Admiral Kirk Stepped out onto
the Bridge of
the Enterprise ...
...
and Dr. McCoy followed him.
McCoy had to admit it was pleasant to be back. He
nodded to Uhura, and she smiled at him. Mr. Sulu had the helm, though just now
it appeared that Lieutenant Saavik, first officer and science officer for the
training cruise, would be piloting the Enterprise for practice. The main
difference, of course, was that now Mr. Spock was the captain. He did not
relinquish his place to Kirk; to do so would be improper. Heaven forbid that
Spock might do anything improper.
“Admiral on the bridge!” Mr. Sulu said.
“As you were,” Kirk said before anyone could stand up
or salute.
“Starfleet Operations to Enterprise. You are
cleared for departure.”
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Captain’s Log: Stardate 8130.5
Starship Enterprise on training mission to Gamma Hydra. Sector
14, coordinates 22/87/4. Approaching Neutral Zone, all systems functioning.
Mr. Spock, in his old place at the science officer’s
station, gazed around at the familiar bridge of the Enterprise. The
trainees, one per station and each under the direction of an experienced crew
member, were so far comporting themselves well.
It was
a good group, and the most able of them was the young officer in the captain’s
seat. Spock expected considerable accomplishments from Saavik. She was young
for her rank, and she enhanced her natural aptitude with an apparently
inexhaustable capacity for hard work.
Spock
listened with approval to the cool narration of the captain’s log. Saavik, in
command of the Enterprise, completed the report and filed it. If she
were nervous—and he knew she must be—she concealed her feelings well. Her first
command was a test; but even more, every moment of her life was a test. Few
people could understand that better than Mr. Spock, for they were similar in
many ways. Like Spock, Saavik was half Vulcan. But while Spock’s other parent
was a human being, Saavik’s had been Romulan.
[8] Mr. Sulu and Ensign
Croy had the helm.
“Sector
fourteen to sector fifteen,” the ensign said. “Transition: mark.” He was a
moment behind-time, but the information was not critical to their progress.
“Thank
you, Helm Officer,” Saavik said. “Set us a course along the perimeter of the
Neutral Zone, if you please.”
“Aye,
Captain.”
Sulu
watched without comment, letting Croy do his own work and make his own
mistakes. The data streamed past on Spock’s console.
Spock
had not failed to notice Saavik’s progress in the use of conventional social
pleasantries. Trivial as they may have seemed, learning to use them was one of
the most difficult tasks Spock had ever tried to master. Even now, he too
frequently neglected them; they were so illogical, but they were important to
humans. They made dealing with humans easier.
Spock
doubted that Saavik would ever use the phrases with warmth, any more than he
would, but she had modified her original icy disinterest, which had come
dangerously close to contempt.
Saavik
gazed calmly at the viewscreen. She was aesthetically elegant in the spare,
understated, esoterically powerful manner of a Japanese brush-painting.
“Captain,”
Uhura said suddenly, “I’m receiving a signal on the distress channel. It’s very
faint. ...”
Saavik
touched controls. “Communications now has priority on computer access for
signal enhancement.”
Uhura’s
trainee worked quickly for several seconds.
“It’s
definitely an emergency call, Captain.”
“Patch
it through to the speakers.”
Communications
complied.
“Mayday,
mayday. Kobayashi Maru, twelve parsecs out of Altair VI ...” The voice
broke up into static. The trainee frowned and stabbed at the controls on the
communications console.
Spock
listened carefully. Even computer-enhanced, the message was only intermittently
comprehensible.
[9] “... gravitic mine,
lost all power. Environmental controls ...”
“Gravitic
mine!” Saavik said.
“...
hull broached, many casualties. “The signal-to-noise ratio decreased until the
message slid over into incomprehensibility.
“This
is U.S.S. Enterprise,” Uhura’s trainee said. “Your message is breaking
up. Give your coordinates. Repeat: Give your coordinates. Do you copy?”
