching Harmonis – yet another red planet.   Time and time again, I have asked for another colored planet, but they keep giving me these red ones.   Damn Starfleet.   We are here to receive a Starfleet dignitary who is to brief us on an imperative situation which has arisen.
Ah, here comes that imbecile Riker.   I suspect he is after my job.
*
“Captain, we’re approaching the planet Harmonis,” Data reported.
“Thank you, Mister Data,” Picard said.   He turned to Riker.   “Excuse me while I approach the viewer and frown some,” he told his first officer.
“By all means, sir,” Riker said.
Picard rose, approaching the viewer in his casual, yet speculative style.   “Lieutenant Worf,” he said finally.
“Yes, sir?” the Klingon asked.
“Advise me.”
“We should attack,” Worf said eagerly.
“Hmmm,” Picard mused thoughtfully, resting his chin on one hand.   “No, I don’t think so,” he said finally.   “We haven’t established a firm storyline yet.   Open a frequency instead.”
“Aye, sir.   Frequency open, sir.”
Picard nodded his acknowledgement.   “This is Jean-Luc Picard, Captain of the U.S.S. Enterprise.”
“Hello, Captain,” the response came back, as the viewer flickered to the image of an elderly gentlemen.   “Good to see you.”
“Thank you,” Picard nodded once more.   “Starfleet’s advised that you’ve a dignitary for us.”
The old man nodded.   “We’ll beam him across,” he said.
Then the viewer flickered off.
“What a strange exchange.   Counselor, did you receive anything from him?”
“Only minute perceptions, but nothing focused.”
“Do you ever receive any focused sensory input?”
“No, of course not.   Things would be too easy then.”
“Of course.”
“Sir,” Riker broke in, “I would advise going down to meet this dignitary in the transporter room.”
“Yes, of course.   Data, Worf, come with us.” The two of them rose, leaving some moronic and speechless unknowns to fill their positions as Picard led them out.
*
“I wonder who it could be,” Riker mused, once they were in the transporter room.
“Well Starfleet’s been extremely abstract about this whole affair,” Picard said.   “Some unspecified item stolen from a Starbase, an unknown dignitary coming aboard the ship.   You know, Starfleet can be annoying at times with all these precautions they take.”
“You think something important is going on?” Riker asked.
“No doubt.”
“Sir,” Transporter Chief O’Brien interjected, “Harmonis is signaling readiness to beam over the dignitary.”
“Excellent,” Picard said.   “Confirm.”
“Can I have another line?”
“No,” Picard refused.
Swearing under his breath, O’Brien engaged the transporter.    The beam suffused the pads in its gentle blue light, brightening until a humanoid form took shape there.   Then gradually, it faded to reveal none other than…
“Mister Spock!” Picard exclaimed, somewhere between bewilderment and genuine delight.
“Spock!” Riker said, just as emotional.
“Mister Spock!” Data said, with as much feeling as the android could muster.
“Romulan!” Worf cried out in warning, reaching for his phaser.
“No, Worf,” Picard said quickly, reaching out with a hand to stop him.   “It’s Mister Spock;   you remember him, don’t you?”
Worf’s eyes narrowed speculatively.   “Oh yes,” he said.   “Sorry.”
“Fascinating,” Spock iterated, studying Worf.   “I must attempt to mindmeld with it.”
“Perhaps later,” Picard suggested.   “Perhaps you would care to explain the situation to us first?”
“Yes, of course,” Spock nodded.   “Lead the way.”
Picard nodded and led them out.
“I wish I’d had another line,” O’Brien said after they were gone.
*
In chambers, all the officers had gathered to listen to Spock.    “We’ll be proceeding to Starbase #618 to pick up a technical device important to the accomplishment of our mission,” he said.
“What is it?” Riker asked
“Allow me to remain mysterious awhile,” Spock said.   “That way, you can talk about the validity of what I say behind my back later.”
“Oh, of course,” Riker said.
“Instead, let me advise you of the situation,” Spock said.    “An item of irreplaceable value has been stolen from Starbase #3 by the Ferengi.   Currently, the U.S.S. Detroit, captained by one Jesse Brown, is in pursuit.   We have been ordered to intercept and lend assistance once we reach Starbase #618.”
“Jesse Brown,” Picard spoke up.   “We went to the Academy together.   Why I haven’t seen him in years.”
“Yes, of course,” Spock said.   “Now logic would suggest that Captain Brown’s death will shortly be forthcoming.”
“What?” Picard scoffed.   “I don’t understand.”
“He is referring to the simple but poignant fact that not one of your old friends has ever survived in this series,” Data pointed out.   “They all die shortly after your initial reunion.    To put it simply, you are a jinx, Captain, a bad omen, a-”
“Enough, Mister Data,” Picard said.
“Aye, sir.”
“So what do we do?” Picard asked.
“Conveniently, our arrival at the Starbase #618 will put us in range for subspace communications with the U.S.S. Detroit,” Spock explained.   “After Captain Brown and the Detroit are destroyed, we’re to take up the chase.”
“And this device;” Riker said, “are you sure you can’t tell us what it is?”
“I’m afraid that must remain a secret,” Spock persisted.
“A secret?” Riker didn’t look happy.   “We’re not a taxi-service, Mister Spock!
“Number One,” Picard calmed him down.   “What have the Ferengi stolen, Mister Spock?”
“I’m afraid that must also remain confidential,” Spock said.
“What can you tell us then?” Picard asked.
“That I am to give this vessel a thorough once-over,” Spock said.    “Too many anomalies have been popping up of late.   Starfleet’s concerned.”
“What systems do you plan to investigate, honky?” LaForge asked.
“All of them,” Spock said.   “Now, if you could please make all the arrangements, Captain.”
“Of course,” Picard nodded solemnly.
*
“This, of course, is the holodeck,” Riker said.
“Of course,” Spock said.   “Show me a sample program.”
Riker nodded.   “Computer,” he said, “please choose and initiate a program at random.”
“Program initiated, sir,” the computer responded.
The doors to the holodeck opened slowly.   From within came the sound of moaning.   When the doors had opened to their fullest, a waft of hot steam rushed out, and through it, they could see a number of beautiful naked woman awaiting them in a sauna.
“Whoa, Commander!” Wesley exclaimed.   “Your aerobic’s program!”
Riker blushed a little.   “Computer,” he said, “choose another program.” Then, “Wesley, how did you know what that was?”
Wesley looked uncomfortable.   “A lucky guess?” he put forward abashedly.
“Fascinating,” Spock said.
“Program initiated,” the computer said.
Now, the holodeck was furnished in a luxurious red, a table as big as a tennis-court against the furthest side.   Behind it, frozen in stasis, were two old men, one seated, another standing and waiting patiently with his hands behind his back.
“What is this?” Spock asked.
“Computer,” Riker said, “identify program.”
“Captain Picard’s James Bond scenario,” the computer responded.   “He was getting a little tired of Dixon Hill.”
Spock arched a solitary eyebrow.
“Well he’s got the accent for it,” Riker said.   “Do you want to interact with the program, Mister Spock?”
“Not yet, thank you,” Spock said.   “Statistics would tell us that the holodeck only has a five per cent successful functioning rate.   Were I to enter, and interact with the program, it would undoubtedly short-circuit and trap me in there while a vital moment expended itself on the bridge – a moment, no doubt, perhaps only I could handle.”
“So what’re you saying, sir?” Wesley asked.
“Perhaps later,” Spock said.
“Oh, of course,” Riker said.
“Commander Riker,” Picard’s voice sounded through his communicator.
“Yes, sir?”
“Is Mister Spock with you?”
“Yes, sir.”
“Excellent.   Mister Spock, we’re arriving at the Starbase #618.   Would you join us on the bridge, please?”
“Of course, sir.   Commander, if you would lead the way.”
“Certainly, sir,” Riker agreed.
Minutes later, they were on the bridge, the face of an old and fragile man on the viewer.   He was sweating and trembling profusely.   “Oh,” he was saying, “about time.   Take this device away from me – please!   It’s driving me mad with temptation.”
“Of course,” Picard nodded, turning and indicating to Worf to mute the frequency.
“What’s happening, sir?” Riker asked.
“It would seem that Lt. Belkis there,” Picard indicated the man on the viewer, “is proving somewhat over-eager in shipping off this device.   Counselor, can you sense anything?   Are you getting anything from him?”
“The Lieutenant is feeling extremely nervous, Captain,” Troi answered.
“Well anybody can tell that by the way he’s sweating,” Picard pointed out.
“And he’s also agitated.”
“That’s also obvious by the way he’s trembling,” Riker added.
Picard turned to Spock.   “What is this device?” he asked.    “What is it, that could evoke such agitation?”
“If you will, Captain, beam it over, and I will show you,” Spock answered.
Picard nodded.   “Lt. Worf, please make the preparations,” he said.
“Aye, sir.”
*
They were in Cargo Bay #1.   The device beamed over looked something like a huge egg, as tall as Spock himself, and glossed over in a dull blue sheen.   On one side was a console.
“What is this, Mister Spock?” Riker asked.
“A time-teleportation device,” Spock answered.
“What?”
“This device allows us to beam any one figure out of the past,” Spock went on.   “In effect, it is almost a time-machine.”
“Intriguing,” Data said.
“But won’t that affect the time-space continuum?” Dr.    Pulavski asked.
“Not if we were to beam the figure just moments before his death.”
“And just who do we plan to bring back?” Picard asked.
“Admiral James T. Kirk,” Spock smiled.
*
“Computer,” Picard called, “abridged recall of Admiral Kirk’s history and death?”
“Admiral James T. Kirk,” the computer began, “hero of the Federation, responsible for the instigation of the first steps toward the Federation-Klingon alliance, savior of Earth on several occasions – in particular, against V-GA, and when he brought humpback whales out of the past – died by electrocution when he attempted to remove a piece of bread from his toaster with a fork.”
“Intriguing,” Data said.
Riker was grinning.   “That’s the way I want to go,” he said proudly.
Meanwhile, Spock’s fingers were dancing across the console of the device.
“I can now understand Lt. Belkis’ trepidation,” Picard said.
“You’re not going to get all moralistic and sermonizing on us, are you, Captain?” Riker complained.
“Yes.   Just imagine the possibilities,” Picard went on.   “You could bring back lost loves, beam away key figures who were responsible for shaping history.   The possibilities are endless.   Mister Spock, who created this?”
“We don’t know,” Spock answered.   “Conveniently, we found it to suit this storyline.   Ah, there, the programming is complete.” He pushed a button and said, “Initiate.”
The egg-shaped device flared with brilliant white light, forcing them all to turn away for fear of being blinded.   When they looked back, a seam had appeared straight down the center of its glossy exterior.   Slowly, it parted to reveal Admiral James T. Kirk with a fork in hand.
“Spock!” he exclaimed.   “What’s happened?   Who’s this bald guy?   Doesn’t he understand the magic of a hairpiece?”
Kirk, although obviously in his late fifties, or early sixties, still retained a note of vigor about his appearances.    He was dressed in the old Starfleet uniform.
“Jim, welcome to the 24th century,” Spock said.
Picard’s communicator beeped.   “Yes?” he said, opening a connection.
“Captain,” Worf’s voice rumbled, “we are now in range to communicate with the Detroit.”
“Very good, Mr. Worf.   We’ll be on the bridge shortly.” Picard closed the connection and turned to the others.   “Gentlemen, if you will.”
They followed him into a Turbolift and up onto the Bridge.    On the way, Spock apprised Kirk of the situation, telling him as much as he had told the others.
As they entered the Bridge, Worf said, “We have the Detroit on visual.”
The viewer flickered to reveal a man of about Picard’s age.    He was black, although his hair was graying, and had an affable, immediately likeable face.   “Jean-Luc,” he said, as if in shock, “don’t-!”
“Hello, Jesse,” Picard greeted him with genuine warmth.
“Shit, that’s torn it!” Captain Jesse Brown swore.
“Captain, unidentified vessel approaching from astern,” they could hear somebody on the Detroit shout out.   “She’s arming photons!”
“Shie-” Jesse Brown began.
Then there was a flare, and the Detroit was gone.
Data was looking at his sensors.   “It would appear the Detroit has been destroyed,” he said.
Picard sank mystified into his chair.   “My old friend,” he said.   “Dead?”
“Yes,” Spock said coldly.   “Your greeting was enough to condemn him instantly.”
“The enemy vessel has disappeared on an unknown heading at Warp speed, Captain,” Data reported.
“It is of no consequence.   We must now take up the Detroit’s pursuit of the Ferengi vessel,” Spock advised.
Picard nodded.   “Set a course to intercept the Ferengi, Mr. Data,” he said numbly.
“Aye, sir.”
“If you will excuse me now, Captain Picard,” Spock said, “but I must talk at length with Admiral Kirk.”
Picard nodded, and Spock led Kirk out.
*
“Were you receiving anything from those two, Counselor?” Riker asked Troi.
“As a Vulcan, Spock’s mind is closed to me,” Troi said.    “And Admiral Kirk hasn’t seemed to have adapted to the present situation, so his mind was almost completely confused.”
“Almost?” Picard asked.
“He did have certain lurid thoughts about me,” Troi admitted.
“Oh,” Picard said.   “This whole thing is rather mysterious.    What could have been stolen that would warrant such extremes as to have Admiral Kirk brought back from the past to assist us?    Whatever it is, it must be vital to our existence.” He coughed.
“Something wrong, Captain?” Riker asked.
“Just a moment of dizziness,” Picard said.
“Perhaps you should see Doctor Pulavski,” Troi suggested.
Picard nodded.   “Perhaps later,” he said.
*
“You can’t be serious, Spock!” Kirk exclaimed, after he’d been told everything.   “They couldn’t have stolen that!”
“They have, Jim.   Now you see how imperative our mission is, and why I endeavored to bring you out of the past.”
“You did the right thing, Spock.”
“Thank you, Jim.   I try to.”
“But what can I do?   Surely that bald guy’s competent enough to handle this?”
“He is, Jim, but I am afraid my presence here will endanger his judgement.   And I am sure other circumstances will arise which will compel his attention.   In such a case, I think only you could take his place.”
Kirk nodded.   “I’ll try to, Spock,” he said.   “I’ll try to.   But I’m not going to shave my head.”
*
“It seems you have some sort of virus, Captain,” Pulavski said.
“What sort, Doctor?   Be specific.”
“I can’t be sure, Jean-Luc.   It’s like nothing I’ve ever seen before, but I’m sure – as far as viruses aboard the Enterprise go – that it’s incredibly contagious.   We’re going to have examine the whole crew.”
“Is it fatal?”
“We can’t be sure, yet.”
“Well do what you have to do, Doctor.   I’ll be on the Bridge.”
Picard left her, and out in the corridor, he felt a momentary urge toward excessive violence.   He fought it down, regained his composure, and continued on his way.
*
“Ferengi vessel in range,” Worf reported.
“On viewer,” Picard said.
The Ferengi ship appeared on the screen, moving away from them at Impulse Speed.
“Open a frequency, Mister Worf.”
“Aye, sir, frequency open.”
“Ferengi vessel, this is Captain Jean-Luc Picard of the U.S.S. Enterprise,” Picard introduced himself.   “I instruct you to come to a complete stop and return the Federation property you have stolen.”
The Ferengi Damon appeared on the viewer.   “Never, Captain,” he said.   “We would rather die first.”
The viewer flickered off.
“Mr. Worf, arm a single photon and target their engines.”
“Aye, sir.”
“Fire!” Kirk shouted impulsively.
Worf fired, the photon striking the Ferengi vessel just under the hull.   There was a tremendous explosion.
“They are slowing, Captain,” Data said.
“Excellent.   Raise shields and prepare a tractor beam.”
“Shields and tractor beam inoperative, sir,” Data said.
“Captain, I’ve lost thruster control,” Wesley said.
“What’s happening?”
The Enterprise grounded to a halt, coming to a dead stop.   In front of them, the Ferengi vessel did the same.    The two ships loomed in space, capable of incredible destruction at any one time, and yet presently impotent.
“All offensive ship systems are down, Captain,” Data said.
Then a deep, booming voice sounded in the Bridge.   “Listen,” it began peevishly, “I’m sick of your violence, okay?    I’m just sick of it!   Are you listening?”
“Who are you?” Picard said, rightly identifying that the voice wasn’t Ferengi.
“I am Orthur, and you’ve entered my territory.   I will not abide violence in my territory, so I plan to destroy you.”
Picard bit back another cough.   “You can’t abide violence, yet you intend to destroy us?” he asked unbelievingly.   “Isn’t that something of a contradiction in terms?”
“Yes, you’re right.   Quite right.   I’ll get somebody else to do it.   Federation vessel, Ferengi vessel, prepare to die.”
“It would appear we’re in the grip of some higher life form,” Spock surmised.
“Data, can you scan the source of that voice?”
“Sensors are inoperative,” Data said.   “Tactical and Engines are inoperative.”
“This sounds familiar,” Kirk said gleefully.
“I can tell you, however, that the voice did not require the ship’s speakers to heard.”
“Counselor, did you sense anything?”
“Only unremitting disdain toward us and the Ferengi,” Troi answered.   “This Orthur is a being of immense power;   it considers are close to, if not, nothing.”
“Damn,” Picard said, then coughed again.
*
They were in chambers.
“The virus has spread,” Doctor Pulavski said.   “95% of the Enterprise’s compliment has it.   It appears, Mister Spock, that you were carrying the virus.”
Spock arched an eyebrow.
“As a Vulcan, you are immune to the virus’s effects.”
“What about everybody else?” Picard asked.   “Who else is immune?”
“Admiral Kirk, myself, Commander Riker, Wesley, Worf, and of course Mr. Data.”
“Why not Data?” Kirk asked.
“Mr. Data is a toaster,” Dr.    Pulavski said.
“I am not,” Data said indignantly.   “I am an android.”
“What’s the virus’s effects?” Riker asked.
“It affects our adrenaline, increasing it until we feel incredible hostility and anger.”
“Can you cure it?” Picard asked.
“I’m looking for the cure now,” Pulavski said.
“It’s obvious that I must take command,” Kirk said.
“You?” Riker asked.
“Yes, me.   I was brought out of the past to help deal with this.”
“I think it would be better if we pool our resources,” Spock said.   “Commander Riker is an exemplary officer, and I’m sure his assistance would be invaluable to you, Jim.”
“Oh, very well, if you want to be a spoilsport about it.”
“What are your plans?” Picard asked.
“First, quarantine everybody affected by the virus.   Secondly, I want all women of impressive measurements brought to my quarters.   Mr. LaForge – is that it, LaForge?”
“Sure thing, honky,” Geordi said.
“I want you to try and restore ship’s power.   Mr. Spock, you assist Dr.    Pulavski in finding a cure for this virus.” Kirk paused contemplatively.   “On second thought, belay those orders.   I have a better idea.”
He rose from his chair.   “Orthur,” he called out.   “Orthur!   Can you hear me?”
“I can hear you, pitiful human thing with an impressive waist-line,” the deep voice answered.
“Why do you seek to destroy us?”
“I have a deep abhorrence of all humans, and all their like.”
“Why?” Picard asked, then coughed.
“Because you are pitiful.   You are no comparison for my never-ending intellect, for my genius, for the capacity of all my knowledge.   So there;   nyahh.   I have summoned others to destroy you.”
“Were you responsible for the destruction of the Detroit?”
“No.   Other pitiful things like you did that.   Now, you have barely a day to live.   Goodbye.”
“No, Orthur, you can’t go!” Kirk shouted.
“Yes, I can.   I’m going to play my Super-Duper Nintendo.    Goodbye!”
Kirk shook his head.
“I think we should quarantine everybody who is sick,” Riker said.
“Yes, quite right,” Picard agreed unselfishly.   “As of now, I turn the command of the Enterprise over to Admiral James Tubby Kirk and Commander William Riker.   Computer, make a note of that.”
“Aye, sir.”
“Now,” Picard said.   “Do as you will.”
*
The sick were confined to their quarters, which the computer then sealed.   Meanwhile, Spock assisted Pulavski in her analysis of the virus, while Kirk and Riker toured the ship, looking for some possibility.
“I just want you to know, Admiral,” Riker was saying, “it’s a great honor to be working with you.”
“Thank you, Commander.   Actually, it’s a pleasure to be pressed back into service.”
“I imagine it would be.   What’s retirement like, if you don’t mind me asking?”
“Boring.”
“Didn’t you do anything to alleviate that?”
“Oh yes, I had many hobbies.   – Mountain-climbing, collecting antiques, whale-hunting.”
“Commander!” Data’s voice sounded over Riker’s communicator.    “We have an unidentified vessel approaching.”
“We’re coming, Data.   Hold on.”
*
Spock was tired.   He was sure he had the answer to the virus right on the tip of his tongue, but he couldn’t quite get a grasp on it.   To relax himself, he visited the Holodeck, initiating Commander Riker’s aerobics program just to see whether he had the complete grip over his emotions he always thought he had.
That was when the Enterprise rocked violently, and the Holodeck short-circuited, trapping him inside.
*
The ship on the viewer was huge, bigger than the Enterprise herself, and shaped like a triangle.   They had struck once, their photon crashing into the hull of the Enterprise.
“Damage, Data?” Riker asked.
“Minimal short-circuiting to ship systems,” Data answered.
“Incoming!” Worf warned.
“Call 911!” Kirk shouted.
The other ship struck again, her phasers cutting across the saucer-section of the Enterprise.   She rocked violently;   then, inexplicably, the attack halted.
“Enterprise,” the voice of Orthur said, “this is not the vessel I summoned to destroy you.   This is indeed the vessel that destroyed your fellow ship, the Detroit.   I am displeased with this vessel.    I will incapacitate it, also.   The other vessel is en route, however.   Prepare to be destroyed.”
Riker and Kirk exchanged a look.   “Lt. Worf, open a frequency to that vessel,” the former said.
“Aye, sir.”
The viewer flickered to the sight of a middle-aged man.    He looked at Riker, then at Kirk.   When his glare fell on Kirk, his eyes burned balefully.   “Yes, we have found you!” he exclaimed.   “At last, we have found you!”
“Me?” Kirk said.
“Yes.   Don’t you recognize us?”
“No.”
“We are your children, Kirk.   All of us.   We are the children born from your flings with women from all over the galaxy.   Do you realize all the child-support payments you’ve missed?”
“You’re my children?” Kirk repeated in astonishment.
“Stop repeating the obvious.   We’ve searched for you for years, for decades.”
“Why?”
“Like Luke Skywalker, we’ve come to destroy you, father.”
*
Picard was feeling excessively violent;   feeling this way, he regretted having not auditioned for Romper Stomper, but his agent had warned him away from the role on the basis he lacked even enough hair for that.
But it made him feel really pissed.
He banged his head against the walls for a few minutes, trying to work out the frustration.   But it was no help.   Suddenly, he was overcome with a madness, a wild desire to search, to destroy, to kill maim and shave.   Yes, he wanted it all.
Taking an errant hairpin from his set of drawers, he slid it into the computer console of the door, short-circuiting it.    The door slid open.
Picard laughed maniacally.
He was free.
Now he would make the galaxy pay.
*
“My own children want to destroy me,” Kirk said, sinking despondently into the center-seat.   “They want to kill me, me – their father, the man who loved their mothers, who cared for them, and treated them…God, this chair is uncomfortable.   Klingon?”
“Yes, Admiral?” Worf responded promptly.
“What is our status?”
“Nothing is working, sir.”
“Where’s Spock?” Kirk asked.   “He’ll get things working.”
“Admiral Spock has been trapped inside the holodeck!” Wesley cried out.
“Admiral,” Data said, “Captain Picard has escaped quarantine.    If Doctor Pulavski’s estimates are correct, he will be in a seriously aggrieved and hostile state.   What do you suggest?”
“We’ll avoid him,” Kirk answered.   “Mr. Crusher, go down to the Holodecks and try and get Spock out.”
“Me, sir?”
“Yes, you.”
“Aye, sir.” Wesley left the bridge.
“Isn’t that a bit dangerous, sir?” Riker asked.   “If Captain Picard has escaped and is dangerous, Wesley could be hurt.”
“Point taken, Commander.   Klingon, send some unknowns to accompany him.”
“Aye, sir,” Worf obliged.
“The secret to good command,” Kirk told Riker.   “Always surround yourself with unknown faces – they’re always the first to die.”
“Admiral, monitoring the approach of an unidentified vessel,” Data said.   “It is the Borg.”
“The Borg?” Kirk asked.   “What are they?”
“An extremely dangerous entity, Admiral.   They’re something like Cyborgs – part man, part machine.”
“Like the Six Million Dollar Man?”
“Worse.   They’ve been trying to assimilate us into their culture.”
“Admiral, Captain Picard is being hailed personally,” Worf said.   “As he is not available, will you receive the message?”
“Aye, Klingon, on-screen.”
The interior of the Borg ship appeared on the viewer.
“Enterprise, Captain Picard, prepare for assimilation.”
“Borg, this is Admiral James T. Kirk;   the Enterprise is under my command.   Will you speak with me?”
“Yes.   James Tiberius Kirk, Captain of Federation vessels Enterprise 1701 and 1701-A.”
“How do you know this?”
“Your name has been noted in files and systems probed aboard U.S.S. Enterprise 1701-D.   Admiral Kirk, prepare your people for assimilation.”
“No, I refuse.”
“Oh, don’t be like that.   Refusal is irrelevant, resistance is irrelevant, relevance is irrelevant.   All but you will be assimilated into our culture, Admiral Kirk.”
“Oh, and why not me?” Kirk grinned with seething arrogance and pride.   “Afraid I’d resist your assimilation techniques and destroy you, huh?”
“No.   We have no prosthesis to fit your stomach, chubby.    Prepare for assimilation.”
The viewer clicked off.
“What do we do, Admiral?” Riker asked.
“Where’s Spock?” Kirk asked.   “I want Spock.”
*
Wesley was attempting to bypass all the complex circuitry and shutdown systems for entry into the Holodeck using the same method Picard had – a hairpin.   Behind him stood two security officers.
“Wesley?”
Wesley froze.   It had the sound of a Borg voice, but the tone…he recognized that tone!
He turned.   Standing before him and the security officers was Captain Picard, but he was decked out in his Locutus outfit – the garb he’d been made to wear when he had been assimilated into the Borg.
“Captain?” Wesley asked.   “Why are you wearing that?”
“It lends me presence, Wesley,” Picard told him peacefully.    “Come with me.”
“Where?”
“To join the Borg.   They have re-established their contact with me, Wesley.   Come with me.”
“No.”
The security officers made a leap for Picard, but quite casually, he backhanded one into unconsciousness, and caught the charge of the other, and rammed his head into the wall.   Then he dropped the inert body to the floor.
“Come with me, Wesley.” Picard held out his hand.
“No.”
Wesley started to run.
*
“We have new assimilation techniques,” the Borg were saying, having reopened a connection with the Enterprise.   “We have new prosthesis, although unfortunately not in the Extra Large size, Admiral Kirk.
“Our special this week,” a specific Borg appeared on the viewer, “is this.” In one hand, he carried the prosthesis for the extension of a hand.   “It has connections to any energy input, computer system interpreters, programming apparatus, a knife, a fork, a spoon, a can-opener, and comes in a choice of seven scintillating colors.   We call it the Swiss Army Prosthesis.”
“Oh bother,” the booming voice of Orthur sounded on the bridge, “I had summoned these people to destroy you, but it appears they don’t intend to.” He sighed.   “Very well, I’ll restore all power to all ships, and you can destroy each other.    And just to show you what a good sport I am, I’ll let the victor go free.”
“Admiral, all systems coming back on-line,” Data said.
“Shields,” Kirk ordered, “and arm all weapons.   We have a battle to win.”
*
The Borged Picard chased Wesley into one of the other Holodecks.    A program had already been initiated.   Wesley found himself in a bleakly futuristic landscape.   He was standing on a narrow walkway, suspended thousands of feet in the air.   Where the door of the holodeck should have been was a shattered window.    Picard approached him slowly.
“There is no escape, Wesley,” Picard said.   “It is useless to resist.   Do not let yourself be destroyed as your father did.”
“No!”
Picard slapped him across the face, sending him sprawling.    The Captain was taking deep, measured breaths now.   It made him sound menacing.   He took a step forward;   Wesley backed away on palms and soles.
“There is no escape;   don’t make me destroy you,” Picard said.
“No.” Wesley continued to back away in terror.
“Wesley, your mother never told you what happened to your father…?”
“She told me enough;   she told me he was killed with you on a mission.”
“No, Wesley…I am your father.”
Wesley’s eyes went wide.   “No,” he refused to believe it, “that’s not true.   That’s impossible!”
“Search your hairline, for you know it be true.”
“No,” Wesley whined.
“Wesley, we can cure this travesty.   I have foreseen it.    Together, we can stop the premature balding which is ravaging the galaxy.   We-”
Somebody appeared behind Picard and put a hand on his shoulder.   Picard slumped unconscious, falling to the ground to reveal…
“Mr. Spock!” Wesley cried out in relief.
“Fascinating,” Spock said.   “An amended reproduction of what was said in the final scenes of The Empire Strikes Back.”
“It’s not true, is it, Mr. Spock?”
“No, I think not.   Your Captain is hallucinating, and presently, the Borg have regained their control of him.   These delusions are not to be unexpected.”
Wesley realized something.   “How did you get out of the Holodeck?”
“Power has been restored to the ship, and I have discovered the cure for this virus.”
“You’re amazing, Mr. Spock.”
“Yes,” Spock nodded his head, “I am.”
*
“What’s our status, toaster?” Kirk asked.
“Everything that was not working…now is working, but damaged,” Data said.
“Can’t you make it any simpler than that?”
“We are screwed, Admiral, to use a popular human colloquialism.”
Spock arrived on the bridge with the Borged Picard slumped over one shoulder.   Wesley came soon after.
“What happened to him?” Riker asked.
“I neck-pinched him,” Spock told them as he gently eased Picard down.   “And it appears that the Borg have regained their control over him.”
“What are our options?”
“If I could mindmeld with him, I could perhaps make contact with the Borg and initiate a command into their group conscious.”
“I like it, Spock.   But what about these other guys?”
“Which other guys?”
Kirk told him what had happened during his imprisonment in the Holodeck.
“To each his own, Admiral.   Commander Riker is familiar with the Ferengi, so I suggest you let him handle them.   As for your children, Jim, they are your children.   I think it only right that you treat them as such.”
“Nice and simple, but how do I get a fistfight out of it?”
“Sorry, Jim.”
Kirk sighed.   “What about Captain Picard?   What suggestion do you plan to implant in his head?”
“Last time, we tried sleep,” Riker told them.
“What?”
“Sleep,” Riker repeated.
“Is it that time already?”
“No, Admiral.   The Borg regenerate damages through a shutting down of the group conscious – or what we know as sleep.   Apparently, if there’s no damages to regenerate, then there’s some malfunction in the conscious – an overload or something.   Wesley could explain it.”
“No, thanks, I don’t have time for meaningless technobabble.   What about this virus?”
“I have come up with the solution for that, also,” Spock said.   “It would seem, Admiral, that you have been suffering from a lesser form of it for a lifetime.   Analyzing your DNA and metabolism, I have discovered an antibody to negate it.”
“That’s great, Spock.”
“Did he ever do anything himself?” Riker asked, pointing at Kirk.
“In the series, some times, in the movies, no, not really.    I came up with all the solutions.”
“Let’s hop to it, gentlemen,” Kirk said.
*
Wading through Picard’s conscious, past the fantasies of taking the Enterprise back into the 1990s to visit a hair clinic, of performing – Spock was sure – certain inhuman positional trysts with Doctor Crusher, the Vulcan reached the Borg group conscious.
Sleep, he told them.
Are you talking to us? they asked back.   Are you talking to us?   You must be talking to us because there’s no one else around;   just us ten thousand Borg.
Yes, I am talking to you, Spock thought firmly.   Go to sleep.
Spock expected an argument, a debate, a tussle of wills where all his Vulcan training and discipline would come to the fore, would battle with the group will of the Borg conscious.    Instead, he got:
Okay.
Spock broke the meld.   “It is done,” he said.   “I will take Captain Picard and my solution for the virus to Doctor Pulavski.”
“Very well, Spock,” Kirk said.   “Klingon, open a frequency to my children’s ship.”
“Aye, sir.”
“Father,” they appeared at once, the spokesman of them looking miffed, “you’ve neglected us.”
“I’m sorry, but I’ve been busy saving civilization as we know it,” Kirk told them.
“We must destroy you.”
“No.”
“We must.”
“I refuse to let you,” Kirk told them.   “Where do you come from, anyway?”
“We exist on a planet on the edge of the galaxy.”
“How many of you live there?” Riker asked.
“7346.”
“Admiral, the Borg ship just exploded,” Worf said.
“Fine, Klingon.” Then, “I have that many children?”
“No.   Only a quarter of us are children.   The rest are grandchildren, great-grandchildren, and as of last week, you have a great-great-grandchild.”
Kirk recalled his encounter with V-GER, and Spock’s recommendation that he treat it as a child.   This seemed similar enough.   He rose to his full height, which wasn’t very impressive standing next to Riker.
“You cannot destroy me,” Kirk told his offspring.   “I will not permit it.   You have acted in a disturbing and unruly manner.”
“Father-”
“Don’t father me.   Now I’ve had enough of this tantrum.   If you don’t start acting your age, then I’ll be forced to take action.”
“Father, we didn’t know you cared,” the spokesman said tearfully.
“Well, I do.   Now go home.   You’re grounded for a week.”
“Aye, father.   But we’re stuck here, just like you.”
“Then hang on a minute, while we sort this out.   Klingon, patch us through to those Ferengi.”
“Aye, Admiral.”
“It’s your show,” Kirk told Riker.
“Thank you, Admiral,” Riker said as the Ferengi appeared on the screen.   “Ferengi, this is Commander William T.    Riker of the U.S.S. Enterprise;   I demand that you lower your shields, surrender, and return the property that you’ve stolen from the Federation.   Or I give you a second alternative;   you can surrender, then lower your shields, and then return our property.”
“No, William T.    Riker of Enterprise,” the Ferengi said, “thiss is ourss.   We stole it.   It is ours now and forever.    Iff you want itt returned, you will pay a big ransom.”
“Don’t be so wishy-washy, Commander,” Kirk whispered.   “You remind me of Commander Decker.   He was wishy-washy.   Be firm.”
“I have a plan,” Riker said, “if you can evoke the assistance of your children.”
“Certainly.”
“Damon-?”
“Damon Sock,” the Ferengi introduced himself.
“Damon Sock, you are alone.   The vessel which awaits on your port side is in allegiance with us.   Surrender now, and be spared.”
Spock and Picard returned to the bridge.
“I do not believe you,” Damon Sock said.   “The otherr vesssel shot at you before.”
“That was a misunderstanding.   Now they are allied with us.   I warn you this last time.”
“Do asss you will, Commander.”
Riker nodded, Kirk transmitted, and the vessel Kirk’s children held fired on the Ferengi.   The Ferengi ship rocked into a spin.   Smoke surrounded Damon Sock.
“We surrender, Enterprise,” he cried out quickly.
“And you will return the property you have stolen?”
“Yess, yess.   We will transport to you.”
“They have lowered shields and are energizing, Commander,” Data informed him.
“Lower ours.”
“Aye, sir, shields lowered.”
“Bridge,” Transporter Chief O’Brien’s voice sounded via intercom, “I’ve just received a package down here.”
“Bring it up,” Riker said.
“Aye, sir.”
“Very good, Number One,” Picard appraised his First Officer.
“But we are still being held in the grip of this being Orthur,” Spock said.
“Yes.   My turn.” Picard approached the viewer, which showed the stars again.   He straightened out the creases in his uniform.   “Orthur, are you listening to me?”
“Yes,” the deep, booming voice sounded.
“We have vanquished your challenged;   we have emerged victorious.”
“But the two other ships still remain.   Destroy them.”
“No.   You do not understand the human spirit, Orthur.   We do not act out of barbarism, or out of a whim on matters of such importance, as it seems you do.   We act out of necessity.   We’ve faced your challenge and shown that violence is not a hereditary part of our nature.”
Kirk blushed.
Picard swept on.   “We are quite capable of reason when required,” he said, “and we have reasoned in this case, as you have witnessed.   Now, the choice is yours.   Free us, or destroy us;   prove the validity of your words.”
“Aw, shucks.   Okay, you can go.”
On the viewer, the Ferengi vessel turned and sped off into Warp speed.   The ship with Kirk’s children did the same in a different direction.
O’Brien appeared on the bridge with the package – a three foot long, one foot thick package wrapped in brown paper.
“This is what the Ferengi stole?” Picard asked.   “What is it?”
“I am sorry, Captain,” Spock said, taking the package and stuffing it inside his jerkin, “but it is of great secrecy.   I must not reveal its nature to you.”
“Very well,” Picard said, but the disappointment was obvious.
*
They were in Ten Forward.   A huge crowd had gathered, because Captain Picard was preparing to make a speech.
“Friends, crew of the Enterprise past and present, thank you for attending,” Picard said.   “I am not one to mince words, so I will come straight out and say this.   After years of service to Starfleet, after years of watching you all grow, I have decided to announce my retirement as Captain.”
A sigh ran through the crowd.
“Starfleet has bestowed upon me the luxury of choosing my successor, and is there any less obvious a choice?”
Riker began to go around the crowd, evoking congratulations from each of his crewmates.
“A man of daring, of vision and foresight, of experience and growing wisdom, I have watched him grow, I have watched him scale the echelons of Starfleet ranks.”
Riker was halfway through the crowd.
“He is a man that will carry the tradition of the Enterprise on and beyond and into the 25th century.”
Riker was up near the bar area now.
“Everybody, please make a big welcome to your new Captain – Captain Wesley Crusher!”
Riker stopped dead in his tracks, even as he was about to grab’s Picard’s hand and shake it.
Everybody cheered.
Wesley appeared behind Riker with Doctor Pulavski.   “I’m sorry about this, Commander,” Wesley said.
“Wesley, don’t apologize,” Pulavski advised him.   “He’s just a lowly Commander.   You’re the Captain.   You don’t have to explain yourself to him.”
“Oh, of course,” Wesley said, but whatever he wanted to say after that was drowned out by the growing cheer of the crowd.
*
They were on the bridge when Q appeared.
“Why, Kirk,” he said, as if resuming a conversation just left-off, “what an ego you have there, what an ego!”
“He is an exception, Q,” Picard said.   “Do not judge or disdain the entire human race on the character of one man.”
“What are you talking about, Picard?   Of course he’s an exception!” Q seemed overly excited.   “We’ve tried measuring your ego, Kirk.   My Continuum has spent years studying it.   But it can’t be measured.   No scale can encompass it.   It’s fantastic.   Really, it epitomizes everything that is wrong with the human race.   Just to be safe, my Continuum believed we should kill you.”
“I will not allow the murder of any man on my ship, Q,” Captain Crusher said.
“Don’t be an idiot, numbskull.    Didn’t I say believed?    No!   I’ve come here to offer you a job, Kirk!”
“A job?” Kirk was surprised.
“Yes.   Anybody with an ego larger than our own we need in our Continuum.   In fact, we’ve nominated you to be head of our Continuum.   You’ll run unopposed.   What do you say?”
“Sure,” Kirk said.
“And just to show you what a nice guy I am, Picard, I’ll even offer you a position.”
“There are some things more important than power and domination, Q-”
“Think of all the fantasies you could make come true,” Q reminded him.
“No, Q, you’ve misjudged me.”
“You’re such a spoilsport.   Kirk, are you ready to go?”
“Sure thing.   Spock, I’ll visit.”
Then he and Q disappeared.
“Mr. Spock, would you care to join me for a drink?” Picard asked.
“Certainly, Cap- Jean-Luc.”
They two disappeared into a Turbolift.
“Commander Data, set course for Vulcan,” Wesley ordered.
“Course set for Vulcan, Captain.”
“Warp Eight, Ensign.”
“Warp Eight.”
“Engage, Ensign.”
“Warp Eight,” Riker said with murder in his voice and eyes, “engaged.”
*
They were mellowed now.
“Mr. Spock, are you certain you cannot discuss with me what the Ferengi stole from the Federation?” Picard asked.
Spock took a quick, conspiratorial look around.   “Let me just say, Jean-Luc,” he began, “that it is of paramount importance to space exploration as we know it.   Without this,” he patted the package where it lay beneath his jerkin, “there would be no boldly going where no one has before.”
“But what is it?”
Spock looked thoughtful.   Finally, he nodded, took the package out and tore off the rapping.   Inside were several hundred sheets of paper.   He laid it on the desk for Picard to see the title.
It read:   STAR TREK VII.