“Copy, Enterprise.
Sector ten ...”
“The
Neutral Zone,” Saavik said.
Mr.
Sulu immediately turned his attention from the speakers to his console.
“Mayday,
Enterprise, we’re losing our air, can you help? Sector ten—” The forced
calm of the voice began to shatter.
“We
copy, Kobayashi Maru—” The communications trainee and Uhura both glanced
at Saavik, waiting for instructions.
“Tactical
data, Kobayashi Maru. Helm, what does a long-range sensor scan show?”
Sulu
glanced at Croy, who was understandably confused by the screen display. It had
deteriorated into the sort of mess that only someone with long experience could
make any sense of at all. Sulu replied to the question himself.
“Very
little, Captain. High concentrations of interstellar dust and gases. Ionization
causing sensor interference. A blip that might be a ship ... or might not.”
The
viewscreen shivered. The image reformed into the surrealistic bulk of a huge
transport ship. The picture dissected itself into a set of schematics, one deck
at a time.
“Kobayashi
Maru, third class neutronic fuel carrier, crew of eighty-one, three hundred
passengers.”
“Damn,”
Saavik said softly. “Helm?”
Sulu
glanced at the trainee, who was still bent over the computer, in the midst of a
set of calculations. Croy shook his head quickly.
[10] “Course plotted,
Captain,” Mr. Sulu said, entering his own calculations into the display.
Spock
noted with approval Saavik’s understanding of the support level she could
expect from each of her subordinates.
Sulu
continued. “Into the Neutral Zone.” His voice contained a subtle warning.
“I am
aware of that,” she said.
Sulu
nodded. “Entering Neutral Zone: mark.”
“Full
shields, Mr. Sulu. Sensors on close-range, high-resolution.”
Spock
raised one eyebrow. Gravitic mines were seldom deployed singly, that was true,
but restricting the sensors to such a limited range was a command decision that
easily could backfire. On the other hand, long-range scanners were close to
useless in a cloud of ionized interstellar gas. He concentrated on the sensor
screens.
“Warning,”
the computer announced, blanking out the distress call. “We have entered the
Neutral Zone. Warning. Entry by Starfleet vessels prohibited. Warning—”
“Communications
Officer, I believe that the mayday should have priority on the speakers,”
Saavik said.
“Yes,
Captain.” Uhura’s trainee changed the settings.
“Warning.
Treaty of Stardate—” The computer’s voice stopped abruptly. The static
returned, pierced erratically by an emergency beacon’s faint and ghostly hoot.
“Security
duty room,” Saavik said. “Security officers to main transporter.”
“Aye,
Captain,” Security Commander Arrunja replied.
“You
may have to board the disabled vessel, Mr. Arrunja,” Saavik said. “They’re
losing atmosphere and life-support systems.”
“The
field suits are checked out, Captain.”
[11] The intern
accompanying McCoy on the bridge hurried to open a hailing frequency.
“Bridge
to sick bay,” she said. “Dr. Chapel, we need a medical team in main
transporter, stat. Rescue mission to disabled ship. Field suits and probably
extra oxygen.”
McCoy
looked pleased by his intern’s quick action.
“One
minute to visual contact. Two minutes to intercept.”
“Viewscreen
full forward.”
The
schematics of the ore carrier dissolved, reforming into a starfield dense and
brilliant enough to obscure the pallid gleam of any ship. Ionization created
interference patterns across the image.
“Stand
by, transporter room. Mr. Arrunja, we have very little information on the
disabled vessel. Prepare to assist survivors. But—” Saavik paused to emphasize
her final order, “—no one is to board Kobayashi Maru unarmed.”
“Aye,
Captain.”
“Coordinate
with the helm to open the shields at energize.”
“Aye
aye.”
Spock
detected a faint reflection at the outer limits of the sensor sphere. The quiet
cry of the distress beacon ceased abruptly, leaving only the whisper of
interstellar energy fields.