October 1st, 1992.
Silk.

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Alternate Paths

NEW ENT Alternate Paths A/T [PG-13] (A/T, au)

Title: Alternate Paths
Author: Brubo brubo2260@yahoo.com
Series: ENT
Part: 1/1
Rating: PG
Codes: A/T, au
Archive: ASC only. All others ask first.
First Posted: August 15, 2004.
Summary: An alternate T’Pol makes different choices. Spoilers for
Seasons 1-3 through E2.
Disclaimer: Paramount owns them; they just haunt my daydreams.
Note: Old T’Pol is from the cannon universe. Young T’Pol is from
an alternate universe. Text between * * represents telepathic
communication. Text between // // represents memories.

********

Alternate Paths
by Brubo
( c ) July 11, 2004

Two roads diverged in a yellow wood…
Robert Frost

When she invited me to tea, I did not expect to reveal my private
life, but I being me, and she also being me, led to fascinating
discussion. Yes, she wanted to warn us that Lorian’s work was
flawed, but I suspect she also had another agenda. When she
questioned my emotional state and admitted that it would never
improve much, she tried to plant the seed of bonding with Trip. I
think, in some vicarious way, she wanted to live her life with him
again, yet she refused a visit with our Trip. I surmise it would have
unsettled her.

During our tea she pressed the idea again. When I told her it was
highly unlikely that I would pursue Trip, she insisted that I would
soon see the wisdom of such a liaison, silently implying that the
septennial biological imperative that plagues our race would
shortly manifest itself and I would have no choice.

No choice? What an absurd idea! I chuckled. The sound startled
her. “It seems that more than simple temporal flux has occurred,” I
said. “Our paths have already diverged greatly.”

“Explain.”

“I have been bonded to Jonathan for several months.”

What was left of her composure collapsed as she coughed and
spluttered tea. After several moments calming herself she asked
what else was different in our time line. We compared a quick list
of events and came to the conclusion that the explosion that sent
her Enterprise reeling backwards in time also fractured space and
pushed them into our universe. Events were mostly the same, but
the chronological order was quite different.

“Fascinating,” she thought out loud. “You’ve been through the pon
farr, then.”

“Yes.”

“Why Jonathan? Were you able to produce offspring?” she asked
as she eyed my flat abdomen. Her questions always returned to
that same agenda. Time was escaping quickly and I knew I had to
return to my ship with her calculations. But she continued shooting
out personal questions that demanded answering. I was slightly
offended, but my curiosity at her choice was also peaked. To save
time, I proposed a mind meld. I had gotten quite skilled at
telepathy in the last few months and was confident that I would not
harm her. She was somewhat apprehensive as her Pa’nar syndrome
still had not been completely eradicated. When I offered to heal her
broken synapses, she could not resist.

As our thoughts gently blended, I followed her pathways to the
area damaged so long ago by Tolaris and momentarily felt the
discomfort of rising anger – mine and hers – and urged her to let it
wash away. One by one, I visualized then felt her synapses fusing
and repairing themselves. As one, we both opened our eyes. In
hers I saw such profound gratitude that I had to close mine again.

As we settled into the unaccustomed comfort of our thoughts, I
saw her long past addiction and uncontrolled emotions, her
growing attraction to Trip, the jealousy another woman inflamed in
her, and the lusty consequences, their uncomfortable aftermath, and
eventual resolution. Her emotional imbalances increased after
several miscarriages and she clung to Trip for stability. Eventually,
her Dr. Phlox deciphered the genetic puzzle that allowed
Vulcan-Human cross breeding and Lorian was born.

I mentally backed away at that point. I was still grieving the loss of
my own infant and did not want to exacerbate the feeling by
experiencing my counterpart’s motherly joy.

*Show me,* she thought.

I realized she was not proficient in telepathy and needed my help to
find her answers.

/ / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / /

We found the Seleya soon after entering the expanse. Only three of the
crew were still alive and they were easily stunned. We studied their
logs and data base and Dr. Phlox confirmed the maddening effect of
Trellium-D upon Vulcans. Nevertheless, we took their supply and
stored it in the cargo bay.

Phlox and I outlined a course of gradual exposure to Trellium in
hopes of my building up an immunity to the substance. Jonathan
gave his wary consent with several admonitions regarding safety
and sanity. I became addicted quickly and my reeling emotions
were demanding an outlet. The nightly sessions of neural pressure
with Trip only irritated the situation as they took place in sickbay
under Phlox’s supervision. I was on my best behavior in spite of the
burning desires within. Trip, on the other hand, was unaware of my
turmoil, and Phlox was too occupied with learning the technique to
notice. After all, I had been lying to him for some time about my
waning ability to control my emotions.

Trip’s accident in engineering happened shortly thereafter while
passing through an anomaly, before we were aware of the
complexity of the sphere network. When Sim came to say goodbye,
I finally lost control. Completely. One kiss and I had him
undressed and bedded swiftly. I only hoped his juvenile grin would
dissipate before he reached sickbay.

During the funeral, my heart pounded hard and loud in my back, in
my ears, in my mind. I escaped quickly to my quarters to meditate.
Peace was elusive and I felt the cold tendrils of insanity toying with
me. I sought out Phlox and he immediately started me on a
withdrawal regimen. We informed Jonathan. In addition to the
addiction, Phlox dismissed my compunction as grief at Sim’s death.
Grief! Remorse was more likely – horror at my selfish use of a
dying man – embarrassment and frustration at my loss of control. I
was becoming more and more like Tolaris! As the humans say, he
didn’t know the half of it.

Jonathan insisted I take leave for as long as I needed. As I was in
no mental shape to argue, I spent a couple of days meditating and
contemplating. The recent craziness and sexual activity turned my
thoughts to the question of pon farr and how it could be and should
be handled if we failed to return home before my time would
become manifest. I had only hazy memories of the earlier
viral-induced episode. Phlox and Jonathan were purposefully vague
when questioned, as was Lt. Reed. I felt that I needed a plan in
place soon.

Knowing I would find nothing useful in the limited data base High
Command allowed the humans to use, I turned to the only hope I
had of finding the necessary knowledge. Before departing P’Jem,
the Elder slipped several data chips to me for safekeeping. Why he
chose to trust them to me is a mystery. I suppose he thought I
would give them to the proper Vulcan authorities. Once I saw
what they contained, my fascination prevented me from even
acknowledging their existence to anyone, let alone parting with
them. As the original purpose of the sanctuary was to provide inner
peace through the rituals of the Kolinahr and, if necessary, the
Fullara, the Elders possessed knowledge of all the traditions and
rituals of our race. They fully understood the bonding process –
from planting the seeds in the minds of the young as they are
initially betrothed to bloom within each other at the time of first
pon farr, to the final telepathic link that bound them for life at their
marriage ceremony. In their own way they were as much V’tosh
ka’tur as was Tolaris and his shipmates. The data chips also held
the outline of study and initiation of those who rose to rank of Clan
Elder, the secret practices passed on from one generation to the
next. All the Elders practiced telepathy. I realized that any Vulcan
could follow this course of study. No wonder the Elders
stigmatized those who mind-melded – they had discovered the
ancient secrets!

As I prepared myself by studying the texts, I wondered what had
happened to Koss. He must surely have found another, for his time
was near when I chose not to return to Vulcan. My studies must be
completed and my own choices must be made soon also. The
encounter with Sim had lit a candent heat deep within me, small
still, but slowly heading toward plak tow. It would have to be a
Human. Phlox was already thrice married, and although he would
gladly offer his aid, Vulcans were monogamous. Adultery, added
to my growing list of imprudences, was unthinkable. There really
were only two men on this ship to consider, the two I was already
closest to, Jonathan and Trip. I weighed one against the other in
my mind for several days thereafter, watching them as they worked,
ate, slept. My meditations and dreams kept leading me to the echo
of another life with Jonathan on a bleak planet of survivors. In
those dreams, he proved his mettle as a mate even though his brain
was infested and we could not fully bond. In our two short years
working together, he’d earned my trust many times over, saved my
reputation and career, saved my life. Trip, on the other hand, was
too attractive, impulsive, foolhardy – and now angry – to suit me. I
needed someone I could trust completely. Jonathan never led me
astray. Trip’s several amorous adventures had led to trouble of one
sort or another, including his pregnancy and the suicide of the
Vissian cogenitor. No, Trip was too immature yet for a possible
lifelong commitment.

Having made the decision, my meditations were now calming. I
embraced the inner flame as my eyes caressed the external one in
the lamp. Sleep was dreamless and healing. At least it was for a
couple of days until the slave Rajin was rescued and taken aboard.
Her mental attack threw me off balance again and the plak tow
advanced four-fold. As soon as we were rid of her, I informed
Phlox of my condition and that is was, as the Humans say, the real
thing. He foresaw no problem with a Vulcan-Human mating, other
than the improbability of procreation.

Satisfied, I went to see Jonathan. He listened patiently and asked
only one question, “Why me?” I found it encouraging that he didn’t
immediately dismiss my request, yet I faltered, stumbling over my
answer. “P’Jem,” I whispered, “the stigma, the incident with
Menos. You know my faults.” I lifted my eyes to his, then louder,
“I trust you.” His eyes reflected compassion and reservation in
equal measure.

My pulse quickened and I tried to refrain from breathing hard while
he deliberated. I closed my eyes. Several scenarios of his declining
ran through my mind and I felt the heat rise to my face. The touch
of his hand and the sound of his voice broke the reverie.

“Okay. Can we wait until Hoshi meets the telepath that’s been
contacting her? I really don’t want her going down there alone.”

“What?” I mumbled. He asked again if it could wait a day.
Relieved, I nodded. We then made plans to attend to the situation
during the time it would take to travel to the sphere we’d just
discovered.

After Jonathan’s visit to the planet and his leaving Ens. Sato there,
Enterprise headed in the direction of the sphere. Phlox concocted a
story to protect our privacy, and we then had a few days to
ourselves to quench the fever.

When he came to me that evening, our coupling began tentatively,
each searching and finding pleasure in the other, not at all like my
frenzied attack on Sim. The attraction and need only grew stronger
with each joining until physical exhaustion claimed us both. Yet the
blood fever continued to envelope more of me instead of abating.
As he slept, flashes of that dream of the two of us living on that
bleak planet kept going through my mind. There it had taken several
weeks to quench the fever – time we could not afford to waste here
and now. There was only one solution left, and when he woke I’d
have to convince him of it.

The morning hours were passed in fitful meditation and distracted
study of the ancient texts. I returned from my mental musings with
a start when he touched my face. He could see my condition was
no better. “What aren’t you telling me? Something’s missing.”

“Yes, but I have no right to ask you.”

“Without it this condition lingers?” I nodded. “Tell me.”

“The mental bond is missing.” I explained the Vulcan mating
traditions and the telepathic bond that usually accompanied them.

“Can you do it?”

“I can try. An Elder usually places the link. I think I can manage a
temporary bond by mind melding with you.” He was concerned,
and rightly so, about Pa’nar. I showed him the texts and let him
read for himself that Pa’nar wasn’t a contagious disease, but an injury
caused by violent forced intrusion. Proper melding required a
gentle touch and the cooperation of both parties.

“And you’re sure you can do this?”

“Reasonably sure.”

“Then let’s do it.”

As I place my fingers on his pressure points, I whispered, “Imagine
a beach. Your thoughts are the sand. Mine are the water. Where
the waves glide over the sand, we share our thoughts.”

*Jonathan?*

*Yes?* The meld was successfully initiated and I sought and
found the correct points, then envisioned a physical link from them
to my own mind. I removed my hands from his face to test the link.

*Can you still hear me?* When he answered, relief filled both of
us. As the connection was tenuous, we proceeded immediately.
This time the intensity of the joining was indescribable as the link
permitted us not only our own pleasures, but also those of the
other. The climax was numbing in its power and came too fast and
hard, but had the effect of cool rain on the fires within me. Cool
sacred rain.

Jonathan felt it too. I laughed out loud and he joined me. In our
minds we played in the rain like children. We continued the
celebration by joining again, much more slowly this time,
thoroughly extinguishing the plak tow. Before sleep conquered us,
we looked back on our mental beach scape and saw two sets of
footprints in the wet sand, side by side. Jonathan smiled and so did
I.

We returned to ship life the next day, studying the sphere and its
intricacies, the echo of pon farr only a memory. By the time we
returned to retrieve Ens. Sato, my body and my meditations were
already beginning to prepare me for the next milestone. Two
weeks later Phlox confirmed the pregnancy but seriously doubted
the viability of the fetus. Jonathan chose not to concede defeat.
He was elated at the prospect of fatherhood. I too was fascinated
with the possibilities. So much Vulcan ideology had already been
revealed as flawed by the events of the last two years. Only a year
ago Jonathan had made light of the idea of Vulcans and Humans
mixing genes. At that time, who would have predicted it would be
us?

Jonathan’s protective nature came forth immediately. He insisted
on marriage and moving into my quarters. He even delivered
Porthos into Phlox’s care to avoid annoying my olfactory nerves.
Feeling somewhat overwhelmed, I put up no resistance to his
endeavors. Ens. Sato called it nesting – an odd analogy, but fitting.
If the rest of the crew had reservations, gratefully they kept their
comments out of earshot.

To temper the intensity of Jonathan’s enthusiasm, I began
instructing him in the techniques of meditation and shielding his
every thought from our mental bond. The cacophony of his
thoughts was deafening! Surprisingly, he quickly adapted and we
began working on strengthening our bond, I teaching him calm
logic, he teaching me to work through my emotions.

Soon we were able to communicate from farther and farther
distances. He was learning to probe my mind without my
assistance and build up walls against mental attack, if necessary.
These skills were useful to our mission as well. They enabled him
to ward off imprinting on the Xindi hatchlings, and allowed us
to stay in silent contact while one of us was off-ship. When he was
confident enough, Phlox and I showed him the brain scans that
mapped my Pa’nar injuries, and he was able to heal them. Yet again
I owed him my life.

The next several weeks were filled with plotting and deceptions –
Gralik, Degra, the trip to the past. I was having trouble keeping
meals down and the sight and smell of Human fast food nearly
waylaid the capture of the Xindi bioweapon. After returning from
Earth’s past, Jonathan went to the galley and made plomeek soup
for me. He said he’d have a better chance than Chef of doing it
right since he could ‘remember’ the taste through my memories.
Indeed, it was the best soup I’d eaten since leaving Vulcan.

The weeks passed studying the spheres and the Xindi shuttlecraft
and trying to find their weapon. I found the work more and more
distracting as the child within me grew. I was now sensing his mind
awakening and his body moving. His thoughts were simple and
joyful, curious and content. During our quiet times, Jonathan and I
communed with our wondrous, beautiful boy whom we now called
Kevin. Amid the chaos of our mission, our small family was a
peaceful oasis. Neither logic nor emotion ruled, only peace and
love and contentment.

That utopian respite ended when we found the Humans and
Skagarans. Shortly after that encounter, I was in sickbay panicked.
I could no longer feel Kevin or his thoughts. Phlox confirmed that
he was dying in my womb. Jonathan berated himself for sending me
off on a horse with Trip. Phlox reassured us that wasn’t the cause.
Neither was the phaser stun that Lt. Reed had delivered. He
reminded us that he doubted Kevin’s viability from the start and
suggested that we induce labor in a last effort to save him. He
planned to put Kevin in stasis until he could find the problem and a
cure.

Labor proceeded quickly and I concentrated on connecting with
Kevin one last time. When he was delivered, Phlox realized that he
was no longer alive. All three of us were thoroughly dejected. I
insisted on seeing my son. Phlox handed him to me on a towel. He
wasn’t as big yet as my hand, but perfectly formed. That’s when I
emotionally shut down. Jonathan’s heart was breaking and so was
mine. I couldn’t handle the onslaught. I retreated to an inner
nothingness and built a mental fortress around it.

How much time passed I didn’t know. Somehow Jonathan had
broken through and was calling me back. I was barely aware of
warm water. He was gently bathing me from head to toe.

*I can’t…*

*Cry,* he finished my thought.

*I’m numb. If I let the wall down…*

*Give me your pain. I’ll cry for you.*

*I can’t.*

He didn’t argue, only kept bathing me and humming softly. The
warmth and the sound lulled my vigilance and he was able to open
the gates to my pain. It rushed through me to him, and when I
finally opened my eyes, I saw the tears flowing down his face. The
first sob came forcefully out of me, repeating endlessly until my chest
was heaving and my own eyes were wet.

Jonathan lifted me out of the water and held me until the outburst
had past, then kissed my forehead and wrapped me in a towel.
“We’ll be alright,” he said. Saying it out loud somehow made it
believable.

An uneasy calm settled on us that night. In my weary state, the
small weak katra I’d held onto in sickbay surfaced and startled us
both. It was Jonathan who recognized Kevin’s essence first. Our
little one was frightened and alone.

*Never alone,* I whispered to him. I created a special place in
my mind – a place of comfort and love – where Kevin would be
safe and held him gently to me. Jonathan led me to bed and held us
close, softly humming the same tune until all three of us slept.

As we neared Azati Prime, our personal problems were put aside in
order to prepare for the mission. I almost lost control again when
he insisted on going alone to destroy the Xindi weapon. I made
him promise not to shield his death from me – I needed the contact
to preserve his katra – and he made me promise not to withdraw
again, to lead our crew to safety. I fought back panic and headed
for the bridge where I watched the shuttle carry him away.

An hour later I could still feel him. He’d been captured and beaten.
I tired to concentrate on easing his pain, but the Reptilian attack
was usurping too much of my energy. When one of those vile
creatures slashed his face, I felt I was going to loose control.
Better to do it in private, I thought, so I ran to Jonathan’s office.
No sooner than the tears began to fall did Trip barge in and lecture
me about my command responsibilities.

“He’s _not_ dead! They’re torturing him,” I spat back.

*HE’S RIGHT!* Jonathan’s mental shouting was like a slap in
the face. *You promised,* he reminded me. I didn’t hear
whatever else Trip said, just wiped my face and returned to the
bridge.

When the fighting stopped and Jonathan returned, I met him in
sickbay. After Phlox had scanned and medicated him, we sent him
off to tend to the many others arriving for help. While I cleaned
Jonathan’s cuts and bruises, we caught upon the state of affairs with
the Xindi, the fragile truce with Degra, and the contition of the
ship. Not once did he speak – or think – about my dessertion of the
bridge. I tried to apologize, but he silenced me by stroking my
middle and forefingers with his own. I closed my eyes with the
intensity of his touch. When I opened them again, he picked up
where he’d left off, verbalizing a list of repairs and other things that
needed doing before we would be able to rendezvous with Degra.

/ / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / /

“A few days later – yesterday – Lorian contacted us, and here we
are,” I said as I broke contact and slipped out of her mind.

“Fascinating! You were fortunate to receive the P’Jem texts. Trip
and I didn’t have that added intimacy.”

With nothing more to reveal, we finished the tea and I took my
leave. After sharing her data with Jonathan and Trip, and making
the necessary adjustments to coerce Lorian into cooperating, we
made it safely through the passageway and met Degra on the other
side. The loss of the older Enterprise left me strangely ambivalent.
I didn’t expect them to survive, but I would have been happy if they
had.

Things finally calmed down and Jonathan and I went to our
quarters for the night. The message light was blinking on my desk,
and we both stared at it wearily. I was shocked to find that she had
sent me more data before she died – her Phlox’s research on
Vulcan-Human genetics. The accompanying message said she
wanted to thank me for healing her Pa’nar Syndrome; she felt whole
again if only for a day. She also appreciated our shared thoughts
and wanted to spare us the painful years it would take our Phlox to
do the same research. She wanted me to recover emotionally – as
much as was possible – and having Lorian had done that for her.
She wished us success in our mission and in our personal lives.

“Well, that was awfully kind of her. What, exactly, did you two
discuss?” Jonathan asked.

“The road not taken.”

“The poem by Robert Frost?” He looked a little confused.

“Metaphorically. We shared our differing experiences.”

“Oh, I get it!” He smiled. “You compared me and Trip.” I
frowned a bit. “Okay, I don’t really need to know,” he said,
chuckling.

I pulled him to me and kissed him long and slow. “I made the
better choice,” I whispered near his ear, “if you’re interested.”

“Yeah?” His eyes were smiling brightly now.

“Definitely.” I felt my lips curl upward of their own volition into
what Jonathan liked to call a ‘Mona Lisa smile’. He looked at me as
if I were an oasis in the desert.

“I haven’t seen you smile since Kevin…”

“You can say it… since Kevin died.” He held me close and
reminded me that he’d said we’d be alright.

Despite the lightness of our mood, I could feel how tired he was, so
I urged him to sleep; he needed to be well rested before facing the
Xindi Council. I, instead, meditated until I heard the long deep
breaths of his slumber. I extinguished the lamp and watched him
for a time, my beautiful gentle husband… my beautiful gentle
husband who’d had to turn against his conscience so many times in
the last months to save his race, and who’d hated himself each time.
Yes, we’d be alright.

For the first time in months, years – since I shot Jossen, actually – I
no longer felt needy. I eased into bed and put my arm protectively
around Jonathan. This new emotion – hope – was a pleasant one
indeed. I let it envelope both of us in its blanket of quiet
anticipation as my eyes slowly slipped shut.

Two paths diverged in a wood, and I –
I took the one less traveled by,
And that has made all the difference.
Robert Frost

The End

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Tripping Up And Down

Title : Tripping Up And Down
Author: Laced Together (Sue)
E-Mail: susieqla@yahoo.com
Website: None.
Series: ENTERPRISE
Pairing: T/Tu
Category: Romance/Het.
Rating: PG-13
Summary: To everything turn, turn, turn…
Archive: All Enterprise archives are fine.
Disclaimer: I own nothing, Paramount’s property.
Spoilers: Harbinger
Notes: For The ASCEML Title Challenge

Tripping Up And Down

Tempted to enter a personal log entry, T’Pol
remained silent, staring at nothing in particular
in her quarters. Her right ankle still throbbed.
If any fault was to be laid, the anomaly that
had wreaked havoc with the treadmill she’d elected
to use over an hour ago, was the logical culprit.

The commander’s quick thinking, and even quicker
hands had saved her. He’d caught her when the
equipment’s glitch had gotten the best of her.
She’d turned her ankle when she’d been thrown
off the equipment’s belt.

Her present circumstance would be a lot worse,
if not for Trip.

Despite her dogged protest, which he patently ignored,
Trip had whisked her off to Sickbay, carrying her
in his arms, no less. The doctor, with his smile
typically knowing no bounds, had advised she stay off
the foot and the application of the ice pack he’d
given her was his learned prescription.

While she waited for the doting chief engineer to
return to her quarters, after his promising her he’d
be right back with the blend of tea she wanted,
her mind effortlessly drifted to the filmy flow of
events that were the aftermath of her present
predicament…

“There is no need to hold me as firmly as you are,”
she had recommended, while she herself gripped the
ice pack in rigid hands.

“Now who’s takin’ ya to your quarters, huh? You or
me, darlin’?”

“I’ve asked you not to call me that outside of
quarters,” she had reminded him, but not as sternly
as she might have if it hadn’t been for her knowing
that his concern was genuine, and it gratified her.

“Can’t blame an anxious fella for forgettin’, now
can ya?” Trip had hefted her in his arms, smiling
at her; he seemed to be doing so much of that lately,
always at her. “Can’t have anythin’ bad happenin’
to my nimble n-p buddy, who just happens to be the
best kisser, too.” He had whistled then. “That’s
some swellin’.” With the boot off, and her ankle
skillfully wrapped in protective elastic, it had
ballooned to the cumbersome size of a navel orange,
nevertheless. “Have I ever told ya you’ve got the
cutest toes?”

She had stared at them, peeking out from the
protective sleeve as they were, and then him. “I’ve
never injured myself in this way before,” she’d
informed him, before passing judgment on its being
too intimate for him to know.

“No kiddin’? Wow, now that’s some track record.”
Trip’s eyebrows had wriggled up and down. “No pun
intended. Hell, if I got a buck for all the times
I’ve twisted my ankles, I’d be one of the richest
men on Earth. My momma used to say I had weak ones,
when I was comin’ up.” More to himself he’d mouthed,
“Still might.”

“Coming up? To what does that refer?” Having
been at a visible loss, she had known her facial
expression had told him as much. What else was new,
as he often coined. These novel insights, so
generally forthcoming from him, could constitute a
database unto itself.

“What do you think it refers to? Okay, okay, I
can see you have no clue what I’m talkin’ about.
It’s just another colorful expression.” Trip had
paused, gazing at her thoughtfully. “Growin’ up as
a kid, a child. Honest, T’Pol, if I live to a ripe
old age, I’m never gonna forget that look on your
face.”

“Striving to be precise is never an exercise of poor
judgment.”

“It’s kind of like a least resistance thing with
me now. When I’m around ya, I can’t seem to resist
the urge to pepper ya with the most colorful turns
of phrase I know. Even Hoshi has commented on my
inventive use of colloquial language, part and
parcel of the neck I hail from. Maybe you might
like to visit that sweet slice of neck with me,
one day…”

From that point on, they had waited in silence for the
turbolift which had seemed to take its own sweet
time to arrive. It had amazed T’Pol at the time
that, far from being awkward, the absence of
conversation had been absorbing. In good part, their
not having felt the need to fill the void was a
barometer of the growing satisfaction each felt in the
other’s company.

They still had their share of rough spots, now and
again, but for the most part, theirs had the makings
of a friendship that might stand the test of time if
they all survived the death dealing rigors of the
Expanse.

Friendship? To think of the commander as merely a
friend was inconsistent. Their friendship, being
his friend, his associate, were safe references.
Charles Tucker provoked so much in her, not the
least of which were feelings that she needed to
explore with him. Her need wasn’t far from
bordering on compulsion.

She reflected that whenever the subject of their
surviving this mission was broached, the commander
was in the habit of crossing his fingers. He had
explained the significance of his doing so, but
his explanation was fuzzy, at present, much as his
logic had been at the time he had tried to explain.

Their not surviving was unthinkable, not only for
Earth’s and countless other worlds’ sakes, but
for her own and this Human’s. She needed to know
why Trip made this difference in everything she
had come to know and accept as truth.

She lifted the ice pack from her injury, with a soft
scowl, noting the annoying protuberance that plagued
her ankle. She settled the pack back in place while
the idea occurred to her how neuro-pressure had proven
its value. It had laid the groundwork for the
commander and she cultivating a unique relationship. A
relationship that was as unlikely as Captain Archer
admitting that her people had never held his father
back.

Even she had to admit it was nothing short of
astonishing how far the intuitive blue-eyed Human
and she had come from so much less than favorable
introductions, what often felt like long years ago.

Why…she was even telling him intimate things she
never dreamed she would.

And Trip…he was making it no secret how he felt
about her.

And then, the turbolift had finally arrived…

Trip had hefted her in his arms once again, seemingly
proud of the fact that nobody else was on board. As
he’d carried her over the threshold he’d even
exclaimed, “Safe from pryin’ eyes.” A gleam had taken
hold of his when he’d intimated, “Remind ya of anythin’,
darl–I mean, T’Pol?”

“What should entering a turbolift remind me of,
Mister Tucker?” It had given her a modest zing of
satisfaction to see him pout because it had been days
since she’d called him ‘Trip.’

“Gettin’ carried over the threshold, like any new
blushin’ bride.” He had tried kissing her cheek,
but she had demurely moved her face out of his lips’
reach.

“Aside from the fact that Human matrimonial rituals
are arcane, at best. Your reference is illogical,
Commander.” She had felt his hard squeeze to her
ribs, and repeated, “Commander, we aren’t married.
Not by Human standards, and certainly not by Vulcan
dictates.”

Before Trip, with the aplomb of a punch-drunk boxer,
had stumbled into tripping over his own feet, he
had resiliently insisted, “Oh…I don’t know about
that. It’s the damnedest thing…it sorta feels
like we’re married now, kinda.” He couldn’t have
been more suggestive. “Speakin’ squarely from my
point of view that is, we sure banged each other
enough like newlyweds our first time. Oh, I forget.
Bangin’s a ribald way of sayin’ doin’ the deed.”
Her beleaguered look, having grown more set, had
prompted him further. “Havin’ sexual you-know-what.
And that ‘lovin’ feelin” comes over me even when
we’re apart. And when we are, all I want is to be
with ya.”

T’Pol shivered upon her bunk at his definitiveness
which she still heard, remembering how he’d spoken
those words. And, what was more, she had known
what he’d meant; she found herself wanting to be
with him more now too. If precision was what she
prized so highly, then there was no fooling Trip;
duplicity was for Andorians, not Vulcans.

She had wanted him that fateful night when
stripping down in front of him felt as natural as
breathing in life-support-generated air, and when
being brutally honest, she wanted him even more
now. When it had appeared as though another female
was staking her claim, (Amanda Cole’s seductive
visage popped into her mind’s eye instantaneously)
she, the now recalcitrant T’Pol of Vulcan, had claimed
her Human anomaly first.

In the plainest English she knew Trip could readily
relate to, she ‘had it bad for him,’ her fixation
of the Homo sapiens persuasion, whom she was seeing
more and more as her ‘t’hy’la.’ But confessing
something this shocking? She was almost there,
accepting it herself, but actually being in Trip’s
face, telling him her feelings for him ran deep?
She wasn’t quite there…yet.

She thought back to how they’d toppled into the
turbolift after Trip had tripped up. To his credit,
he’d made sure she was spared the brunt of impact.
He’d used his own body as a shock absorber so she
wouldn’t sustain further injury.

They had lain dazed a good couple of minutes before
he’d sheepishly asked, “You all right? A possible
second reason for my nickname you’ve discovered
today. I have this annoyin’ habit of gettin’ a
might clumsy when it’s inconvenient.” He’d raised
his head, squinting at her through slitted eyelids.
“Sorry.”

Lying sprawled atop him, prone, she’d answered, “I’m
fine, but you? Are you all right…Trip?”