“Captain,
total signal degradation from Kobayashi Maru.”
“Sensors
indicate three Klingon cruisers,” Spock said without expression. “Bearing
eighty-seven degrees, minus twelve degrees. Closing fast.”
He
could sense the instant increase in tension among the young crew members.
Saavik
snapped around with one quick, frowning glance, but recovered her composure
immediately. “All hands, battle stations.” The Klaxon alarm began to howl.
“Visual: spherical coordinates: plus [12]
eighty-seven degrees, minus
twelve degrees. Extend sensor range. Mr. Croy, is there a disabled ship, or is
there not?”
The
viewscreen centered on the ominous, probing shapes of three Klingon cruisers.
“I
can’t tell, Captain. The Klingon ships are deliberately fouling our sensors.”
“Communications?”
“Nothing
from the Klingons, Captain, and our transmission frequencies are being jammed.”
“Klingons
on attack course, point seven-five c,” Spock said.
Saavik
barely hesitated. “Warp six,” she said.
“You
can’t just abandon Kobayashi Maru!” Dr. McCoy exclaimed.
“Four
additional Klingon cruisers at zero, zero,” Spock said. Dead ahead. Warp six on
this course would run the Enterprise straight into a barrage of photon
torpedoes.
“Cancel
warp six, Mr. Croy. Evasion action, zero and minus ninety. Warp at zero radial
acceleration. Visual at zero, zero. Dr. McCoy,” Saavik said without looking
back at him, “Enterprise cannot outmaneuver seven Klingon cruisers. It
will, however, outrun them. If we lure them far enough at their top speed, we
can double back even faster—”
“And
rescue the survivors before the Klingons can catch up to us again,” McCoy said.
“Hmm.”
“It is
the choice between a small chance for the disabled ship, and no chance at all,”
Saavik said. “If there is in fact a disabled ship. I am not quite prepared to
decide that there is not.”
The
viewscreen confirmed four more Klingon ships dead ahead, and then the Enterprise
swung away so hard the acceleration affected the bridge even through the
synthetic gravity.
“Mr.
Sulu, Mr. Croy, lock on photon torpedoes. Fire ...” She paused, and Spock
wondered whether her early experience—fight or be killed—could, under [13] stress,
win out over regulations and the Federation’s stated object of keeping the
peace. “Fire only if we are fired upon.”
“Aye,
Captain.” Sulu glanced at the young ensign beside him. Croy clenched his hands
around the firing controls. “Easy,” Sulu said quietly. The ensign started, then
forcibly relaxed his hands.
Another
blip on the sensor screens: “Enemy cruisers, dead ahead.” A third group of
ships arrowed toward them, opposing their new course.
Saavik
said something softly in a language with which Spock was not intimately
familiar, but by her tone it was a curse.
The
Klingons fired on the Enterprise.
“Fire
at will!” Saavik said.
The
viewscreen flared to painful brightness before the radiation sensors reacted to
the enemy attack and dimmed the screen to half-intensity. The energy impact was
so severe even the shields could not absorb it. Spock held himself steady
against the wrenching blow, but it flung Sulu from his post. He crashed into
the deck and lay still. McCoy and the intern vaulted down the stairs to the
lower bridge and knelt beside him.
“Mr.
Sulu!” McCoy said. His tricorder gave no reaction. “Spock, he’s dead.”
Spock
did not respond.
“Engineering!”
Saavik said.
“Main
energizer hit, Captain,” Chief Engineer Scott replied.
Saavik
slammed her hand down on her controls, transferring command to the helm. She
took Sulu’s place. Croy fought for data enough to aim the torpedoes.
Saavik
did the calculations in her head, keyed them into the console, transferred a
copy to Croy’s station, and spoke to Scott in the engine room.
“Engage
auxiliary power, Mr. Scott. Prepare to return fire ... now.” She
fired. One of the Klingon cruisers fired on the Enterprise just as
Saavik’s torpedo [14] hit.