He hadn’t reacted right away, and when the reason
why had become apparent, she’d tried raising herself
up off him. She couldn’t though. One of the
linkages to the belt she’d worn, which had lent a
decorative effect to her work-out outfit, had somehow
hooked itself into the slight hole in the front of
Trip’s sweatpants.

Embarrassing was embarrassing, regardless of the
species involved.

Companionable silence hadn’t been awkward, but finding
themselves joined at their hips in this way, had
certainly been.

T’Pol shut her eyes, reliving the compromising
situation anyone who might have innocently entered
the turbolift would have found them in. Despite her
having a twisted ankle, the person, or persons in
question, seeing the determined chief engineer with
his hands busily manipulating her crotch to free them
could not have helped but at least begin to wonder if
all the current rumors circulating about them were
partially-true. Which, of course, they were; they
were wholly true.

And there was also the matter of his premature–

T’Pol squashed that baser thought, but not in time
enough to prevent the stark image of the sizeable
splotch that had soaked through to the front of the
commander’s sweatpants from materializing in her
overactive mind’s eye.

“Oops–sorry, T’Pol. You know how highly suggestible
I can be. Too much friction is a powerful thing.”

His haunting words clogged the flow for any further
rational thought, since no truer words had he ever
spoken. All this friction, and their emotions that
were eating them alive…how would it end? She
flopped back on the bed, her head hitting the
slab-ish pillow; she pulled it out from under her
head and put her head under it.

Her audible sigh coincided with her door’s light,
airy chime.

Trip stood inside her barely-lit quarters before
T’Pol could muster up the request he enter. “Here’s
your tea, all pipin’ hot, just the way you li–”
He set the tray with its steaming cup and small
lidded teapot down. He hurried over to the bunk
wearing a frown that looked etched in his face.

That’s her biggest problem, he thought, taking
in her languishing form, she only does what she
wants, when she wants.

“You should have that pillow under your foot, not
over your head. You heard Phlox; keep it elevated.”

She didn’t move a muscle; the pillow remained where
it was, and the ice pack slipped off her ankle of
its own volition.

Trip returned to the tray Chef had provided and
unstuck two medium-sized strips of tape used in
insulation. He taped the ice pack to her leg,
securing the strips to either side of her foot.
He took it upon himself to lift the pillow off her
head, and T’Pol let him, not protesting.

Gently, he eased her foot onto the pillow, not
finishing adjusting its angle and position until he
had it just so. Gazing down upon her, he said,
“I’ll be right back with my pillow to put under
your head so you’ll be all nice an’ comfy.”

T’Pol raised herself up to lean on her elbows. “No.
Thank you, Trip, but no. I am quite comfortable as
I am. There is no need for you to get your pillow.
I’ll be fine like this. You may return to your
concerns.” She settled her eyes on the tray over
on the low table.

She looked so small and vulnerable, and all he
could think about was what he could do to help her.
“You’re my concern right now.” Serviceably, he
offered, “Here, I’ll bring ya your tea.”

She couldn’t help but appreciate his candent quality,
even if most times his enthusiasm usually made her
feel uncomfortable, unnerved, sometimes. Her physical
discomfort was such that it forced her to realize how
easily one could become infirm, a virtual dependent
on someone else. His presence, his being at her
disposal was reassuring.

Reassuring…when had he become that?

Before bringing her her tea, he removed a light
blanket from the utility shelf, and settled it
over her body. Then, he brought her tea. While
Trip fitted the mug into her hands, he seated
himself at the head of the bunk. She made
careful note of his having changed into a clean
pair of sweatpants.

Unmolested, he coaxed T’Pol to use him as her
backrest, resting her supple body against him
gently. She felt wonderful, always did.

“Much better,” he conferred, looking down, past her
head, at her hands that were molded around the mug.

“Thank you, Trip,” she acknowledged, resting against
him heavily as she angled her head back to glance
up at him tentatively. His sincerity was almost
a palpable entity, nearly having the ability to grip
her of its own accord.

“No need to, glad to oblige. Since you’re gonna
be off your feet for a couple of days, if there’s
anythin’ ya need, anythin’ at all, just let me know,
and I’ll get it for ya.”

Nodding, she raised the brim of the mug to her lips.
When had he developed this…this level of devotion
toward her? Devotion…it was the first word that
had sprung to mind. All the signs were clearly
evident, and since they were, she chose to accept
the implications. “I will, as I will also choose
to thank you when appropriate.”

T’Pol sipped more of the tea he’d selected for her,
somewhat amazed that he’d remembered her favorite
was chamomile. Yet, there was something more
flavorful about the taste, something faintly citrus.

“How’s your tea?” Trip solicitously asked. “Not
too sweet?”

“Not sweet at all…but different…”

“I’ve watched how you prepare it,” he said with
a modest lilt in his voice. “Only this time, I
took the liberty of addin’ just a teeny tiny bit
of lemon to the honey. I hope by, ‘different’
ya mean ya like it. If ya don’t I can go get–”

T’Pol shook her head. “By *different* I was
referring to the tea’s new taste. It is acceptable.”
She took another sip, longer this time, as though
lingering with her lips to the mug was more a
guilty pleasure than a chore.

“How’s your neck feel?” He looked as though he
longed to stroke it, no matter what her response
was. “Kinda sore?”

“No, not at all. Why should it be?” She admitted
to herself that he made an excellent ‘visible means
of support.’

“The way your head snapped back the way it did,
just before the treadmill chucked you off, I
figure you’ve gotta be a prime candidate for
whiplash.”

T’Pol said nothing, the risidual of a headache
making her head throb. Headaches, she never used
to be so susceptible to them; she got them often
now. Ever since contracting Pa’naar Syn., the
smallest provocation would set one off. Without
thinking, she blurted, “My head hurts.” She held
her mug away from her, not wanting anymore of the
beverage at the moment.

Taking the mug out of her hand, Trip set it down
on the floor, off to the right of his feet. “Let
me see what I can do…” Intuitively, he placed
his left hand at the back of her head, and his
right hand, with palm covering her forehead like
a band, began a gentle but firm vice-like
undulation against it.

T’Pol surrendered herself to the comfort he lent,
not thinking twice. He always made a point of
letting her know she had ‘magic fingers.’ His
digits, his entire hand, both his hands were like
finely-tuned instruments skilled in administering
relief in their own right, relief she sorely
needed.

Her neuro-pressure student was gifted, and what he
was doing to her now was a far cry from any n-p
session they’d had to date. Even so, it was
helping. His strong, determined touch was
gradually working the headache out of her head.
She felt adrift, listing on a sea of serenity; the
sky she was under, a pacific blue. To her
satisfaction, her ankle was beginning to feel more
like its normal self.

“Head feelin’ a little better?” Trip inquired,
more gently than the calm before a storm, easing up
on the pressure applied to her forehead.

T’Pol didn’t reply, but with eyes still closed, she
nodded within the confines of his restorative
hands. The throbbing in the frontal region of her
head was all but gone. In time, pleased that he
hadn’t left off from massaging, she said, “You
have allayed my discomfort. You will have to teach
me your technique. It’s very effective.”

Trip took a break from his ministrations. His
crackly laugh filled her quarters. “My momma taught
me everythin’ I know. My dad gets some real winners
whenever he gets headaches, and when he does, he gets
as grouchy as a wet hen. When my brother and sis…”
He hesitated before going on, and when he did, his
voice was level, sure. “When we were kids, we knew
to give our old man a wide berth whenever we saw our
mom at his head. We kids knew what *that* meant.”

T’Pol processed that unexpected bit of personal
information, then opened her eyes. As long as she
was going to be laid up, she might as well make
the best use of the time. “Would you bring me the
PADD near the computer, please?”

A look of, ‘your wish is my command’ sparked in
Trip’s arresting eyes. “Why, sure. Anythin’ for
you, T’Pol.” He fairly popped up when he stood,
with eyes panning over to the desk where the tool
was. Having forgotten all about the mug at his
feet, he stumbled. He stumbled badly, his legs
having seemed to work independently of each other,
causing him to go down hard. He lay sprawled out
on the floor.

T’Pol regarded his fallen form, wondering why he
was having such a problem with balance this day.
Trip looked right back at her, red-faced, looking
as though he wanted to be any place but here in all
his clumsy glory.

“Don’t know what’s got into me today,” he muttered
under his breath. “It’s like my space legs have
up and left.” No sooner having made that
observation, the comm. interrupted their fleeting
contemplation of each other.

‘–Bridge to T’Pol. T’Pol, I’d like you to join
me in the captain’s mess tonight for dinner. You
and Trip.–‘

“I’ll get this,” Trip told her, noting a look of
uncertainty on her face. When he tried to stand,
the groan he let out startled both of them. “What
a pain in the ass!”

“Have you injured your behind, Comman–Trip?” T’Pol
innocently asked, looking the most concerned Trip
had ever seen her.

‘–T’Pol are you in your quarters?–‘

“No, it’s my ankle.” Grimacing, Trip sort of
bopped, sort of hopped his way over to the
communications port. “Trip here, Cap’n….with
T’Pol.”

‘–You two seem to be spending a lot of time
together, lately–‘

Leaning against the wall, trying to impress T’Pol
by being as stoic as she could be, Trip responded,
“She’s had a mishap, sir, no thanks to an anomaly
she never saw comin’; happened in the gym. The
roilin’ zipped along makin’ the treadmill she was
on throw her for a loop. Like Johnny-on-the-spot,
I caught her in the nick of time. She sustained
a nasty ankle sprain, so I took her to Sickbay.”

‘–She’s all right, though–‘

“You’re all right?” Trip asked her, lowering his
voice considerably.

T’Pol nodded, taking him in with wide luminous
eyes. She saw how he favored the ankle he rubbed,
unable to stop herself from speculating.

“She’s fine, Cap’n, but Phlox’d like her to stay
off her feet a couple of days. Her ankle really
swelled behind the sprain.”

‘–Then I guess it’ll just be you and me tonight
for dinner, then.–‘

Looking doubtful, Trip suggested, “Uh, it just
might be you, sir. You know what they say…”
He shot a ‘we’re in the same boat’ expression at
T’Pol. “One good turn deserves another.”

‘–And what’s that supposed to mean?–‘

“It means your first- and second-in-command have
the weakest ankles on ‘Enterprise.'”

‘–So, you’re saying you sprained your ankle too?–‘

“On the nose, Cap’n. On the nose.” Trip scrunched
up his face for T’Pol who treated him to a quizzical
look.

‘–I’ll tell Phlox I’m bringing you in, and be there
in less than a minute, stay put.–‘

“Oh, don’t worry, sir, goin’ somewhere is pretty
much out of the question for me too right now. Man,
you should see how fast this ankle is swellin’. Think
I’m gonna need your help to Sickbay so Phlox can see
what a good job I’ve done racking myself up.”

‘–(Archer heard over the comm) – Mister Reed, you
have the Bridge.’

‘–(Malcolm’s voice) – Aye, sir.–‘

“See ya in a few, Cap’n,” Trip interjected.

‘–I’m on my way. Archer out.–‘

Avoiding having his left ankle, the compromised one,
make contact with the floor, Trip made his hobbled
way back to T’Pol’s bunk as best he could. Her PADD
was in his right hand, and he set it upon the bed
as soon as he was able to.

“Talk about coincidence… We’ve been sharin’
a lot lately, but sprainin’ our ankles together
draws the line.”

“I recommend neuro-pressure prior to seeing Doctor
Phlox. Some preliminary treatment before the
application of an ice pack will facilitate quicker
healing.”

“That’s okay, T’Pol, you’re in no shape to be
working me over with neuro-pressure. I’ll be all
right once Phlox slaps the cold on.”

She made room for him on the bed, and watched
attentively as he hoisted himself up to carefully
sit beside her. “My attending to your ankle will
in no way interfere with my healing process. What’s
more, your healing process will be greatly enhanced
by the application of neuro-pressure.”

Trip glided the backs of his fingers over her
washboard flat abdomen. “I’m not willin’ to take
any chances with you, if I have anythin’ to say
about it.”

“But, if I remember correctly, you just told me
you are willing to do *anything* for me.” She
arched her eyebrow, looking summarily pleased
with herself for throwing his very words at him.

“Sure, anythin’ within reason. Not somethin’
that could be bad for ya.”

“But that’s not what you said, you said *anything*,”
T’Pol stubbornly insisted, seeing a pained
expression frame the look on his face.

“You know what I meant.” He made a digging motion
with the largest joint of his middle finger against
her side. “You’re not gonna browbeat me with
semantics at a time like this,” Trip said, scrubbing
his hand over his face. “It’s called not playin’
fair.”

“I only wish to help…” And then almost
plaintively, T’Pol purred, “Help you as much as
you’ve…you help me…”

Arching his eyebrow, Trip, looking her dead in the
eye said, “You wanna help me, help me like
this…then.” He kissed her tenderly, first both
cheeks and leisurely her lips which he felt tremble
beneath his. After a while, he supplicated, “No
hypospray could ever work better than what your lips
do for me, honey.” As he shut his lids, his eyes
rolled back, and he knew she was waiting for him to
say, “I know, I know, that’s totally illogical, but
just ’cause somethin’ isn’t logical doesn’t mean it’s
no good. Is it logical you and I, the way we’re
goin’? Who would’ve ever thought, huh? But it
sure feels like we should go as far as we can with
what we’ve started.”

T’Pol thought that over, knowing in her heart of
hearts that he was right. Had it been logical
for her to resign her commission to be with this
crew…to be with…

She lowered her head, but when she felt Trip’s
finger beneath her chin, raising it, she couldn’t
help but meet his eyes, and the fragile look
contained within them. It was a look she found
herself anticipating with each passing day; it
made her feel wanted, needed, prized.

“We’re good together, don’tcha think?”

T’Pol nodded upon his finger, lost in the haven
of everything he was beginning to mean to her.
Her nostrils began twitching, her control over
them to stop, nonexistent.

“So do I,” he whispered, leaning into her even
closer, his intent to kiss her, clear. This
time, his kiss left them both breathless. His
lips quivered against hers, and he said, “We
should get married. I’ve never felt so sure about
anythin’ in my life. We don’t always see eye to
eye, but that’s what makes us work…”

“Perhaps there is some validity in something I’ve
overheard many crew members say.” The texture of
his skin against hers made her giddy.

“And what’s that?” Trip questioned, studying her
face attentively.

“Opposites attract…”

“Amen.” Trip claimed her lips for himself yet
again, deepening the kiss in response to T’Pol’s
initiating her wanting him as much as he wanted
her.

The chiming of the door chime coincided perfectly
with the couple’s gradual withdrawal from the
other’s face.

“Enter,” they chorused, in complementary unison.

Archer did as they’d instructed, coming into T’Pol’s
quarters the way he did when he entered any enclosed
area aboard Enterprise. He swaggered. Seeing them
lounging on her bed together neatly confirmed every
speculation he was trying hard of late not to
entertain concerning their relationship. Ever since
‘Enterprise’ had entered the Expanse Trip and T’Pol
seemed to have something ‘going on.’

Their body language spoke volumes. In their own
quirky way, it was increasingly hard to ignore
that they were an ‘item.’

“Two peas in a pod,” Jonathan quietly muttered
deep within his throat, and that was as far as he
wanted to take it for the time being. The captain
watched his chief engineer give it a real college
try in trying to get to his feet unassisted. Not
knowing quite what to make of his sudden feelings
of envy, Archer put a stop to Trip’s aggravating his
ankle further. “Here let me give you a hand.”

“I wouldn’t mind if ya threw in a healthy ankle
while you’re in a generous mood, Cap’n. I really
did a number on mine.”

“And just how did this happen?” Archer refused
to permit his over-active imagination to run
rampant. He guessed that if T’Pol wanted Trip here,
that was why he was. At least she didn’t seem to
mind fraternizing with Trip; she rarely did with
anyone else.

“I tripped over T’Pol’s tea mug which I’d set near
my feet when I was gettin’ her PADD for her, over on
the desk. Just call me twinkle-toes with two left
feet.”

“Looks as though you could use my assistance,” Archer
offered, eyeing his friend’s ankle which indeed looked
very swollen now that Trip had his athletic shoe off.

“Sure could,” Trip agreed.

“Forget about my bringing you, on second thought…”
The captain was at the communication port in two
strides. “Archer to Doctor Phlox…”

The doctor’s acknowledgement was immediate. ‘Yes,
Captain…’

“I think it’s advisable that you come to T’Pol’s
quarters to take a look at Trip’s ankle, here.
I don’t think it’s a good idea for him to try to
walk on it.”

‘Understood, Captain, I’m on my way.’

Archer, not missing a beat, got back on the comm.
“Chef, change of plans for tonight.”

Trip and T’Pol exchanged thoughtful glances,
silently questioning, “now what?”

“Instead of the captain’s mess, I’d like to have
dinner served in sub-commander T’Pol’s quarters
this evening.”

Trip glancing T’Pol’s way was superfluous.
Instinctively, he knew this turn of events
wasn’t what she’d expected at all. He also knew
she’d go along with it, because she knew all
too well that making a fuss was pointless.
Once the captain’s mind was made up, he was like
a dog with a bone. You’d get hurt, trying to
wrench it away.

“Great idea, Cap’n,” Trip awarded, secure in the
knowledge that, smugly, T’Pol was waiting for him
to reward Archer.

Phlox arrived, almost on cue, and said pretty much
the same things he’d advised in T’Pol’s case,
recommending that the chief engineer stay off the
injured foot for a few days. Trip got his own
ice pack. The doctor saw no reason why, with
assistance, Tucker would have to remain in T’Pol’s
quarters. Inconveniencing T’Pol, anymore than she
had been already, would be unnecessary.

Again, the first- and second-in-command exchanged
meaningful looks, the thought crossing both minds
that the captain and the doctor sported twinkles
in their eyes that advertised speculation.

It was something the couple, particularly the Vulcan
constituent of the puzzle, who wasn’t quite sure
what the well-liked Human and she were, could do
without.

No sooner had Phlox left, when Chef and his dapper
entourage of stewards called, ready, willing and
able to serve the triumvirate rarified fare fit for
even T’Pol’s discriminating palate. The servers set
up a make-shift dining area, complete with table
and chair, for the captain who would be dining
at it while Trip and T’Pol would be using her
bunk.

Everything was as it should have been.

The plomeek soup ‘a la Provencale,’ which was
another way of saying Chef used vegetable stock
instead of a dairy-based one, and the butter
was purposely omitted, ever since T’Pol had
inquired about his recipe, was superb. It was
the best preparation to date; T’Pol requested a
second serving, which was a blatant admission of
how much she liked it. And she ate every bit of
her ‘Caponetta’ salad, not leaving so much as a
morsel, unlike her norm.

The porterhouse steak, for the non-Vulcans, with
all the trimmings, mashed potatoes and caramelized
string beans with almonds were done to perfection.
When Archer had inquired about the unusual flavor
of the string beans, Chef had informed him to
read up more on the Maillard Reaction.

“Well, I guess it is getting late,” Archer admitted,
once an over-officious Chef and his efficient troop
departed, leaving T’Pol’s quarters as it normally
was, minimalist. Sitting beside Trip, T’Pol
regarded Archer expectantly.

Nodding in agreement, Trip concurred, looking at
her. “Where’d the time go? I’m so full, I hope
I don’t break the back of whoever’s gonna haul my
ass to my place.” Following his pregnant pause,
he added slyly, “Cap’n…”

“Don’t worry, Trip, I think I’ll be able to handle
it.” Archer gazed over at T’Pol, who seemed to be
regarding Trip with eyes as large as saucers. With
a ‘time to call it an evening’ expression, he
extended, “Is there anything I can get you before we
leave?”

“No, Captain, there is nothing I lack, thank you.”
Her eyes couldn’t help but settle upon Trip and
he practicably returned her sated look.

“Goodnight, then,” Archer bade.

“Goodnight, Captain,” T’Pol wished.

Trip just smiled at her as though the set of his
mouth would stay that way for a good while. Playing
footsies under their captain’s nose, when his eyes
hadn’t been on them, had been fun.

“Ready, Trip?”

“Ready as I’ll ever be, Cap’n.” Trip made to
stand, but Archer was right under him, sparing
him any undue exertion. “A little rocky, sir.”

“Not too bad. I’ve got you.”

T’Pol noted how heavily Trip leaned upon Archer,
and thought that perhaps tensions between them
were finally easing. “Captain,” she said,
“despite my temporary incapacitation, I will
have those iconic analyses completed, as you
requested.”

“Take all the time you need, T’Pol, there’s no
rush.”

With a pronounced sluggishness to the men’s gait,
Archer and Trip made a second start for the door.
“We’ll talk tomorrow, T’Pol. Maybe go over those
injector percentiles, if you’re up to it,” Trip
introduced.

“That’s only if she’s up to it, Trip,” Archer was
quick to remind.

“Aside from the swollen condition of my ankle, I’m
fine. Mentally, I’m quite capable of performing my
duties,” T’Pol insisted.

“Let’s not push it,” Archer cautioned, initiating
the opening of the door. Upon its doing so, the
captain gently urged Trip on. “Sprains can be a
tricky–”

“Watch out, Cap’n,” Trip warned, but the warning
came too late. Archer had gone one way and he
another, with the result that both men were now
lying in a heap; Trip had his face buried in
Archer’s armpit, and the captain was grimacing,
clutching his ankle.

Through the open door, they heard T’Pol call, “Is
everything all right?”

“Uh…”

“Uh huh…ya damn right, uh…”

“Is there some difficulty?”

“Not unless you consider a three-way ankle sprain
a problem,” Trip piped up, sounding as snide as
he could. “Cap’n, as soon as I’m able to stand on
two solid feet, I’m gonna check the decks for bobbles.”

“You do that, Trip. You do that. T’Pol…”

“Yes, Captain.”

“Could you call Phlox? I’d do it myself, if my
ankle didn’t feel as if it’s broken. I’d appreciate
it. Take your time though, no need worsening your
present condition.” Archer winced; shiny beads of
sweat dotted his forehead.

“I’ll call him, Captain.”

“T’Pol,” Trip hailed.

“Yes, Commander?”

“Watch your step.”

She supposed she’d make allowance for the unmistakable
strains of amusement shading his tone. At heart,
generally, he was a Human who managed to see the
comical in the most unlikely situations. “Indeed…”

The anomaly was responsible for her incident. What
were their excuses? As she crawled her way to the
comm. port, she tried making some for them, and found
she couldn’t…unless…clumsiness, in and of itself,
was some new, more insidious form of anomaly.

She wondered about that…

End

Posted in Enterprise | Tagged , | Leave a comment

The Stronghold

Story By: Barbara Brennan
barbara@bearpaw.dnet.co.uk

A stand-alone adventure set during the time of the first series (please note, I haven’t seen any of the later series yet so this story may not fit in with future plot explanations).

While visiting a new planet, Archer and T’Pol are roped into helping the local government negotiate with rebels intent on destroying this stable society. But it’s Hoshi who holds the key to the solution.

The Stronghold

“Evening Captain, Sub-Commander, Doctor” Trip said cheerily, nodding to each of them as he slid into his seat for dinner. “Looks good” he commented, leaning over the table and picking up the dish of pasta. He spooned large amounts of it onto his plate, “So, did you find anything interesting in the scans today?” he asked Archer.
It was T’Pol who answered, “There are several interesting phenomena along our present course, in particular there is a binary star system which appears from the scans to have one planet orbiting both stars. This is incredibly rare and any scans we take will be of great scientific interest.”
Trip looked excited, “A planet? Does it show any signs of life?”
“No, Commander,” T’Pol replied evenly, “There is no atmosphere at all on the planet. There is no way there could be any life there.”
Trip’s enthusiasm dissipated instantly and looking over to Archer, he sighed, “Captain, not another ‘great-for-science’ experience, how about some actual adventure?”
“This is very important,” T’Pol commented reprovingly.
Trip appealed to Archer, who laughed, “Don’t worry Trip, we’ve adventure lined up as well. On our way to the binary stars we pass the Macabean system. The third planet’s inhabited, the Vulcans have been dealing with them for years.”
Trip brightened again, “Great, so we get to visit without worrying about cultural contamination!” He rubbed his hands together in glee, “Fabulous, visiting a new planet without having to have Doctor Phlox cover my face with extra bits of skin. My forehead still itches from the last time, you know.”
Phlox laughed, “That’s purely psychosomatic Commander, I assure you.”
Trip shrugged, “Well, whatever… But, you can’t deny Captain, it’s a lot more fun to go exploring when you don’t have to hide in the shadows!”
Archer laughed and raised his glass to Trip, “I agree, and I take it you’ll be volunteering for the landing party when we arrive.”
“Hell, yes!” Trip replied vehemently, “Now if you could just pass the pepper Doctor…”

The Enterprise arrived at the Macabean system two days later. Archer asked Hoshi to open a channel to the main city on the third planet.
Taking a deep breath, he spoke, “This is Captain Archer of the starship Enterprise. We’re a ship of exploration from Earth and we would like to come and visit.” Archer looked over at Trip and shrugged slightly, he always felt slightly foolish as he tried to figure out how to introduce himself to new worlds. No-one this far out in space knew what “Earth” was – an unfortunate side effect of being the first humans to explore this region.
Archer tried to stay calm and patient as he waited for a response. He didn’t want to make Hoshi nervous by glancing over at her too often. Ensign Hoshi Sato wasn’t your standard bridge crew officer and he was often aware that she felt very much out of her element here in deep space. He resolved to wait patiently until she had something to report – staring at her wasn’t going to make it any quicker.
A few seconds later, Hoshi looked up with relief; “I’m getting a response, Captain.”
“Put it on screen, Ensign.” Archer looked over at T’Pol, “You’d better join me here – might as well show them a familiar face.”
T’Pol nodded silently and moved round to join Archer within the range of the view-screen. Archer nodded to Hoshi, who activated the comm. channel.
The face that appeared on screen appeared male, his skin was dark, darker than Travis Maywether’s, but his eyes were a startling green and rather than eyebrows he had three stripes of exposed bone – well that was what Archer assumed they were. He made a mental note to remember to ask T’Pol to provide pictures of the races the Vulcans knew.
“Welcome to the Stronghold. I am Leader Trasic, what may we of the Stronghold do for you?”
Archer smiled at the welcome; “We are explorers, Leader Trasic. We would like to visit your planet.”
Trasic considered this, “Then we will have to see what we can do. The people of the Stronghold are always welcoming to visitors.” He paused and his gaze switched to T’Pol who was standing next to Archer patiently waiting.
“A Vulcan?” Trasic murmured.
T’Pol nodded in greeting, and Archer replied, “Yes Leader, this is Sub-Commander T’Pol, my science officer.”
“Then it looks like you might be in a position to do us a good deed, ” Trasic remarked. “Let me know when you are ready to come down to our city and I’ll make arrangements for your arrival.” Trasic switched off the communication at that point, and Archer got the impression that Trasic wasn’t being rude, rather that he was suddenly distracted by an idea that had only occurred to him once he realized there was a Vulcan on board.
Archer looked at T’Pol, “Do you know what that was about?”
“I do not,” she replied, “With your permission I will scan the logs to see if there has been anything recorded about Macaba recently, that might explain his…” she paused trying to find the correct word to describe what she read of Trasic’s reactions, “… concern.”
Archer nodded, “Do that.”
As T’Pol went back to her station, Archer walked around to the Engineering station where Trip was working, or rather sitting listening with excitement.
“Interesting name they have,” Trip commented, “Stronghold? – Do you think that’s the name of their city or their planet?”
“No idea,” Archer felt Trip’s enthusiasm, it was going to be fun getting out of the ship for a while. He turned to look over at T’Pol and asked “Sub-Commander, is that actually the name or was it some sort of a translator error?”
T’Pol looked up, “That is the name of their main city, once they began space travel, they adopted it also for the name of their planet.”
“Hmm, an interesting idea.” Archer mused.
Hoshi joined the discussion. “Perhaps it’s their philosophy? A sense of security based on the strength of the city – that used to be common in history.”
Archer smiled, “I take it you’re volunteering for the away mission too, then?”
Hoshi broke into a broad smile, “You bet Captain, getting to see their city and have access to their language for our translation database…”
Archer nodded, “Count yourself in, Hoshi. Gather your things and we’ll meet up in the shuttle bay in half an hour. You too, Trip, Travis, sort out your replacements for while we’re gone and head down to the shuttle.”
Travis jumped up, as excited as Trip, “Thank you Captain!” He and Trip left the bridge to organize going down to the planet.
Archer turned to Lieutenant Reed who was sitting at the security station with a resigned look on his face.
Before Archer could speak, Reed interjected, “Sir, you are going down to a completely new planet with no real idea of what might happen. You should take a security contingent with you.”
“Malcolm,” Archer replied patiently, “This isn’t an uncharted planet we’re going to, these people have had relations with the Vulcans for decades. The Vulcans like them.”
“Even so sir,” Reed was implacable, as he always was. Archer sighed, Reed’s world was one full of suspicion and planning for betrayal, it made for a great tactical officer, but it did make him a little inflexible.
He tried again, “All the more reason I need you to remain on Enterprise, Malcolm. If something does go wrong you will be in the best position to help us.”
Reed nodded, that was an argument he could believe in, “Very well, sir.” Reed smiled and relaxed slightly now that he knew that the Captain wasn’t completely ignoring the risks, “But I will be able to go down to the planet later though sir?” he asked, “I would like to see it.”
Archer grinned, “No problem Malcolm, if all goes well, I’d like everyone to get a little R&R while we’re here.”
Reed smiled and nodded, “Looking forward to it, sir.”
Archer had turned away to go to T’Pol’s science station to see if she was now able to explain Trasic’s curious comment when Ensign Sinclair arrived as Travis’s replacement. Archer smiled as she walked passed him and she shyly returned his smile, she was slightly older than Travis but without the easy confidence that he had gained from living and working in space since he was born. As Archer watched her take her place at the helm, and begin to calmly work through the checks and diagnostics to familiarize herself with the ship’s position and condition, he felt proud. Even the young members of his crew really were the best of the best. He could see a future when Starfleet had more ships like Enterprise and in that future Ensigns like Sinclair would be the captains leading their own ships into the wide unknown and he would be… Archer shook his head, he must be getting old – it wasn’t like him to get whimsical. He definitely needed a holiday.
Get back to business and fast, Archer thought to himself. “Is there anything in the logs?” he asked T’Pol as he walked over to her station.
“There is a message from the Stronghold to Vulcan High Command requesting a diplomatic team, but the request doesn’t include any details other than the fact that it is to do with an internal dispute. High Command dispatched the T’Kron three weeks ago from it’s station on Carsallas Prime, which would mean it is due here in another two weeks.”
“Interesting. Maybe whatever it was has got worse in the meantime.”
“We have no way of knowing what it is that Leader Trasic requires of us until we have more information. It may not even be connected to this message.”
Archer grinned, “Bet you it is though.”
T’Pol looked over at him forbiddingly, “I do not bet, Captain.”
Archer laughed, “Shame, that would have been easy money.” He swept his arm out towards the door of the turbo-lift; “Shall we get to the shuttle bay and find out?”
T’Pol favored him with what Trip called the Vulcan look, which meant she was trying to decide whether humans really were an intelligent life form, and then she led the way into the turbo-lift.
“You have the conn, Mr. Reed” Archer called out as he left.

In the shuttle bay, Trip, Travis and Hoshi were already there and waiting when Archer and T’Pol arrived.
“We’re all ready to go then?” Archer asked with a smile.
Travis grinned and replied, “Ready and waiting with bated breath, Captain.”
Archer laughed, “We’d better get started then. Hoshi, open a channel down to the planet so that we can let them know we’re coming. T’Pol”, he said turning to his science officer, “since they seem so keen on Vulcans we might as well reassure them that you’re coming – you get their instructions on landing.”
T’Pol nodded and followed Hoshi into the shuttle. Archer grinned at Trip and Travis; “The adventure begins, then?”
“Sure thing, Captain.” Travis grinned back. He turned and followed T’Pol into the shuttle.
Archer looked over at Trip who hadn’t moved. “You seemed to have lost some of your excitement. What’s up?”
Trip shrugged, “I may have been hanging around Malcolm too long, but something’s bothering me about this, I guess I’m just waiting for the other shoe to drop.”
Archer patted Trip’s shoulder, “Malcolm would be proud of you – come on, let’s see what’s out there…”

Inside the shuttle, Travis was running the preflight checks in the pilot’s seat and T’Pol was at the comm station with Hoshi receiving instructions on entering the Stronghold. Once the call was finished, she turned to Travis to give him the instructions on flying down to the Stronghold.
“Engineer Croaj has given me precise co-ordinates for entering the airspace over the city. There is an energy shield that surrounds the city, when we are on approach, they will open the shield just wide enough to allow the shuttle through.”
Trip paused in climbing into the seat beside Travis and raised his eyebrows, “Seems a bit severe. Is this another cultural thing, to do with the name?”
T’Pol considered it, “It is possible. I have never been to this planet before. There is no mention of such a shield in any of the reports, but that does not necessarily mean that it was not there. The Vulcans would have been expected, so preparations could have been made.”
“Plus Trasic seemed to indicate something was going on.” Travis interjected, “Maybe this is part of that special circumstance.”
“Only one way to find out.” Archer decided resting a hand on Travis’s shoulder, “On you go Travis.” He leant over and activated the comm. panel, “Malcolm, we’re on our way.”
“Very good sir, Let me know when you’ve landed.”
Archer shook his head and smiled “Naturally.”

Leader Trasic was there to meet them when the shuttle landed in a large courtyard in the center of the large building, which was itself at the center of the main city of the planet. Trasic was flanked on both sides by three security guards, all three holding their rifles ready to shoot at the first sign of trouble.
Trip looked over at Archer, “Maybe we should have brought Malcolm” he muttered.
Archer frowned and stepped forward, “Leader Trasic, if you didn’t want us to be here, all you had to do was say so.”
“Forgive me,” Trasic stepped forward, “The guards are not because of you, but are a standard fixture at the moment. I do want you to be here.” He paused, considering his words, “I need your help.”
Archer remained stern, “Then you had better explain, because otherwise…”
T’Pol touched his arm to interrupt, “Please Captain,” she whispered, “Try to remember that you are talking to a head of state.”
Archer nodded but his expression did not change. He took a deep breath and tried to keep his voice calm. “Let’s start this again shall we? How about you tell us what’s going on. We will help if we can.”
Trasic lead them to a small meeting room off the main courtyard, He signaled for the guards to remain outside. Archer was unable to follow what they were saying, but going by the body language of the guards, this looked to him like a break in protocol. Those guards looked just like Malcolm did when he was trying to hide his annoyance at the rash actions of his Captain. Which reminded Archer of something he had forgotten to do and he pulled out his hand-held communicator.
“Archer to Enterprise…”
No response.
“Enterprise, this is Captain Archer, come in please.”
No response.
Archer looked over at T’Pol, who tried her own communicator without response.
“It might be their shield,” Trip suggested, “If they’re that worried about security, they could have constructed it to stop all electronic signals as well as ships.”
T’Pol looked up at the sky, it was just possible to see the shield in the shimmer of the sunlight, “Very impressive,” she commented.
“That’s as may be,” Archer was getting very annoyed at the way this mission was going. “But that doesn’t help us trying to contact Malcolm to let him know we’re all right. I don’t particularly want him trying out our weapons against those shields.”
“Not yet, anyway,” Trip muttered.
T’Pol nodded and walked over to where Trasic was arguing with his security guards. “Leader Trasic,” she interrupted, “We need to be able to contact our ship. It is standard procedure.”
Trasic looked surprised, as if he hadn’t considered the inconvenience of the shield to visitors. “Oh, of course… sorry, I had forgotten to warn you. My apologies… I have a lot on my mind at the moment. None of your electronic equipment will work while the shield is up.”
Hoshi reacted with surprise, “None of it, not even our translators or recorders?”
Trasic shook his head, “None of it, but then you don’t need translators, ours work as well with your language as anything you could achieve, and as for contacting your ship, you can of course use our communication units. Dravac will take you to one now if you wish,” Trasic gestured to one of the guards, who stepped forward.
“Thank you.” Archer replied, through gritted teeth, and as he left with Dravac he shot a look at T’Pol that very clearly said his patience was running out, and she needed to have found out what the hell was going on by the time he returned.
Archer wasn’t the only one taken aback by this turn of events. Hoshi turned to Travis and whispered, “Now I feel like a fifth wheel, I only came along because of the chance to learn their language, how am I supposed to do that if we can’t use our recorders or our translators?”
“Don’t worry, ” Travis replied, calm and relaxed as always, “I’m sure the Captain will think of something.”
Hoshi was envious of Travis’s ability to meet any new situation without worrying about the outcome, she didn’t know if it was just his personality or the fact that he had been in space all his life. Compared to him, her life as a language scientist had left her woefully unprepared to deal with life on Enterprise. She took a deep breath and tried to appear as relaxed as he always did.
T’Pol stepped forward and spoke in a carefully neutral tone, “Leader Trasic, if you could explain what is happening here then perhaps we could help you.”
Trasic nodded slowly and sank into the chair behind the central table; he gestured for the Enterprise crew to do the same. As he waited for them all to be seated, Trasic rubbed the bone ridge above his right eye. Hoshi saw this and wondered if it was the Macabean version of the human gesture of rubbing the bridge of the nose when tired. Trasic did look very tired, she thought.
“My people, “ Trasic began, “are experiencing a level of turmoil that we have not known in centuries. A faction has risen from Drusii, one of the outer cities, saying that the Stronghold is archaic, that the concept should be,” he struggled to finish the sentence, the opinion that he was attempting to express was obviously one that he strongly disagreed with, “dismantled.”
T’Pol concentrated hard to hide her surprise. This was illogical – the Stronghold had been a stable part of interstellar politics for longer than the Vulcans. Societies like that rarely suffered from violent upheaval.
“What has caused such discontent?” she asked carefully.
Trasic ran the palms of his hands across the ridges on his forehead as though wiping them clean.
“At first it didn’t look like anything different from the usual discussions that we have every year. There are always dissenting voices in the Stronghold – as there should be in any good society”
T’Pol raised an eyebrow at that but made no comment.
Trasic continued, “Usually when these discussions occur we all – that is, the Council and anyone else who is interested – talk through the issue and we take on board any changes that are useful and so the Stronghold grows. But this time” Trasic stopped, genuinely unable to comprehend what was happening, “this time they just won’t listen.”
Trip laughed, “Sounds just like Earth politicians.”
Trasic looked over at him in amazement, “What is the point of arguing if you aren’t willing to compromise?”
“Hey don’t ask me, I’m just an engineer.”
“They wouldn’t compromise at all?” Hoshi asked.
Trasic held up his hands, palms upward, “No, they just kept demanding the destruction of the Stronghold.”
“Did they say why?” Travis asked leaning forward, “They must have had a reason.”
Trasic raised his palms again, “None that I could comprehend. That’s why I asked for Vulcan intervention. I needed their logic.”
“The T’Kron.” T’Pol stated.
“Yes,” Trasic agreed, “Vulcan High Command said they would dispatch it immediately, that it would be here in six weeks local time.”
“And how long ago was that?” Travis asked.
“Four weeks.”
“That fits with the reports.” T’Pol agreed, “The T’Kron left Carsallas Prime just over three Earth weeks ago.”
“And we thought that would be plenty of time but matters have deteriorated rapidly. The opposition have started threatening terrorist action.”
“Have there been any attacks?” T’Pol asked.
“Thankfully no. But the threat is enough – all of our defenses are designed to deal with attacks from outside the Stronghold. No-one ever dreamed of needing to defend against attacks from within.” Trasic began rubbing his right eye ridge once more.
“Sounds like you’ve had it lucky.” Trip commented. “In Earth history acts of terror play a big part.”
Trasic looked over at him speculatively. “Then perhaps it is not Vulcan’s help I need, but Earth’s”
T’Pol said nothing as she looked over at Trip with a raised eyebrow and an expression of disdain. But further discussion was halted by Captain Archer’s return.
Archer stopped just inside the door. “Well, do you know what’s going on yet?” he asked T’Pol.
“Yes, Leader Trasic is trying to negotiate with a group of intransigent rebels who are threatening to commit acts of terrorism if they don’t get their way. It is a situation that Commander Tucker appears to be very familiar with.”
Trip grinned and shrugged, “Not me personally, Captain, I was just talking about Earth in general.”
Archer nodded, his face remaining serious, “And how do you want us to help?” he asked Trasic.
T’Pol interjected before Trasic could speak knowing her answer would be more succinct, “Leader Trasic has requested the aid of the Vulcan High Council, they dispatched the T’Kron.”
“Which isn’t due here for another two weeks.” Archer finished.
“Yes Captain.”
“And you want our help in the meantime?” Archer asked Trasic directly.
“Yes. The situation has deteriorated far faster than I imagined.” Trasic looked over at T’Pol, “At first when I saw you had a Vulcan on board I desired her help, but listening to your crew I think perhaps it is you I need.”
“If any of us help, what would it involve? Negotiations?”
“Yes Captain, I need someone who can talk sense into these people because I cannot.”
Archer gestured for Trip and T’Pol to join him outside.
“Well?” he asked the two of them.
“It would be good if we could help them.” T’Pol replied, “The Stronghold is a steadying power in this quadrant.”
“Plus doing a favor is a great way to make friends – which we can never have too many of out here.” Trip commented.
“I agree. But I am no diplomat.” Archer said doubtfully.
“That much is certain, Captain.” T’Pol interrupted calmly. “But I will, of course, remain to aid with whatever you decide.”
Archer nodded. “Here’s what we’ll do. T’Pol and I will stay here and help Trasic.” Archer looked around quickly to make sure none of Trasic’s guards were close by, “Trip, I need you to head back to the Enterprise – work with Malcolm, see if there’s anyway you can break through the shield.”
“Captain”, T’Pol interrupted urgently, “I hardly think…”
Archer put up a hand to forestall her complaint, “Just to be on the safe side. I don’t like being out of contact with my ship.”
T’Pol nodded in acceptance.
Archer paused and then nodded once in decision, “Travis will go back with you, Trip, between the two of you, sort out a schedule so that there are always two good shuttle pilots on duty for as long as this lasts. If this all goes to hell in a hand basket then we are going to need to move very fast.”
“And with their shield, we can’t even use the transporter” Trip agreed.
“My thoughts exactly.”
“And Ensign Sato?” T’Pol asked.
Archer shook his head; “Given the fact that she can’t use a translator because of the shield it’s not vital that she be here with us. I’d feel better with her on Enterprise.”
T’Pol nodded, “Having her working with the computers could be useful to the negotiations. We are not going to have the opportunity to fully investigate what has happened so far. If Leader Trasic gives Ensign Sato transcripts she can begin the research.”
“Good plan – ask Trasic to give Hoshi the transcripts.”

Trasic lead the way into the debating chamber flanked by two guards, next came T’Pol with two guards and then Archer also with two guards assigned to him. Trasic had told them that these guards would be assigned to them for the duration of their stay. Archer didn’t like it and would rather have had two of his own security team but Trasic gave them no choice. Archer didn’t feel comfortable at all with placing this much faith in strangers in an unknown situation – there just too many variables that he had no control over. He was beginning to feel sympathy with the rebels.
That sympathy dissipated quickly after the first morning in the negotiation hall. The rebels were belligerent and antagonistic – refusing to listen to anything he, T’Pol or Trasic had to say. The two leaders of the group who did most of the talking contributed nothing except to repeat with ever-increasing volume that their demand was the dissolution of the Stronghold and they would accept nothing less. Frankly, as Archer commented to T’Pol during a break, it was all just giving him a headache.
“It is illogical to continuously restate a position in an argument that you are not going to win.”
“More than that”, Archer muttered, “It’s a definition of insanity.”
T’Pol raised an eyebrow in question.
“To repeat the same action over and over expecting to get a different result.”
“Commander Tucker suggested that this is how politicians on Earth act.”
“Most don’t, thank goodness. But, yes, there are some groups who see it as weakness to move from their core request.” Archer paused as a disturbing thought occurred to him. “Those groups aren’t interested in negotiating – they just use the failure of talks as further justification for violence.”
“A disturbing trend – and one that is new to the Stronghold.”
“It’s more than disturbing.” Trasic interjected having arrived for the end of the conversation. “It could mean the end of the Stronghold. I cannot allow violence to occur within these walls. If that happens the Stronghold is destroyed anyway.”
“Equally, you cannot dismantle something so important on the whims of a few.” T’Pol replied firmly.
“There must be some options we haven’t tried yet.” Archer tried to raise Trasic out of his defeatist mood. “What about a separate settlement for these people to live in how they choose?”
“Outside of the control of the Stronghold?” Trasic asked doubtfully “That’s unheard of.”
“But worth suggesting, though?”
“I agree.” T’Pol commented, “It is a solution that could be workable. Perhaps you should talk it over with your advisors.” she suggested carefully, making sure it came out only as a suggestion and not as an order which would have been her natural inclination.
Archer smiled slightly as he noticed her struggle – but it was successful. Trasic nodded, considering the idea, and left. Archer sighed a small sigh of relief; at least they weren’t out of options yet.

Back on Enterprise, Hoshi sat hunched over her communications station deep in concentration. She was listening to the recordings of the negotiations to help her understand the Macabean language and mindset. It was more than just listening to the words; she was listening underneath the words to the undercurrents of meaning, the hidden inflections that reveal the true intentions of the speaker. As she worked Hoshi felt herself become energized; this is what she was on Enterprise for. This is why Archer had asked for her, her ear – her ability to hear what everyone else ignored.
She stopped suddenly – hearing something that didn’t belong. She must have heard it several times by now but she hadn’t noticed the implications. Hoshi replayed the last section of the recording to make sure she wasn’t imagining things.