The cruiser imploded, collapsing in upon itself, then exploded in eerie,
complete silence. But its deathblow struck the Enterprise full force.
The screen blazed again, then darkened, with the radiation of the furious
attack.
“We’re
losing auxiliary power, Captain, and our shields along wi’ it,” Scott cried.
“The ship canna take another—”
The
scream of irradiated electronics cut off Scott’s warning. The enemy ships in
pursuit caught up to the Starfleet vessel. At close range, they fired. The Enterprise
shuddered, flinging Uhura against the railing and to the deck. McCoy left
Sulu’s inert body and knelt beside the communications officer.
“Uhura—Uhura
... Oh, my God,” McCoy whispered.
Saavik
fired at the Klingons, but nothing happened.
“Mr.
Scott, all power to the weapons systems; it’s our only chance.”
“Mr.
Scott ... is a casualty. ...” his assistant replied. Her voice was drowned out
by a flood of damage reports and pleas for medical help. “Environmental
controls destroyed.” “Life support, nonfunctional.” “Gravity generators
failing.”
McCoy
cursed at the intraship communications. “Dr. Chapel, I’ve got to have a team on
the bridge! Dr. Chapel! Chris!”
But he
got no reply at all from sick bay.
Saavik
touched the photon torpedo arming control one last time, delicately,
deliberately, yet with the realization that nothing would happen.
“There
is no power in the weapons systems, Captain,” Spock said. He felt the gravity
sliding away. “There is, in fact, no power at all; we are merely bleeding the
storage cells.”
The
enemy ships enclosed them, hovering at the vertices of an impenetrable
polyhedron. Spock saw the final attack in the last fitful glow of the
viewscreen.
Firing
their phasers simultaneously, the cruisers [15]
enveloped the Enterprise in
a sphere of pure energy. Spock imagined he felt the radiation flaming through
the ship. He grabbed for a handhold.
His
console exploded in his face.
As he
fell, he heard the wailing hiss of escaping air, a sound that had been the last
experience of all too many spacefarers.
Saavik,
clutching at the helm officer’s console, fighting the ship’s quakes, turned
just in time to see Mr. Spock fall. For an instant, she wished only to be ten
years old again, so she could scream with fury and the need for revenge. Dr.
McCoy struggled toward Spock, but never made it; the convulsions of the ship
flung him down. He screamed, and collapsed with a groan.
Saavik
stood up. Her ship, her first command, lay dead in space; her crew was
destroyed by her incompetence. She opened the hailing frequencies, not even
knowing whether any communications were left at all.
“Prepare
the escape pods,” she said. “All hands, abandon ship.” She armed the log buoy
and fired it out into space. It would testify to her failure, yet also to her
honor in accepting the responsibility.
“All
hands,” she said again. “Abandon ship.”
Sitting in front of the viewscreen, Admiral James T. Kirk
shook his head. He laughed softly, but more at memories than at what he had
observed.
“All
right,” he said. “Open it up.”
The
wall in front of the video console parted and opened, revealing the destroyed
bridge of the Enterprise. Kirk got up and walked into it. Acrid smoke
burned his eyes, but the heavy-duty ventilation system had already begun to
clear the air. He stepped carefully through shattered bits of equipment, over
Dr. McCoy’s body, and stopped in front of Lieutenant Saavik. She met his gaze
without flinching.
“May I
request the benefit of your experience, Admiral?”
“Well,
Lieutenant, my experience is that the Klingons never take prisoners.”
Saavik’s
expression hardened. Kirk turned all the way around, surveying the wreckage.
This
could have happened to me, he thought. It almost did, all too often and not in
simulation, either.
“Okay,
folks,” he said. “The fun’s over.” He glanced at the upper level of the bridge.
“Captain Spock?”
Spock
got smoothly to his feet. A scattering of breakaway glass shivered to the floor
and crunched beneath his boots.