Travis came back to the Bridge carrying a tray of sandwiches and mugs; he went over to the engineering station where Trip and Reed were arguing softly trying to figure a way of breaking through the shield.
“Thought you might like some refreshment, sir,” he said offering the tray to Trip.
“That’s good thinking Travis.” Trip replied gratefully taking a sandwich and a mug of coffee. “Hadn’t realized how hungry I was.”
“Me neither.” Reed agreed inspecting the choice of sandwiches.
“I brought tea for you sir.” Travis said pointing to one of the mugs with his chin.
“Very impressive – thank you!” Reed took the mug, grinning. “Milk and no sugar?”
Travis nodded. “Just the way you like it.”
Trip laughed, “You looking for reassignment to catering or bucking for a promotion?”
Travis grinned, “It always worked on my parent’s ship!”
Leaving the two of them laughing, Travis went over to Hoshi at the communications station. She was staring out into the distance concentrating on her own puzzle and didn’t hear him approach. Not wanting to interrupt her train of thought Travis left her a sandwich and mug of herbal tea on the desk beside her and went back to his own station.
A couple of minutes later Travis heard Hoshi gasp with a deep intake of breath as though she’d been underwater. He went over to her.
“Hoshi, are you okay?”
Hoshi looked around at him vacantly and then she blinked and looked at him again with more focus. “Hmm? Oh yes, I’m fine. I was just… er… thinking.” She blinked again and looked around. “You know, actually I’m quite hungry.” She stopped speaking as she noticed the sandwich and looked back up at Travis.
“How long has that sandwich been there?”
Travis laughed, “Not long. I brought them up from the mess-hall.” He shrugged, “There’s not much for a pilot to do while the ship’s in orbit so I figured I might as well make myself useful. The tea should still be warm enough.”
Hoshi reached over for the mug and picked it up breathing in the scent of the tea. “Rose-hip and chamomile” she commented, “Perfect.”
She looked over at Travis, recognizing in him her own feeling of restlessness from the beginning of the mission. It made her feel better knowing that other people felt the same way that she did.
“Travis, would you be able to give me a hand with some research?”
“Sure thing, what do you need?” Travis grinned showing his relief at having some actual work to do.
Hoshi paused, trying to formulate a coherent train of thought from the jumble in her mind. “The opposing group in these negotiations are called the Komor Vas – it means League of Peace,” she explained. “I want to know how long they’ve been in existence.”
“You think there’s something funny about them?”
Hoshi shook her head, “I’m not sure yet – I’m curious about them and because of the shield I can’t get access to the Stronghold records. Could you search the Vulcan records for me?”
“I’d be glad to. I’ll get started right away, while you take a break and eat that sandwich.” Travis grinned.
Hoshi smiled and nodded “Sounds like a fair deal to me.”
She picked up the mug of tea and sipped it slowly, ruminating over the ramifications of what she had heard.
When time and a full stomach didn’t weaken her conclusions, Hoshi was more certain than ever of the importance of what she had heard. She copied out the segment of the recording for easy access later, taking the time to listen to it again to remind herself of the voices: Trasic and Komtas, the leader of the rebels.
“Did you find anything?” she asked Travis as she walked over to his station.
“Nothing specific,” he replied, “There are some mentions of the group being involved in the government of the Stronghold as far back as 2037 but no details.”
Hoshi was interested, “They used to be involved in the government – so they weren’t always extremists?”
“Doesn’t look like it. I mean there are no details of what they were doing with the government, but I doubt the Vulcans would even mention them unless they were an accepted part of the main leadership.”
Hoshi nodded, “I agree… Interesting…” she paused and reaching a conclusion asked, “Has the Captain called in recently?”
Respecting her need to keep her thoughts to herself until she was ready, Travis swallowed his curiosity and answered her question simply, “Not since lunch-time when he called up to see how the Commander was getting on.”
Hoshi nodded vacantly, back in thought again.
“Do you want me to send a message?” Travis prodded, bringing Hoshi’s attention back to the conversation.
“I don’t know… I think I do need to talk to him but I’m not sure what to do first…”
“You’d better talk to Commander Tucker then, he’ll be able to figure out what to do.”
“Good idea – I’ll explain it to him. If I’m going to make a fool of myself I’d rather it be with the Commander than the Captain and the Sub-Commander.”
Travis grinned in agreement, “Very good idea.”

Hoshi went down to Engineering to find the Commander. He was working with Malcolm Reed over a display of the planet. Reed looked up as he heard her enter.
“Ensign,” he said on greeting, “You don’t often frequent Engineering, what can we do for you?”
Reed was always formal, it was his nature, but Hoshi had noticed that of late he had been even more careful with her. Occasionally it bothered her, but at times like this, when she was pursuing a puzzle, she was grateful for his apparent disinterest in social chat of any kind.
Trip looked up at Reed’s words and grinned when he saw Hoshi. “Hey, Hoshi, you looking for me?”
“Yes Commander, I’ve found some things in the recordings that might explain what’s going on in the Stronghold.”
“Sounds interesting – step into the office” Trip gestured to his small office-cum-workroom, “Malcolm, you come too – I could do with your opinion.”
Reed nodded and followed them into Trip’s office. Trip sat in his chair behind the desk and Hoshi sat in the only other chair, Reed leant against the wall facing both Trip and Hoshi. Hoshi looked across at both of them beginning to feel very nervous, realizing this, Trip smiled over at her.
“Relax Hoshi, whatever it is, I want to hear about it.”
Hoshi took a deep breath and blurted “I think the leaders of the rebels are imposters.”
Reed raised his eyebrows, “Imposters?”
Hoshi nodded and said with more confidence, “I don’t just mean that they’re not real rebels. I mean they’re not real Macabeans ”
Trip and Reed stared at her in stunned silence.
“Not real Macabeans?” Trip repeated.
“Two questions,” Reed said softly, “One, with all the Macabean security, how is that possible? And two, how do you know?”
Hoshi answered confidently, she felt on surer ground now that the two officers seemed to be taking her seriously. “The first question I can’t answer, maybe the Captain can, but as for the second I know because their speech patterns are wrong, they say ‘Stronghold’ as though it’s just a place.” She held up a hand to forestall their questions. “As a start, trust that in the area of language I know what I’m talking about. For Macabeans, the Stronghold is more than just a place, it’s a way of thinking, their whole philosophy and society is based around the nature of the Stronghold, it is a sense of security that is the pillar of their lives. You can hear it in the reverence of the way they speak, even when they are just referring to the place.
“That’s why the idea of dismantling the Stronghold horrifies Trasic. Anyway, when Komtas and Reaydet – the two leaders of the rebels – say Stronghold they sound just like you and I would – with no undertones or feeling at all.”
“Why wouldn’t Trasic notice?” Reed asked.
“I guess the physical disguise is very good – no-one would spot the language undertones unless they were looking for it.”
Trip looked over at Reed, “What do you think?”
“Makes some kind of sense.” he decided, “It would explain why they aren’t interested in negotiating. Still, it raises a lot of questions.”
“The first of which,” Trip agreed, “is how the hell could they do that?”
Reed looked over at him, “Maybe the question isn’t how, it’s who”
Realization of what Reed meant struck Trip, “The Suliban?”
Reed nodded.
Trip shook his head, “Jeez, what is it with them…  Anyway, Suliban or not, the Captain is definitely going to want to hear about this.”
Trip thumbed the comm-link on his desk, “Tucker to the Bridge”
“Maywether here, sir” Travis’s voice came out over the speaker, calm and confident.
“Travis, get a message through to the Stronghold for me. I need the Captain or T’Pol to contact me as soon as possible.”
“Will do, Commander.”
Trip switched off the comm and leant back in his chair. He grinned over at Hoshi, “Nice work Hoshi – the Captain is going to receive this like manna from heaven!”
Hoshi blushed and looked down at the floor not sure how to react.
“Don’t get too excited, Commander” Reed commented wryly, “the problem’s not fixed yet.”
Grateful that the attention was off her for a moment, Hoshi took a quiet breath and willed her face to cool down. Feeling a little more composed; she looked back at Trip.
“Lieutenant Reed is probably right sir, this may not make a difference.”
Reed interrupted quickly, “I didn’t say it wouldn’t make a difference, if nothing else it’s going to turn Stronghold security upside down. I just said the problem wasn’t solved yet.”
“The two of you are just pessimists anyway,” Trip said laughing.
The comm unit chiming interrupted further argument. He flicked the switch to activate it.
“Tucker here.”
“Trip? What can I do for you?”
The Captain’s voice sounded a little distorted, Trip figured it was probably a side effect of the shield surrounding the Stronghold and raised his voice slightly to compensate for the distortion. “Hoshi’s figured out something about these rebels that you ought to hear about but I think it’ll be best done face to face.”
Trip glanced over at Reed who nodded his agreement with the plan, “When can you get back up here, sir?” Trip continued.
“We should be done for today in about an hour” Archer replied, “Send Travis down for us then.”
“Will do, Captain.”
Hoshi raised her hand to attract Trip’s attention.
“Hold on a second, Captain.”
Trip nodded to Hoshi and gestured to the comm unit. Hoshi leant forward to make sure the unit picked up her voice clearly. As a communications officer she was already used to pitching her voice so that it traveled clearly through distortion.
“Captain,” she said “could you ask Leader Trasic for the Stronghold records of the history of the Komor Vas?”
“Sure can, what do you need?”
“Mostly information on the two leaders, their history that kind of thing.”
“You think they…”
Trip interrupted before Archer could get any further, “Hold that thought, Captain. We’ll explain when you get here.”
They could hear Archer’s chuckle through the distortion, “I hear you Trip, see you soon.”

When Captain Archer returned to the Enterprise he called a meeting of his senior staff. They met in the mess hall; one of few places on the ship that would seat all of them comfortably, and besides, Archer was hungry and he was in the mood for invoking the Captain’s privilege of being allowed to eat whenever the hell he wanted.
As Hoshi explained her findings and played to him the recording of both Trasic and the leaders of Komor Vas in an attempt to show him the difference, Archer worked his way through a beef and salad sandwich.
When he had finished eating, and she had finished explaining, he lent back and put his hands behind his tired head lacing his fingers to provide a cradle to rest it in.
He closed his eyes and thought in silence working through the possibilities, after a few minutes he opened his eyes to look over at Trip.
“How impenetrable is their shield?”
Surprised by the change in subject, it took Trip a moment to gather his thoughts. In the silence awaiting his answer Hoshi began to fidget, worried that maybe she hadn’t explained herself clearly enough. She leant forward and took a deep breath readying herself to launch into further argument. Archer saw the movement out of the corner of his eye and waved her back.
“Relax Hoshi, I understand your point.”
Hoshi subsided back into her chair feeling a little embarrassed.
“Trip?” Archer prodded.
“Ah, yes sir. Nigh on 100% proof, as near as I can tell, Cap’n. We took scans of the shield’s composition and density and ran simulations to see if there was anything that would penetrate it but nothing me and Malcolm have able to throw at it has even made it blink.”
“No change in energy output or density of cover at any time during our investigations, sir.” Reed elucidated.
T’Pol nodded, she, at least, appreciated the explanation.
Archer nodded, “So you think it’s good enough to shut anyone else out too?”
Beginning to see where Archer’s train of thought was going Trip leant forward concentrating hard; “I’d say so sir, from what we know of the Macabeans this shield’s going to be top-notch. Security’s too much of a priority for them to take any chances. It’d have to be a race significantly advanced on from the Stronghold, and I don’t think there’s too many of them about. Is that right Sub-Commander?” he looked over at T’Pol. After a frosty beginning, he was finally beginning to understand the Vulcan, and he respected her judgement.
“That would be correct.” T’Pol agreed in her measured tones, “There are races sufficiently advanced of the Stronghold, but they would not be concerning themselves with internal politics of another race.”
“Well, that’s reassuring at least.” Archer muttered. Trip, hearing, grinned over at him. T’Pol also heard just as well, but chose to ignore what she recognized as Archer’s lingering resentment at what he saw as Vulcan meddling in Earth’s development.
“So,” Reed interjected, “we can be pretty sure that this shield is as impenetrable to everyone else as it is for us?”
“Correct.” T’Pol asserted.
“Which means,” Archer said continuing with his main train of thought, “that if Komtas and Reaydet are impostors of some sort they will have to leave the shield to relay any information they have.”
“Which means we’ll be able to track them!” Travis exclaimed in surprise.
Archer nodded and smiled, “And that means we’ll be able to figure out who they really are and what they really want.”
“The issue is how to get them to come out from the shield.” T’Pol pointed out.
“Oh, that’s easy,” Archer replied. “We just give them something so amazing that they rush out to report home.”
“And that would be?” Trip prompted.
Archer just grinned.

Trasic sank back into his chair in horror, “You want me to do what?” he whispered faintly, his dark skin turned darker in reaction to the shock making his bone ridges stand out even brighter. He rubbed them again trying to comprehend the reason for Archer’s near blasphemous request.
“You want me to offer the Komor Vas the Stronghold?” he whispered again.
“Perhaps you did not break the news ‘gently’ enough” T’Pol murmured quietly.
Archer shrugged and, taking a deep breath, tried again. “Leader Trasic, I have no intention of you actually having to hand over the Stronghold. We just need to make sure that Komtas hears something that he has to report back to whoever’s controlling this.”
Trasic sighed and stopped rubbing his bone ridges, resting his hands on the table between him and Archer. “I understand your plan Captain but look at it from my point of view. Even if you are correct in your theory about Komtas and Reaydet, even then, this suggestion will go down in the records of the Stronghold. There will be precedent, the Leader of the Stronghold actually offered to hand it over to a group of rebels who were willing to argue for long enough. And if you are wrong…” Trasic trailed off, unable to voice that fear.
Archer leant back in his chair with a deep sigh. T’Pol had warned him that perhaps he had overlooked some of the ramifications of his plan. It looked like she was right, although that realization didn’t help his current situation.
T’Pol sat down beside him and spoke calmly to Trasic. “Leader, we understand the issues, but you have to admit that you have tried all the diplomatic paths. None of them have worked.”
Trasic raised hands palm up, “I do understand that. It’s just that what you suggest… It’s just that what you are suggesting… It goes beyond recklessness…”
“And we understand that, Leader.” T’Pol reassured him, “If we thought there was another choice we would offer it to you. But if we are correct, then this is the only way.”
“If you are correct…” Trasic repeated under his breath.
Archer tried to think of a way through this. He could think of only one option.
“What if we record a message from us explaining that your offer was only an attempt to smoke out the genuineness of the rebel’s claim? That way if we are wrong no precedent is created.”
“The precedent will still be there, Captain, but perhaps it will, at least, allow a chance of defending the Stronghold in future.”
Trasic stood up and walked to the door. “However, I will not allow you to take responsibility, Captain. I will make the recording explaining what we are attempting. If it fails, I will stand down as Leader. This recording will, I hope, give my successor some hope of preserving the Stronghold”
Trasic ran a hand across his brow ridge in a gesture of tiredness.
“Not quite the legacy that I would have wished for.” He sighed, “You are right though, Captain Archer, when you say that I am out of options.” He opened the door and gestured for the guards. “Come Captain, Sub-Commander, time to design my legacy – good or bad.” Trasic smiled and Archer felt a swell of pride for this man who was willing to risk everything he had, but unwilling to risk the chance of anyone else having to pay the price.

Once Trasic had recorded his message and set it for a time-delayed delivery – to be either deleted by him because the plan was successful or to be read with gratitude by his successor, Archer explained his plan to the bridge crew.
“Malcolm, Travis, I want the two of you to return with us to the surface. Travis, stay in the shuttle and be ready to track Komtas and Reaydet as soon as they leave the shield. Malcolm, you’ll come to the meeting hall with us. If you can, follow them when they leave.”
Reed nodded.
“Trip, you stay here on Enterprise. It’s vital we find out who these aliens are. If there is a ship out there and you need to stop it to find out then you have my authority to use any means necessary.”
“How are you going to get them to leave the Stronghold?” Travis asked.
Archer grinned a feral grin; “Leader Trasic is going to make them an offer they can’t refuse – he’s going to give them the Stronghold! Then one of two things will happen, either we’re right and the aliens will want to report their success to their people. At which point you will be able to use the sensors to prove they are aliens and we can stop their plan in its tracks.”
“And if we’re wrong?” Travis asked.
Archer smiled briefly, “Then we’re in an awful lot of trouble.” he pronounced. “We’ll be responsible for destroying one of the most stable societies in this sector.”
“Don’t worry,” Hoshi reassured the group, “They’re either aliens or working for aliens, I’m certain of it.”
Reed pressed the point home, “And Travis and I will prove it.”
Archer nodded, pleased at their certainty, “Any other questions?”
There were none, and Archer disbanded the meeting. As the officers filed out, Archer touched Hoshi’s arm, “Stay a moment, Hoshi.”
Hoshi sat next to Archer and together they waited for everyone else to leave. Once the room was empty, Archer smiled reassuringly.
“I just wanted to make sure you knew how impressed I am with your deductions,” Archer said. “If this works out, there’s no way we could have done without you.”
Hoshi smiled briefly, embarrassed but very pleased by the praise. “Thank you sir.” she managed to speak.
“And you understand why I need you to stay on board Enterprise?”
“Oh yes.” On surer ground here, Hoshi was able to speak confidently. “The Enterprise is the best place for me to be available to everyone.”
Archer smiled in response, ” Good, I’m glad you’re happy with this. I, certainly, will be grateful to know you are on board the Enterprise, if it all goes badly!”
Hoshi grinned, “Thank you sir. Good luck!”
Hoshi got up and left the briefing room, leaving Archer deep in thought, continuing to work through all the possible outcomes of the plan.

Travis piloted the shuttle down to the surface, once again following the specific flight-path given to him by the Stronghold technicians. Lt. Reed disembarked with Archer and T’Pol, once they were on the ground Travis took the shuttle back into the air, having previously received permission from Flight Control to maintain a low-level station above the Stronghold. All he could do now was wait.

After Archer and T’Pol had left to restart the negotiations Reed paced up and down a short distance in the side corridor where he had positioned himself to be able to get a clear view of the only entrance to the main hall of the Stronghold. All he could do now was wait.

Trip tried to settle in the Captain’s chair but he couldn’t. It just didn’t fit. Hell, he was an engineer. Chief Engineer was as high as he wanted to go up the chain of command. Yet here he was in charge of the Enterprise and he was on his own – Archer and T’Pol would be unreachable without a lot of negotiation with Communication Control at the Stronghold, so there was no speedy help to be had there. He looked around the bridge, only Hoshi was part of the Alpha shift bridge crew, most everyone else was almost a stranger to him. I really should get to know the rest of the shifts more, Trip thought idly. He shook himself; he needed to pay attention. What he would not give for an engine to take apart right now, but all he could do was wait.

“Message coming in from the Stronghold, sir.” Hoshi reported.
“Put it through.”
Hoshi opened the channel, and Reed’s voice came through. “Commander? I just spotted them, they left the hall together, no-one else came out so my guess is that it’s not a general break, I’m going to follow them now.”

The waiting was over.

Reed followed the two leaders of the Opposition through the corridors of the Stronghold. It wasn’t a difficult task to remain hidden from them, since they were making no effort to be discreet; the news they had to report was consuming their attention. That part of Archer’s plan was working as expected
Reed followed the two of them outside the central building of the Stronghold, at which point they took a sharp turn to the left and followed a side alley that appeared to lead into an area of low-level buildings. Most likely this was the quickest route to get out from underneath the shielding. If the Captain, or rather Hoshi, was right about what was going on, these aliens had to have figured out the quickest way to get out from within the shield so that they could get instructions from whoever they worked for.
This was the part of the plan where it got difficult. The Stronghold’s shield did not show up clearly on the Enterprise’s scanners and so they had no idea of exactly where the shield ended. It was also not information that Trasic could give them for the simple reason that he didn’t have it. The co-ordinates of the shield randomly fluctuated and could only be exactly computed within Security Control at the center the Stronghold. Reed admired the Macabean approach to security; it was single-minded in a way that he could truly appreciate, although right now it was a real pain.
Since Enterprise did not know where the shield ended, Travis could only wait until he saw a signal and try to read from that. It was going to be a split-second task if the aliens had some sort of a transporter set up, but Reed doubted that – it would leave them open to detection as aliens if they were spotted. That would be too much of a risk given the trouble they had gone to creating these identities. Reed followed them as close as he could, ready with his tri-corder to take a reading in case Travis wasn’t able to pick them up with the shuttle’s scanners in time.
The two men turned left down a narrow alley, which ended in a stone wall set about waist high. Reed watched them vault over this wall and move out into the field beyond. At this point they slowed down and started moving casually about, as though they were simply taking the air.
Reed realized they must be out from under the shield, but their position out in the open meant that it would be very difficult for him to follow them and come out from the shield himself. He tried his communicator just in case he was already clear but the line was still dead. Crouching behind the wall, Reed waited for a moment when they were both facing the other way and when the chance arrived he slid over the wall and lay in the tall grass on the other side.
“Travis,” he whispered, but the line was still dead. Reed had to hope that Travis had spotted them by himself and was even now transmitting the scans and location back to the Enterprise. However, waiting and hoping wasn’t something Reed was very good at and he began to carefully shuffle forward lying flat on his stomach. Every couple of seconds he lifted his head to check what was happening with the two men, reassuring himself that they were still there and hadn’t spotted him yet. Each time, once he had seen it was still safe, he tried calling back to the shuttle.  On the fourth such tense try, the comm-line finally hissed into life – he was out from the shield!
“Travis,” he hissed, “are you there?”
“Sure am,” Travis whispered in reply, “And I’m getting clear signals  – I’m sending them up to the Enterprise for analysis right now sir.”
“Thank goodness,” Reed sighed, “Okay I’m heading back to the main hall to meet up with the Captain. Well done, Ensign.”
“Thank you, sir.”

“I have a signal coming from the shuttle.” Ensign Kozlowski reported from the science station.
Trip leapt from his seat and went over to Kozlowski’s station; Hoshi followed on his heels.
Kozlowski stood up to let Trip sit at the station himself, but he gestured to Kozlowski to remain seated. “You’re the expert here, Ensign. Tell us what we have.”
Kozlowski nodded, pleased at being given the responsibility – “What I can tell you immediately, sir, is that they are definitely not native to Macaba.”
Trip sighed with relief, “That’s all I need to hear for now. Keep studying the scans, see if they exist in the Vulcan database.”
Kozlowski nodded.
Trip turned to Hoshi, “Get a channel open to the Stronghold. Let the Captain and Leader Trasic that we have the information they need. And send them the information Kozlowski has.”
Hoshi nodded and grinned. “I’m on it, sir.”
As Hoshi bent over her communications desk, Lieutenant Hopkins turned round from the tactical station where he had been searching the space around the planet for any sign of the alien’s ship and called out, “I’ve found it sir!”
Trip spun round, “The ship? Where is it?”
Hopkins pointed down onto the visual display, “It’s just moved out from synchronous orbit, sir, it looks like it’s moving to leave the system.”
“Do we go after it sir?” Sinclair asked from the helm.
Now that was the question, Trip thought. What would the Captain do, track the ship or stay here? Where was it more important to be? Instinctively his need for action made Trip want to race after the ship, but he was the acting Captain of the ship that meant there were larger concerns to consider. Trip was painfully aware that everyone was watching him, waiting for a response. He took a deep breath and tossed a mental coin.
“No, we stay here. Track it as far as you can, Hopkins, but we’ll not follow it. The Stronghold is our concern right now.”
As he sank back into the Captain’s chair, Trip concentrated on looking as calm and confident as Jonathan Archer always did, and prayed that his choice had been right.

When the steward came into the meeting room to tell him the Enterprise had information for him, Archer knew the moment of truth had arrived. He quietly excused himself and left the hall. Out in the communications center he took one look at Hoshi’s face and knew the news was good. He grinned down at her and asked for the details.
“We were right sir, definitely not Macabean, I’m sending you the scans now.”
“Nicely done, Hoshi – you get the credit for this. Have you been able to tell who the actually are?”
“Yes sir.” She took a breath. “They’re Suliban, sir.”

Travis piloted Archer, T’Pol and Reed back to Enterprise. Trasic was still leader of the Stronghold and more importantly for Trasic and the Macabeans, the Stronghold still existed. As soon as the two Suliban realized that their cover was blown they had returned to their ship and it left the system at high warp, tracked by Lieutenant Hopkins.  With their leaders exposed as aliens, the Opposition collapsed and were more than happy with Trasic’s offer to keep this whole event secret if they were to publicly declare their unstinting support for the Stronghold.
Back on Enterprise, Reed leant back in his chair at the tactical station and leaned over to Trip, now gratefully out of center stage. Reed spoke softly not wanting to attract attention.
“What is it with the Suliban? Why do they keep butting their noses into things that don’t concern them?”
Trip smiled and shrugged, “I don’t know, but do you think at some point they are going to get annoyed that we keep stopping them?”
“You see, that’s a thought that keeps coming back to me. What if that’s their actual plan?”
“What? To get us involved?” Trip was incredulous.
Reed nodded firmly, “Yes. What if it’s us they’re trying to manipulate?”
Trip shivered, “Come off it Malcolm. Don’t you think you’re being a bit paranoid?”
Reed shrugged, “Possibly.”
He glanced back over his shoulder and saw that T’Pol was starting to pay attention to their conversation, so he smiled over at Trip, who was now looking very disturbed by the conversation, and started to pay very close attention to the tactical display.