“Trainees
to debriefing,” he said.
The
young crew members, still stunned by the [17]
realism of the test, got up and
moved toward the exit. The more experienced bridge crew rose from being dead or
injured, laughing and joking.
Uhura
got up and brushed bits of scorched insulation from her uniform. Sulu turned
over and sat up slowly.
“Was
that rougher than usual, or am I just getting old?” he said. He climbed to his
feet.
Dr.
McCoy lounged on the deck, lying on his side with his head propped on his hand.
Kirk
stood over him. “Physician, heal thyself.”
McCoy
gave him a hurt look. “Is that all you’ve got to say?”
“I’m a
Starfleet officer, not a drama critic,” Kirk replied.
“Hmph.”
“It’s
too bad you’re not a cook,” Mr. Sulu said to the admiral.
“A
cook? Why a cook?”
“You
could make fried ham,” Sulu said, deadpan.
Jim
Kirk started to laugh.
“Fried
ham?” Dr. McCoy exclaimed. “I’ll have you know I was the best Prince Charming
in second grade!”
“And as
a side dish,” Sulu said in the tones of an obsequious waiter, “perhaps a little
sautéed scenery? When it’s cooked it’s much easier to chew.” In an uncanny
imitation of Dr. McCoy, he cried, “Mr. Sulu! Mr. Sulu! Oh, gods, Spock, he’s
dead!”
McCoy
glanced at the ceiling in supplication, but then he could not stand it any
longer. He began to laugh, too. From the upper bridge, Spock watched them, his
arms folded.
McCoy
wiped tears from his eyes. “Mr. Sulu, you exaggerate.”
“Poetic
license,” Sulu said.
“Speaking
of poetic license, or dramatic realism, or whatever,” McCoy said, serious for a
moment, “you hit the floor pretty hard. Are you all right?”
“I am,
yes, but did they reprogram that simulation? I [18] don’t remember its knocking us around quite so badly before killing
us.”
“We
added a few frills,” Kirk said. “For effect.” He turned toward Saavik, who had
watched their interplay as dispassionately as Spock. “Well, Lieutenant, are you
going down with the sinking ship?”
He had
the feeling she had to draw herself from deep thought before she replied. She
did not answer his question; but then his question had after all been purely
rhetorical.
“The
simulation is extremely effective,” Saavik said.
“It’s
meant to be.” Kirk noticed, though, that she appeared as self-possessed and
collected now as when she had entered the simulator, unlike most of the other
trainees, who came out sweating and unkempt.
“But I
question its realism.”
“You
think it’s an effective simulation, and you think it’s unrealistic?”
Kirk asked.
“Yes,
sir.” Her imperturbability was not as complete as she pretended; Kirk could see
the anger building up. “In your experience, how often have the Klingons sent
ten cruisers after a single Starfleet vessel?”
“Lieutenant,”
Kirk said with an edge in his voice, “are you implying that the training
simulation is unfair?”
She
took a deep breath and did not flinch from his gaze. “Yes, I should have been
more direct. I do not think the simulation is a fair test of command
capabilities.”
“Why?”
“The
circumstances allow no possibility of success.”
Jim
Kirk smiled. “Lieutenant Saavik, do you think no one who worked on the
simulation, and no one who ever took it before, ever noticed that the odds
couldn’t be beaten?”
She
started to reply, stopped, and frowned. “No, Admiral,” she said slowly. “I
admit I had not considered that possibility.”
[19] “You were given a
no-win situation. That’s something any commander may have to face at any time.”
She
looked away. “I had not considered that, either.” She made the admission only
with difficulty.
“By now
you know pretty well how you deal with life, Lieutenant. But how you deal with
death is important, too, wouldn’t you agree?”
“I—”
She cut herself off as if she would not trust herself to answer.