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The search of the Albatross

Name: Robbie Gray
masamimbi@yahoo.co.uk

Story Title: The search of the Albatross

Characters: Voyager Crew plus Audrey Gan and Young

Summary: Audrey Gan and Young are sent by Admiral
Roberts are sent to retrieve the Voyager crew back
from the Delta quadrant. With the help of a new kind
of propulsion they are sent on there way. But all dose
not happen to go as planned.

The voyager characters and ship in this story are owned by paramount. The rest is my own.

‘How are we doing?’ asked Captain Janeway.
‘Well Captain we will be at the co-ordinates in about three hours.’ said Commander Chakotay
‘Captain we are being haled on an federation emergency hale on all frequencies.’ said Harry Kim from the ops station
Janeway looked over at Ops.
‘On screen Mr Kim.’
‘Audio only Captain.’
‘Go ahead.’
‘This is the Morning Star calling any vessel.  An alien vessel is attaching us. Can you read me. This is a Mayday can any one reserve this. This is a mayday I repeat this is the Morning Star calling any vessel.’
Harry looked up from her console. ‘Captain the message repeats.’
Janeway nodded. Then glanced over at the helm.
‘Increase to Maximum warp.’
‘Increasing to Maximum Warp captain.’ Said Pairs from the helm.
Janeway glanced over to Chakotay
‘I hope we are not to late.’ She said.
~
‘Captain were are approaching the area of the distress signal.’ said Paris.
‘Okay go to impulse.’ said Janeway.
They watched the main view screen and only saw deep space looking back.
‘Are these the right co-ordinates?’ asked Chakotay.
‘Yes sir, I’ve just double checked.’ said Harry.
‘Scan the area. I want to know what sent out the distress signal.’  Janeway glanced over to Chakotay who shrugged.
‘Captain I have found debree scattered around the area. The fragments are from a Federation vessel as well as other unknown elements. There has also been resent weapons fire in the area.’
‘Are you sure.’
‘Yes sir.’
‘Is there any thing that could send a distress call in the area?’
‘Sir I’ve located a small drone in the debree field it is sending the distress call.’
‘Transport it to engineering and keep scanning the area for life pods. Chakotay you’re with me.’ Janeway ordered as he got up and headed for the turbo lift closely followed by Chakotay.
They entered Main engineering and found Belanna Torres scanning the drone.
‘What have we got?’ asked Janeway.
‘We’ll it is federation Captain. We have even found what ship it was a assigned to.’ Belanna glanced down at her PADD.  ‘The Federation Search and Rescue Runabout Wanderer.’
‘A runabout?’ Janeway tapped his comm badge.
‘Janeway to Kim.’
‘Yes sir.’
‘From you scans could the ship be the size of a runabout?’ he asked.
‘Can’t tell for sure but I doubt it there’s too much debree here.’
‘Okay thank you.’
‘Captain you should see this.’ Janeway moved closer to Belanna.
‘What have you found?’
‘There is a file in the memory core of the drone.’
‘Can you access it?’
‘Yes Captain.’
‘Computer interface with the drone and access the memory core file.’
‘Accessed.’ chimed the computer.
To their right a screen on the wall flickered on and the Federation emblem appeared. It was promptly replaced by the image of a tall woman in her late thirties with blond hair and blue eyes. She wore a command Starfleet uniform and she had a cut across her forehead. Thompson noted the spotted pattern then ran down both sides of her face, which meant that she was a member of the Trill, a symbiotic species who shared their life with a slug like parasite known as a symbiont. He also noted that she held the rank of Lieutenant Commander. They saw her look over her shoulder at some one working in the background.
‘Young’un is this recording.’
‘Yes skipper it is.’ replied a tired voice.
They saw the woman look back.
‘My name is Lieutenant Commander Audrey Gan of the federation deep space rescue vessel Morning Star. If you are hearing this Captain Thompson then we have failed and “Robbie” our rescue drone is playing this.’
There was flash of light from behind her and yell. She looked towards the sound.
‘Young’un are you okay?’ she asked.
‘Well you know Skipper the circuit that I thought was dead. Well its not.’
‘If I have told you once, I’ve told you a million times that killing your self half way through a rescue mission is not a bright idea.’
‘What do you call our situation now then Skipper.’
Gan grinned ‘A set back.’
‘Ha what a set back Skipper.’
‘Keep going.’ she turned back to the screen.
‘Well I bet you have many questions like what is a federation ship doing deep in the                                     and why is it being repaired by a maniac.’
‘Oi I heard that Skipper.’ said the person called Young’un.
Gan smiled. ‘Well these are perfectly reasonable questions so I better start from the beginning.’
‘I guess it all started when we were called into Admiral Robert’s office……’
~
‘I have asked you both here for a important mission.’ said Admiral Roberts. She looked a Gan and Young. Young was the only person in the room not wearing a Starfleet uniform. Instead he wore a thick dark blue polo neck jumper and black trousers. There was a small Albatross emblem on the jumper with the words We got you, your safe. He was a member of the Albatross recovery team, which was a civilian, search and rescue service noted for its member’s extreme bravery. If you needed help they were the people how could be trusted to get you out in any situation. He was on an exchange program with Starfleet and he had become a very vital part to their operation.
‘What do you know about the Starship Voyager?’ she asked.
‘Well sir the USS Voyager. She was thought to have been destroyed in the badlands and we have gotten communication using the Mitus array and Lieutenant Barkley.’ said Young.
Admiral Roberts hid a smile. She had always wondered where he got his information from but it did not mater.
‘Well since we found Voyager with the help of the Mitus array we want her back. They have been out there too long and they need to come home.’
She looked at them both and then said ‘This is a volunteer mission only I will not order you to go. I just want to say that voyager and her crew have gone through enough.  We need to get them back. ’
Young and Gan looked at each other and then Gan said ‘Admiral rescuing ship is our job and you will need the best and as you have stated many times before that we are the best.’
‘And any way it’ll be easy sir.’ said Young.
The admiral smiled ‘Good, I will see you both at Utopia Planitia Fleet Yards at 0900 tomorrow.’
They both nodded and left.
~
At 0845 found Gan and Young heading towards Utopia Planitia Fleet Yards in there rescue runabout Wanderer.
‘Utopia Planitia Control this is the runabout Wanderer request permission to approach.’ said Gan. She looked over to the co-pilots seat which was occupied by Young.
‘What you looking at Young’un you been buried in that PADD for hours?’
Young looked up and said ‘Did you know Skipper that Captain Thompson and Commander Dvorak were close friends of the Grants.’
‘What the archaeologists.’
‘Yes Skipper them. Did you know that Captain Thompson specially requested that Scott Grant was transferred to the ship before it left and Rosemary Grant would have been transferred later if she had not done it her self.’
Gan look back at her consol.
‘Runabout Wanderer this is Utopia Planitia Control proceed to construction facility G5.’
‘Thank you Control Wanderer out.’ she tapped the control panel and the Wanderer moved forward.
‘It is nothing mysterious about Captain Thompson wanting the Grant children on board his ship. It was probably because he knew the parents.’
Young frond ‘Maybe Skipper but what about this, the Indefatigable was lost in the Alpha Quadrant but we were told that it was found in the                    .’
‘Well you got me there but there are things in this galaxy that we don’t know about.’ said Gan as she flew past the many star ships in different stages of construction.
‘I got one for you Young’un why have we been sent to the dead end of Utopia Planitia Fleet Yards?’
Young smiled ‘That’s because Skipper we are going to see our new craft.’ said Young with a smug smile.
‘I hope so.’ said Gan as she docked with the construction facility G5. ‘Because I’ll be dammed if I going to fly the Wanderer all the way to the Gamma Quadrant. Lets go and see what we have volunteered for shall we.’ with that Young and Gan left the Wanderer.
A short woman with grey hair met them.
‘Lieutenant Commander Gan and Mr Young I presume, would you please come this way.’ the woman showed them down the corridor and into a small room. The room had a large display screen on one wall and windows that took up the other wall, which had blinds so that they could not see through. There was also a small desk in one corner and Admiral Roberts was sitting in it.
‘Glad you made it on time. The Professor and I am very happy that you decided to do this.’ said Admiral Roberts pointing to the woman who showed them in.
‘Thank you Admiral.’ said Gan.
The Admiral turned to Professor and said ‘Well Professor this is your Baby why don’t you start.’
The Professor nodded and walked over to the window shutters. She tapped a command and they moved up to reveal the large construction bay of facility G5. Floating in the bay was a ship that was attached to the bay by mooring lines.
‘This is the Morning Star the vessel that you are going to rescue the Indefatigable.’ said Professor.
Gan and Young came forward and looked at their new ship. It was about 180.59 meters long, 140.9 meters wide and 34.8 meters high. They could see two deflector dishes that were sunk into the hull forward and aft. A raised section that seemed like the bridge was about three-quarters away along the ships hull.
‘The Morning Star is a prototype vessel and if works will change the way we think of faster the light travel. It has a 1500 plus Cochrane warp core which is fed to two nacelles. It can do warp 9.9 for 12 hours. It has two prototype “Nitro” impulce systems as well as the “Push me, Pull me” drive.’ she looked back at the ship. ‘As well as that it carries four large magnetic clamps and has a crew of two. This is because its systems a fully automated so that a small crew is acceptable.’ she turned to Admiral Roberts ‘Admiral shall we take a closer look?’
The Admiral nodded and they filled out of the room and into a turbolift. As the turbolift moved towards the Morning Star Gan turned to the Professor and asked ‘Professor what is the  “Push me, Pull me” drive?’
The Professor smiled The “Push me, Pull me” drive sends out a been into subspace from the modified deflector dishes. One end will attach its self to your destination point and the other anchors its self to a position 100 metre aft. Then the forward deflector pulled and the aft deflector pushes the Morning Star to its destination.’ The turbolift came to a stop and they all exited and walked along an umbilical that connected the Morning Star to the station.
‘Sir how long would it take to get to Voyager’s position?’ asked Young.
‘About one month.’ said the Professor as the doors opened. They walked through two sets of door and along a corridor. As they walked along Gan asked ‘How are we going to get the Voyager’s crew back when we reach them?’
The Professor stopped in front of a door. Young saw that the sight read Cryo 4 as the door opened. They walked into a huge room. It was four decks high and had three gantries that ran the length of the room. On each level tubular containers had been fixed to the walls.
‘This is how you will get them home. There are four main bays. Each bay is four decks high and runs half the length of the ship. As you can see the cryogenic units have been installed. You will cryogenically frieze the crew on your return journey.’ She said.
‘Frozen! They are not going to like looking like an ice feature while we fly them home.’ Said Gan with a sly smile.
The Professor turned towards her. ‘You both will be frozen as well.’
‘What’ cried Gan the smile disappearing
‘Yes. You see we found that drop into subspace by the pull me-push you drive will kill any human….’
‘I’m not human.’ Said Gan quickly.
The Professor sighed. ‘Any normal biped then. That is why the ship is fully automated because we can’t spend energy freezing the whole crew and the crew that they have been sent to rescue. Would you like to carry on to the bridge.’ She turned and left.
The bridge of the Morning Star tiny. To say that was an understatement. I’ve been in coffins bigger then this thought Young. It had a console and two seats at one end. Then behind them was two fold down beds across from each other in the wall. In between the beds was a table and at the far end of the room were two cryogenic units. The room was not very large but had all what was needed.
‘There is a replicator in behind the panel. The fold down beds can be used a bio beds. We have no EMH but that will be install when you get back. We entered by Air lock 4. There is a full range of SEWG and other EVA gear in each Air lock. There is also room for storage and through here down the corridor is the warp core.’ said the Professor pointing to the door to her right and then at the door behind her.
‘You probably won’t need to come in here its just for easier access. The “Push me, Pull me” drive is connected to the warp core so that you can only use the warp engines or the “Push me, Pull me” drive not both.’
Gan and Young sat down at the controls.
‘What type of weapons dose she have Sir?’ asked Young.
‘None.’
Young and Gan both turned and looked at the Professor.
‘We had weapons on the Wanderer sir and were Search and Rescue.’ said Young.
The Professor gave him a look. ‘This is a prototype rescue vessel Mr not an assault craft but it dose have ablative hull armour and multi-phasic shielding. This is because we do not exactly know what will happen when you go into subspace. You also have the   “Nitro” impulse systems.’
‘What is that Professor?’ asked Gan.
‘The  “Nitro” impulse systems dumps frozen deuterium into the Vectored exhaust director. This causes a controlled explosion that produces extra thrust that will send you to _ of light speed in stead of maximum impulse which is only 1/4 the speed of light .’
‘What happens if any thing goes wrong sir with the “Nitro” impulse systems I mean?’ asked Young.
‘You will blow the back end off the ship Mr. Ow by the way when you activate the “Push me, Pull me” drive make shore that there is nothing for at least 100 metres behind of you.’
‘Why is that?’ asked Gan.
‘Because the “Push me, Pull me” drive will invert so that both deflectors with either push or pull and will rip the ship apart.’
Gan looked at Young. ‘Well lets try and not do that shall we.’
‘Aye Skipper.’ said Young.
‘When do we go Admiral?’ asked Gan.
‘You are scheduled to depart in one hour.’
Gan thought for a moment. ‘Okay then we will need some things from the Wanderer. Young’un I need you to get our gear, my replicator recipes I’m not eating the standard rubbish you humans program into it, those reports you were looking at earlier and “Robbie”.’
‘Who is “Robbie”?’ asked the Professor.
‘“Robbie” is our rescue drone sir.’ said Young. “Robbie” was the name for the multi-task drone that they had. Young had nick named it after an old science fiction robot called “Robbie the Robot”.
Gan turned to Admiral Roberts and the Professor. ‘We will be ready on schedule and get the Indefatigable back for you.’
‘I know you will.’ said Admiral Roberts she nodded and left with the Professor.
‘You still here Young’un we have a lot of work to do.’ said Gan.
‘Right away Skipper.’ said Young’un and he disappeared through the door….
~
‘I’ve got you minimal sensors and thrusters.’
They saw Lieutenant Commander Gan look over her shoulder.
‘Your the best Young’un.’ she said as she looked back at them.
‘Skipper what happened to your head?’
They saw Gan look over her shoulder again.
‘Nothing.’
‘Stop talking bull Skipper.’
‘Young’un I’m fine.’
‘Of course you are Skipper.’ the voice said sarcastically.
They saw her chair spin round and a arm appeared with a tricorder.
‘What was that you told me Skipper. “An ill officer is a officer that will make mistakes and mistakes kill.”’
‘Look Young’un I’m fine.’ said Gan.
‘Yes Skipper, I’m 455 billion years old. I’ve had 25 hosts and colliding with a console wouldn’t hurt me coz I’m hard.’
They saw Gan scowl at the other person. ‘Young’un I’m 568  and I have had 9 hosts and I am fine so sit down here and carry on with the report.  I’ll see if I can try and get this heap of junk moving in the right direction so that we can start to find the Indefatigable coz were the ones that are going to need rescuing soon.’
They saw Gan get out of her chair and young Lieutenant sit down. His dark blue polo neck jumper was dirty and he had a nasty bruise on his face.
‘”We got you, your safe”’ grinned Thompson ‘always new the Albatross recovery team were a bit mental.’
The others grinned sadly
‘My name it Young I am a member of the Albatross recovery team I’m the person how is supposed to get the Skipper here out of this bloody mess.’ he glanced away. ‘Where did you get to?’ he asked.
‘We were ready do depart.’ replied Gan from some where away from the camera.
‘Ow yes I had just strapped “Robbie” down……’
~
‘Ready?’ asked Gan.
‘Okay Skipper lets get going shall we?’ asked Young
‘G5 control this is the Morning Star. We are ready to depart.’ said Gan.
‘Roger that and good luck.’ said Admiral Roberts.
‘Don’t worry Admiral we’ll get them back for you.’ said Gan. She then looked down at her console. ‘Release mooring lines.’
‘Mooring lines released.’
‘Engines to one quarter.’
The Morning Star slowly moved forward slowly as the grate door of G5 construction bay began to open. Gan piloted the Morning Star out of the bay slowly and stopped her a thousand kilometres away from the facility.
‘Okay here goes nothing.’  Said Gan as she put in the destination co-ordinates.
‘Swapping warp power to  “Push me, Pull me” drive.’ said Gan.
‘“Push me, Pull me” drive is running okay Skippa.’ said Young.
‘Cross your fingers Young’un.’ said Gan as she activated the  “Push me, Pull me” drive in T minutes five minutes from my mark.’ Said Gan.
They both got up from their seats and walked to far end of the bridge. They opened the activated cryogenic units and climbed in side.
‘What a way to travel in this day and age getting reduced to travailing through the stars in a fridge.’ Grumbled Young.
Gan gave a small chuckle. ‘Computer Mark.’ The computer gave a small beep as the cryogenic unit hatches began to shut.
‘See you in a month Young’un.’ Said Gan as the door sealed shut.
The Morning Star drifted in space as the timer ran down. Then with slight serge it disappeared from sight as it dropped into subspace.
~
‘Young’un I’ve got the ship on what we now have as long range sensors. Its still there’ said Gan.
They saw Young leave his seat and move away from the camera.
‘What’s working Skipper?’
‘The Warp drive’s still shot Young’un so we can’t use the “Push me, Pull me” drive or the warp engines. The only thing we can use is the impulse drive.’
‘You mean the “Nitro” impulce systems Skippa?’
‘Yes Young’un strap “Robbie” down will you.’
‘Got it.’
As they watched the camera was rotated on to its side. They saw Young’s face appear in front of the camera.
‘Skippa you still want this to be recorded?’
‘Yes. If we get through this we can just edit it out and of we don’t well it will show Captain Thompson that there is some people who are trying to get him home.’
Young moved away from the camera.
‘Ready Young’un “Nitro” in Five, Four Three, Two, One engage.’
They saw the bridge shake as the “Nitro” engaged. Suddenly the camera flew around wildy and went blank.
Thompson looked at Emarzy. ‘Is that it?’ he asked.
Emarzy looked at her consol. ‘No sir there is more.’
They looked back and saw that the screen became clear.
As they watched they saw Young’s face appear in front of the camera.
‘Sorry about that but “Robbie” went for a little trip.’ he looked away.
‘Skipper how we doing?’
‘Young’un just carry on I can handle this.’
They saw him nodded.
‘Okay where were we. Ow yes the trip in subspace was uneventful but things all changed when we popped out of subspace….’
~
Some thing beeped at him through the darkness. He tried to ignore it but is kept beeping. Slowly his senses returned to him. With a sharp hiss of escaping gasses the cryogenic unit hatch opened. He stumbled out shivering onto the cold floor.  He looked over and saw Gan sitting at the table with a hot cup clasped between her hands.
‘What are you so glum about? We made it.’ She said looking up.
‘We made it but we have to go back.’ He grumbled.
She grinned at him. ‘ Go and get a shower and warm your self up. I’ll start sending the message for the Voyager.’
He nodded and shuffled towards the bathroom.
‘Don’t use all the hot water.’ Called Gan as the door swished closed.
He returned five minutes later warmed up and warring clean clothes.
‘How is it going?’ he asked.
Gan spun round in her chair. ‘Every thing is ready to go. I’ve sent the Indefatigable the message. I’m using audio only because it will travel further. I have done a full diagnostic of the ships systems and every thing is okay.’
Young took his seat.
‘Lets start a standard search pattern. Nothing fancy. We need to be thorough.’ Gan spun round to her console.
‘Okay lets get started then. Half impulse.’
‘Yes Skipper half impulse it is.’
~
‘Computer pause play back.’ Said Janeway. She walked over to a near by console and grabbed a PADD that was lying on the side.
‘Computer do a data search for the records of Lieutenant Commander Audrey Gan Star fleet and a Mr Young of the Albatross recovery team’
‘Processing’ came the computers reply. The computer beeped.
‘Records accessed.’
‘Copy the information on the PADD.’ She said.
The PADD blinked into life and the image of Lieutenant Commander Audrey Gan and Young appeared side by side.
‘Computer continue play back.’
~
‘Skipper we have a warp signature heading towards us.’ said Young
‘All ready, the professor got the coordinates rite.’ said Gan as she smiled at Young.
‘I’ll power up the crio-chambers so that the voyager crew can enjoy those fridges as much as we did.’
Gan should her head and giggled. ‘I can just see Captain Janeway’s face when we tell her she will have to spend a month in an ice box.
Gan’s console beeped as she glanced at it.
‘We have company and I don’t think it is Voyager. Its far to big.’
Gan and Young glanced at each other.
‘I’m getting a communication from the alien ship.’ said Gan.
The ship suddenly rocked.
‘Its firing at us. Shields are down.’ called Young as the ship rocked again.
‘Skipper let get out of here.’
Gan tapped furiously at the controls as she ship was hit again.
‘Skipper we just lost warp drive. We only got impulse.’
The ship danced through space trying to miss the weapons fire.
‘Young get the warp drive on line because we don’t have weapons so we need to go.’ called Gan as she ship rocked.
‘Skipper we have a hull breech. I’m sealing it but we can’t stand this for long.’
There was a beep at his desk.
‘Skipper there is a power surge in the cryo chambers.’ called Young.
‘Dumb them quickly.’
Along two sides of the hull hatches blasted out wards followed by hundreds of cryo-chambers. The cryo-chmbers dropped behind the fleeing Wanderer and exploded when it hit the alien ship.
‘Wow that was good do we have any more?’ asked Gan.
‘Not now I just dumped the rest. Lets get out of here before they change their minds.’
~
‘Gan how are and impulse engines looking?’  asked Young glancing over.
‘ It looks like they are totally dead. I can’t fix them I would need a star base to that and I can’t see use getting to one of those any time soon.’
Young sighed. ‘ I better tell you the rest before the alien’s come back.’
‘……. Gan we have to get out of warp your stressing the engines. They won’t hold together for long. We ether drop out warp controlled or the engines will shut down and we’ll fall out.’ called Young from his flashing console.
Gan grunted and Young looked out of the front window he could see the stars returning to normal.
‘Sensors up.’
Gan scanned the system savagely trying to find the alien ship while Young was trying to cool the engines.
‘Do you think we lost them?’ he asked.
‘I think so …. Dam.’
Young glanced up from his console as the proximity alarm sounded.
‘Young’un give me warp engines we need to get out of here.’ She cried
‘Skipper we don’t have any warp engines. The injectors are fused and we have a split in the crystal I can’t fix them. We have not warp or  “Push me, Pull me” drive.
‘Okay then Nitros in ten seconds. Young’un strap in.’ called Gan.
Young saw her stab at her control panel as he strapped him self into his seat. He closed his eyes and gritted his teeth as the G forces pilled on as the Morning Star accelerated.
‘Where are we going.’ Screamed Young over the roar of the impulse engines.
‘Asteroid belt. Are they following us?’
Young glanced at his console. He saw the alien ship turn to follow their course.
‘They are still following.’
‘Lets try and lose them in the asteroids’ she said as she put the Morning Star through a couple of stomach churning manoeuvres.
Young’s stomach lurched as Gan decelerated hard as the Morning Star slid into the mass of asteroids belt.
‘Do you think that they will follow us?’ asked Young unbuckling him self from his seat.
‘No the asteroids should mask our signature but lets not waste time wondering about that and try to get this heap of junk fixed.’ Said Gan getting out of her chair.
Young had been half under a console when the attack started. He had heard Gan curse and stood up. He frantically grabbed the table, which was nearby as the deck suddenly dropped.
‘What is it Skipper.’ yelled Young as he held on to the table for dear life.
‘Young’un they are detonating special charges. That’s what’s happening. The asteroids are fragmenting. ’ Said Gan as she executed another manoeuvre.
‘I thought you said the asteroids were masking our signature.’ He said.
‘You tell them that.’ She snapped as she sent the ship into another set of tight turns.
Young fell into his seat and scanned the console in front of him. There were three asteroids in pursuit and closing. Gan changed course again.
‘We got incoming three fragments heading to wards us. They are going to hit.’ Young shouted. He glanced over the console. ‘Impact in five, four, three, two, one’
Gan made a tight manoeuvre but it did not change a thing. The first asteroid fragments the largest out of the three hit the left side of the Morning Star biting a chink out of the side of the ship.
‘We’ve just lost our shields Skipper all of them.’ yelled Young.
The second hit aft behind the aft deflector dish. It ripped through the hull leaving a large half moon shape where the deflector use to be and forced its way through the ship and out the other side. The other asteroid fragment buried its self into the front of the ship and dug its self deep into the hull and stayed there. In the bridge alarms were shrieking.
‘Skipper we’ve been compromised in three placed. One aft, we have lost the aft defector. One in the starboard side it took a chunk out of the side and the third has buried its self-forward.’ said Young as he read out the damage reports. ‘Barriers and force fields are responding but were badly damaged.’
‘I thought you said this was going to be easy.’ said Gan.
‘So did I Skipper, so did I.’ said Young.
Gan turned off the klaxon that was screaming around them.
‘What’s working?’ asked Gan.
Young looked at the information that was poring over his console.
‘The toaster.’
‘Young’un now is not the time for stupid remarks’ snapped Gan.
‘We’ve got not propulsion Skipper. The asteroid destroyed the “Push me, Pull me” deflectors so there is no hope thinking about that and the warp engines are still no go. The only thing that we have any hope of reappearing is the impulse drive.’ said Young.
‘Right Young’un get on with the impulse engines I’ll send out a distress call and hope the Voyager hears us.’
Young looked at Gan. ‘Skippa this is not exactly how I wanted to find them.’
Gan nodded as she turned to her control panel.
‘How long do you think we have until the alien ship finds us?’
Gan glanced over at him. ‘The fragments are scattered over a wide area that will give them problems with there sensors. I’m also pulsing the distress call so that should also help but its only a matter of time Young’un. Only a matter of time.’
~
‘Well Capt’n that is it we spent the rest of the time drifting in space.’ said Young.
They saw Young get up and move away from the camera.
‘How are we doing?’ they heard him ask.
‘Not good Young’un. The alien ship has powered up its weapons.’
‘Can we out run it Skipper?’
‘Young’un we only have impulse they have warp. I wish this ship had weapons. When we get home I and going to complain to the Professor.’
They heard a beep from a console and saw Young look over.
‘Well isn’t that nice. The ship is haling.’
Thompson could hear some one speaking but it was too quiet to hear what was being said.
‘That’s nice of them isn’t it Young’un.’
‘Yes Skipper, last chance to surrender the ship or we will destroy you isn’t that original’
‘Well Young’un what shall we do?’
‘Well skipper we have come this fare lets not make his day. I though he would have got the answer the first time.  I think we should ignore him.’
‘Good choice. Well lest get “Robbie” away before we destroy the ship.’
Thompson saw the camera being lifted and carried into a small room.
‘It has been a pleasure working with you Young’un.’
‘The pleasure is all mine Skippa all mine. Come on lets not keep the bastard waiting. Lets go and tell that bastard where he can shove him self.’
‘Yes lets do that.’
‘I think I have a plan that might work. Its …’
As the air lock door came down they saw a hand carrying a hypospray crossing the screen.
Janeway heard a hiss and then suddenly the camera was flung back wards as it was ejected out of the air lock. “Robbie”’s camera panned out to show the alien craft and the Morning Star in floating in space. Janeway could see the impact damage of the asteroids on the Morning Stars hull. The other ship was massive vessel about the size of a Romulan Warbird. It was dark yellow with green marks over it, which gave it an almost reptilian appearance. As Thompson watched the Morning Star fired its impulse engines. It spun like a top until it faced the alien ship.
‘Ow god.’ whispered Chakotay as they all watched in horror.
The Morning Star charged forward aiming to ram the alien ship. The alien ship fired a heavy barrage of weapons at the Morning Star. The ship spun side ways as it was hit and then crashed head onto the alien ship. There was earthly silence as they watched the two ships buckle and crumple. The Morning Star exploded in a blinding flash oblittering the alien vessel. They sat there stunned watching the debree scatter over a wide area. About half an hour later they saw the Voyager appear on “Robbie”’s camera.
‘We were so close. If we had got there a little sooner then it would have been all right.’ Said Belanna.
Janeway stood starting at the screen.
‘Computer rewind to time index 3445.65.’
They all turned and looked at her.
‘Captain?’ asked Chakotay.
Janeway moved closer to the screen.
She watched the Morning Star spin and turn to wards the ship.
‘Computer pause. Enhance grid 274 by 390.’
The screen zoomed in along the top of the Morning Star. A small plate fell away from the ship and a cryo-chamber fired out.
Janeway tapped her combadge
‘Janeway to Ensign Kim.’
‘Yes captain.’
Ensign perform a detailed scan of the debree. I want to find a cryo-chamber and quickly.’
‘Yes captain.’
She turned to Torres.
‘Belanna. Copy every thing from the drones memory and then place the drone on storage.’ she turned and walked out of main engineering.
Chakotay caught up with her in the turbilift.
They emerged on to the bridge when Kim said.
‘I have it captain. I’m sorry that I did not see it early the radiation was to high.’
Janeway smiled slightly.
‘Don’t worry Mr Kim we will for get this little indiscretion to duty. Have a the occupant of the cryo-chamber transported to sick bay and alert the doctor.’
Mr Kim blushed a little and occupied him self with his work.
Janeway stood up and headed for the turbo lift.
‘Chakotay you have the bridge.’
When Janeway entered the sickbay she found that the doctor was scanning a patient. He turned as Janeway entered.
‘The person from the cryo-chamber is a female trill Captain.’
As Janeway came closer she could see the spots that marked the woman as a trill.
‘Is she alive?’ Janeway asked.
The doctor shook his head. ‘No Captain the cryo- chamber was damaged during the explosion and went onto emergency life support. Even with the heavy sedation that she was given she would have died before we found her but the symbiont is still alive.’
Janeway looked at the doctor.
‘Will the symbiont survive?’
‘Yes. But we don’t have a host in the crew. I will have to place the symbiont in statuses until we get back to the federation.’
‘Is that the only way. Is it not risky.?’ Janeway asked.
‘Yes but if the symbiont is not placed in the stasis then it will die.’ said the doctor evenly.
Janeway sighed.
‘Go ahead doctor. I have a report to make to Admiral Roberts, tell her what happened and send it in the next communication.’
~
Admiral Roberts glanced through the big piles of PADD’s on her desk. She had been worried about the lack of communication from Young and Gan. They were going to get the monthly communication from Voyager soon. There was a buzz at her offices door and her aide entered with a PADD.
‘Voyager.’ said the aide and left.
Roberts grabbed the PADD and activated it.
She saw Captain Janeway‘s face she was sad. this is not good thought Roberts.
‘Admiral Roberts I am sorry to inform you that Lieutenant Commander Audrey Gan and Mr Young have died before we were able to reach them. We were able to save the symbiont Gan and placed it in stasis.  Here is a copy of the date file that was down loaded from a rescue drown. ‘Young’un is this ………’
Roberts quickly went through the PADD and dropped the PADD as she rested her head in her hands.
‘John I need the last of kin details of Audrey and Young.’ She told her aide.

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Myosotis

Myosotis

Author:  A.C. Harper
Characters:  Spock, Leila
Rating:  PG
Genre:  Drama/Romance
Summary:  Spock and Leila after Omicron Ceti, on the way to Starbase 27.
Feedback:  Acoleen2@aol.com

Spock was concerned.

The 7 days 11 hours 13 minutes of the Enterprise’s transit from Omicron Ceti III en route to Starbase 27 had passed uneventfully, but still he was concerned. Of the forty-five colonists brought aboard for the transition, he had observed only forty-four. She had not been seen outside her cabin for the entire 7 days 11 hours 14 minutes. Not wanting to infringe on her privacy, he had not questioned any of the other colonists about her, but he was concerned about her well-being. This disturbed him, because he found it illogical. Surely her fellow colonists would see to her welfare; it was not his responsibility. Yet, he found that his logic was uncertain where she was concerned. Perhaps it was an aftereffect of the spores. Perhaps. However, for 7 days 11 hours 15 minutes these thoughts had plagued him, and it was illogical to assume that the spores could still have this much influence after that period of time.

Off duty, he had been walking through the corridors, lost in thought. He stopped and looked at the door to which his wanderings had taken him. It was her cabin. When had he made a conscious decision to go there? He did not know, and that troubled him. Yet, he knew that the only way to be certain of her well-being and allay his concerns would be to see her for himself. His hand wavered as it approached the door signal. Illogical. If she wished company, she would have sought it. He should respect her desire to be alone. He started to turn away, but for 7 days 11 hours 16 minutes now he could not stop thinking about her. It was interfering with his efficiency. This was the only way. His hand closed on the signal.

—————–

Leila was confused.

For a week now, they had been en route to Starbase 27. She found that she could not leave her cabin for fear that she would see him – for fear that she would break down and become a teary-eyed bag of mush every time she saw him. So, she stayed put. It would only be a few more hours now. She cringed when she recalled her shameful display in the transporter room, when she had begged him to come back with her. He had just looked at her with those deep brown eyes. What had he felt, if anything? Pity? Embarrassment for her? She had behaved like a love-struck schoolgirl, and she hated herself for it. She could not face him again after that.

She sighed and rolled over on her mattress. It seemed that the whole past week all she did was sigh and sleep. Eating was too much of a chore; she didn’t have an appetite anyway. She wished the ship would just get to Starbase 27 and she could get on with her life – what was left of it. Elias had called on her once to check on her. She felt bad when she thought about how she had just told him to leave her alone. He did. He understood her better than most; he understood how much she had lost when Spock had left them. They had all lost so much. Was it worth it? Was it so bad just existing and being happy? She sighed again. Her door signal chimed. She closed her eyes. Why didn’t they just leave her alone? It chimed again. She opened her eyes resignedly and sat up.

“Come in.”

The door slid open. Framed in the doorway was him.

——————

He had buzzed twice. He was starting to walk away, when he heard her reply and the door slid open. He paused for a moment, saw the girl sitting on the bed, then took a step into the darkened room. The door slid closed behind him.

Leila did not move from where she sat. “Why are you here?”

Spock took another tentative step forward. In the dim light he could not see her face clearly, but she seemed more pale even than usual. “I was…” he sought for a better word, found none. “Concerned – for your welfare. I came to see if you were all right.”

She would not look at him, but stared at a spot on the floor. “I’m fine.”

Another step and Spock could see her face more clearly. She looked drawn and tired and there were dark circles beneath her eyes. Illogically, he felt responsible for her discomfort. He knelt before her and looked into her face. “Are you really?”

When Leila looked into his eyes the tears sprang unbidden to hers and she had to look away again. “Spock – why are you doing this to me? Why did you come here?” Her voice was anguished and bitter.

Spock’s brows drew together in consternation. He should not have come. “I – wanted to be certain that you were all right,” he repeated.

Still seated on her bed, Leila turned her shoulder to him so he could not see her face. She shook with a silent sob. Spock’s hand went out to touch her shoulder. His logic was uncertain. He felt her anguish through that touch. He wanted to comfort her, but did not know how. But when he touched her, Leila impulsively flung herself off the bed toward him, crying uncontrollably. Not knowing what else to do, Spock sat on the floor with her and held one arm around her shoulders, allowing her to pour her grief onto his chest. Involuntarily, his other arm reached up and soon she was completely encircled by his arms. The cascade of emotion was nearly overwhelming, but he allowed himself to feel her grief and loss, knowing that only in this way would he truly be able to help her to sever the ties between them and move on. After a time, Leila’s sobs subsided and Spock withdrew his arms. She looked up from his chest and they sat on the floor together, just looking into each other’s eyes. Words were unnecessary. Concern and confusion gone, in their place resignation and peace. They had come to terms with their respective losses. Spock knew that he would always cherish the memory of his day of happiness with Leila, just as she knew that she could be at peace without him.

She smiled up at him, then – that brilliant, lovely smile he would always remember. “Do you recall that little Myosotis plant I gave you six years ago?”

He nodded. “I have it with me still. I have never and will never forget you.”

Spock took her hands and drew her up from the floor with him, and they walked out of the room into the light.

END

—————-

A/N:  Myosotis is the botanical name of a family of plants commonly known as “Forget-Me-Not.”

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Could This Day Get Any Better

Could This Day Get Any Better?

Author:  A.C. Harper
Characters:  Kirk, Spock, et al.
Rating:  PG-13
Genre:  Humor
Summary:  Kirk wakes up on the wrong side of the bed – What could go wrong?
Feedback:  Acoleen2@aol.com

The full moon shone brightly on the warm summer beach. Softly undulating waves caressed the sand in their timeless rhythm. Ruth! …softly undulating…softly caressing… Oh, Ruth! Undulating (oh!)…caressing (Ruth!)…the tide, rising, rising…the waves, stronger, overwhelming. The pounding of the waves rose relentlessly in his ears until it could not be ignored. The waves rose and crashed around the two lovers, and Kirk found himself, with Ruth still in his arms, flung inexorably into the cold maw of a mounting storm. Under the violent water, Kirk felt conflicting currents tug at his body. His arms were numb; he could no longer feel Ruth. With every moment without air the ringing in his ears grew louder, and the wave carried him with unbending fury down, down, to be dashed against the rocks…

Kirk caught his breath and sat up with a start on the floor, bedclothes twisted around him. The intercom was buzzing insistently and he groped for it with one hand. “Kirk here. This better be good!”

Sulu stared blankly for a second (but only a second) at the disheveled, bleary-eyed face of his captain and the pillow he was still hugging fiercely. “Oh, it is, Sir. I mean…I wouldn’t say it is good, but, well, it is important, Sir, and you know we wouldn’t have bothered you for anything trivial, and this was so unusual we thought you should know in case…”

“What IS it, Sulu? What ARE you babbling about?” Kirk disengaged himself from the pillow. “Give it to me straight. I can take it.”

Sulu cleared his throat. “Well, Sir…”

“Oh hell!” Kirk slammed the pillow onto the bed. “I’m on my way.” He slid hurriedly into his pants and rumpled shirt worn the day before, sniffing critically. Oh well, no one would notice…

As the turbo-lift doors opened to deposit Kirk onto the bridge, Spock jumped out of the center seat to take up his customary position to the right of the chair.

“Thank you Mr. Spock.”

Spock’s nostrils flared involuntarily as Kirk passed by. “Musk, Captain?”

Kirk cast Spock a look that might have caused Hell to freeze, but had no effect on the Vulcan, who merely raised an eyebrow. Kirk settled into his chair and looked at the forward view screen, where a large, cloudy mass loomed imminently. “Status report, Mr. Spock,” he snapped. “What’s going on here?”

Spock faced the captain solemnly, hands folded behind his back, and took a deep breath. “A temporal space/time anomaly has converged, Captain, creating a distortion in the marginal Doppler shift patterns of a nearby gaseous energy mass, causing spatial gravitational pull of dynamic static proportions to occur exponentially within the time/space continuum, creating a spiral gradient at our present coordinates.”

“Huh?” Kirk stared blankly at his first officer.

“The Enterprise is stuck.”

“Stuck by what, Mr. Spock?”

“I believe I have already explained that; however…Mr. Chekov?”

The navigator, startled, looked up from the magazine he had been reading. “Sir?”

“Mr. Chekov. May I remind you we are on Yellow Alert. What is that you are reading?” Spock held out his hand.

Chekov reddened and looked guiltily from Spock to the captain and back, handing the magazine to Spock. As the Vulcan took it, the centerfold flipped out and his eyes widened considerably. “Fascinating!”

“Let me see that, Mr. Spock!” Kirk reached for the magazine, and Spock handed it over.

“As I was about to say, Captain,” Spock intoned, “Perhaps Mr. Chekov would explain our present situation to your satisfaction.”

Kirk was still looking at the magazine. “Hmm?”

“Captain.” Spock was starting to sound exasperated.

Kirk looked up. “Oh yes, of course.” He tucked the magazine under his chair cushion and turned toward Chekov. “Mr. Chekov, please explain the phenomenon.”

“Aye, Sir. As I understand it, Keptin, the space/time flow of thees area of space has been deesrupted in such a vay as to cause deestortion in the spatial and elemental mass of a nebula, vhich ve vere approaching for research purposes. Thees deestortion has affected the gravitational pull of time as vell as space and ve are caught in its flux…”

The captain shook his head. I should never have gotten out of bed, he thought. “Which all means?”

“The Enterprise is stuck, Sir.” Chekov replied.

“Stuck, huh?” We’ll see about that, Kirk thought, as he punched the intercom button on the arm of his chair. “Mr. Scott!”

“Aye, Sir!”

“Give me full forward thrust! See if you can break us out of this with one massive burst!”

“Aye, Sir, I’ll try, but I dinna think it’ll work! We’re gettin’ a power drain down here that nothin’ can stop! If we dinna find a way to stop it, we’ll be dead in space in two hours! Dead in space!! If I gie ye the thrust ye want, Sir, that’ll cut the time down to ten minutes!”

“Understood, Mr. Scott.” Kirk rubbed his forehead. “Forget the massive thrust. Keep trying to stop that power drain.” He punched the arm of his chair and stood up. “Mr. Spock, come with me. We’re going to get answers now! Something has to be draining our power and we’re going to find out what it is!”

At that moment, as Kirk took a step toward the turbo-lift, the emergency lights came on and the Red Alert klaxon blared wildly. “Intruder Alert! Intruder Alert!” the computer warned loudly.

Kirk turned to Spock. “Where is it?”

“Captain,” Spock replied, “the inaccuracy of your phrasing leaves much to be desired. If I am to give you a correct analysis, I must know what ‘it’ is to which you refer. For instance, if we take…”

“Spock!!!”

The first officer eyed his captain inquiringly. Kirk’s face had turned a fascinating shade of red.

“Spock,” Kirk’s voice took on a strained quality, “you know very well what I mean. Where – is – the – intruder!”

An indignant lift of his brow betrayed the offended Vulcan. “Really, Captain. You might have said so in the first place.”

“Spock — PLEASE!!”

Spock cleared his throat. “According to my sensor scans, there seems to be an abnormal energy flux of extremely high magnitude in turbo shaft number one.”

Everyone looked at turbo shaft number one.

Red doors hissed open.

The two security guards on the bridge drew their phasers.

Everyone looked at turbo shaft number one.

Out walked Rand, carrying a tray with several cups of coffee. “Hi, everyone!” She said, with a cheery smile. “What’s up?”

A sigh of relief rippled around the bridge. The security guards lowered their phasers. Rand started distributing the coffee. Sulu was sneaking a hand under the cushion of the center seat.

Kirk and Spock still looked at turbo shaft number one.

Cautiously they approached the turbo-lift. In unison, they each leaned forward and peered inside, Kirk looking to the left and Spock to the right. Slowly they scanned the interior of the empty lift until they faced each other, practically nose to nose. The captain and first officer quickly withdrew their heads from the turbo-lift and stepped back. At that moment, a brilliant flash of light emanated from the open doors, momentarily blinding everyone in the room. And there, where the light had been, stood a man.

He was dressed in 15th century garb, complete with plumed hat, breastplate, cape and sword. Kirk thought he looked vaguely like pictures he had seen of Christopher Columbus.

“Who are you? What are you doing here?” Kirk demanded. His head hurt. He mentally willed Rand to get that coffee to him.

The security guards raised their phasers.

“Thou art notified that thy kind have infiltrated the galaxy too far already…Thou art directed to return to thine own solar system immediately!” the Columbus clone proclaimed arrogantly. Then, looking about himself, he suddenly gave the appearance of being vaguely confused, and his lips formed the word “oops!”

Another flash of light. He was gone.

The security guards lowered their phasers.

Kirk stared, bewildered, at the space where man had been. The turbo-lift doors closed and Janice shoved a cup of coffee into his hand. “Scotty – status!”

“Och, what’ve ya done, Captain? Th’ power drain just increased! We’ll be dead in space in one hour! Dead in space!” Was that a sob over the intercom? “Ma poor bairns…”

The captain of the Enterprise passed a weary hand across his eyes. “Spock…”

Spock was preoccupied. “The magazine, if you please, Mr. Sulu.”

It was Sulu’s turn to look embarrassed, as he was caught perusing the centerfold. He sheepishly gave it up to the waiting hands of the first officer, wondering as he did so what the men around him found so intriguing about the magazine; it certainly wasn’t to HIS taste.

“Mr. Spock!” Kirk’s voice grew insistent.

Spock put the magazine on his chair at the science station. “Yes, Captain?”

“Any ideas about this power drain? And, are we still ‘stuck’?”

Once again, the Vulcan first officer of the United Space Ship Enterprise turned and faced his captain, hands folded loosely behind his back, and took a deep breath.

Just then, the bridge shuddered under an apparent attack.

“Status!” Kirk shouted.

Everyone looked at their instruments in confusion. The bridge rocked with another assault.

Uhura had been busy monitoring transmissions, such as they were. She looked around the bridge for the “item,” and her eyes focused on Spock’s chair. Gingerly, she picked up the magazine, instantly knowing what she needed to do. “Janice!”

Rand was busy leaning against the bridge railing with one foot on the step, her hand trailing up her thigh, surreptitiously gazing at the captain.

Kirk pretended not to notice. There she goes again, he thought. Will she ever get a clue?

“Janice!”

The sound of Uhura’s voice brought Yeoman Rand back to reality. Janice lurched ungracefully over to the communication station as the bridge jolted under another onslaught.

“Status!”  Kirk shouted again, more insistently.

Spock looked up from his scanner. “The gaseous anomaly that has been holding the ship in its gravitational field and causing the distortion of the space/time continuum which has created the spiral gradient seems to be emanating temporal waves of unusual magnitude.”

Kirk swore his headache was getting worse.

Uhura and Rand seemed to be urgently discussing something near the communications console. Janice grabbed the magazine from Uhura and flipped through it. “I think you’re right!”

“I know I’m right! Let’s go!”

Before the captain or the first officer could query what was going on, both Lieutenant Uhura and Yeoman Rand leapt for the turbo-lift, each holding a side of the magazine.

The lift doors whooshed open.

Without hesitation, the women heaved the magazine through the lift doors.

Flash of light…

The doors whooshed closed.

“Keptin! Look!”

Kirk turned his attention toward the view screen. The gaseous anomaly was dissipating. His chair beeped at him and Scotty’s voice came over the com. “Captain! Power readings are comin’ back ta normal! Th’ drain has stopped!”

“What happened, Spock?”

The Vulcan did not answer.

“Spock?…. Spock!”

Beyond the voice he could hear faint rhythmic beeping. Spock opened his eyes and immediately wanted to close them again. The first thing he saw was Dr. McCoy’s face bending over him and he remembered at once that he was in sickbay. “I had the most fascinating dream…”

Meanwhile, in the captain’s quarters, Kirk caught his breath and sat up with a start. The intercom was buzzing insistently and he groped for it with one hand. “Kirk here. This better be good!”

END

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