“Think
about it, Lieutenant,” Kirk said. “Just think about it. Carry on.” He turned to
leave. At the top of the stairs, he came face-to-face with Dr. McCoy. “What’s
the matter with you?”
“You
don’t think you could manage to push just a little bit harder, do you?” McCoy
said softly.
Kirk
scowled. “They’ve got to learn, Doctor. We can’t keep the reins forever.
Galloping around the cosmos is a game for the young.”
He
crunched through the debris on the floor and disappeared down the corridor.
Sounding
miffed, Uhura said, “What was that supposed to mean?”
McCoy
shrugged, and shook his head. He and Commander Uhura left together.
Saavik
sat alone in the ruins of her first command. She knew she must go to debriefing
immediately ... but she had many things to consider.
Jim
Kirk trudged toward the debriefing room. He felt tired, and depressed: and
oppressed, by the shining self-confidence of the young people he had been
observing. Or perhaps it was by the circumstances of fate that made him the
instrument for shaking and scarring that self-confidence. But McCoy was right:
he had been too hard on Lieutenant Saavik.
He
turned the corner and came face-to-face with Spock, who was leaning against the
wall with his arms folded.
[20] “Didn’t you die?”
Kirk asked.
He
thought for an instant that Spock was going to smile. But Spock recovered
himself in time.
“Do you
want to know your cadets’ efficiency rating—or are you just loitering?”
“Vulcans
are not renowned for their ability to loiter,” Spock said.
“Or for
their ability to admit terrible character flaws, such as that they’re curious.”
“Indeed,
Admiral? If it will raise your opinion of my character, I suppose I must admit
to some curiosity.”
“I haven’t
even got to the debriefing room yet, and you want an opinion?’ He started down
the corridor again, and Spock strode along beside him.
“I seem
to recall a Starfleet admiral who referred to this particular set of
debriefings as ‘a damned waste of time,’ ” Spock said. “He had a very strong
belief that actions were more important than words.”
“Did
he?” Kirk said. “I don’t believe I know him. Sounds like a hothead to me.”
“Yes,”
Spock said slowly. “Yes, at times he was known as a hothead.”
Kirk
winced at Spock’s use of the past tense. “Spock, those trainees of yours
destroyed the simulator and you along with it.”
“Complete
havoc is the usual result when Kobayashi Maru comes upon the scene.” He
paused, glanced at Kirk, and continued. “You yourself took the test three
times.”
“No!”
Kirk said with mock horror. “Did I?”
“Indeed.
And with a resolution that was, to put it politely, unique.”
“It was
unique when I did it,” Kirk said. “But I think a number of people have tried it
since.”
“Without
success, you should add. It was a solution that would not have occurred to a
Vulcan.”
Jim
Kirk suddenly felt sick of talking over old times. He changed the subject
abruptly. “Speaking of [21] Vulcans, your
protégée’s first-rate. A little emotional, maybe—”
“You
must consider her heritage, Jim—and, more important, her background. She is
quite naturally somewhat more volatile than—than I, for instance.”
Kirk
could not help laughing. “I’m sorry, Spock. The lieutenant is remarkably
self-possessed for someone of her age and experience. I was trying to make a
joke. It was pretty feeble, I’ll admit it, but that seems to be about all I’m
up to these days.” He sighed. “You know, her tactic might even have worked if
we hadn’t added the extra Klingon attack group.” He stopped at the debriefing
room. “Well.”
Spock
reached out as Kirk started to go in. He stopped before his hand touched Jim
Kirk’s shoulder, but the gesture was enough. Kirk glanced back.
“Something
oppresses you,” Spock said.
Kirk
felt moved by Spock’s concern.
“Something
...” he said. He wanted to talk to Spock, to someone. But he did not know how
to begin. And he had the debriefing to conduct. No, this was not the time. He
turned away and went into the debriefing room.
All
those kids.
They
waited for Admiral Kirk in silence, anxious yet eager. Lieutenant Saavik
arrived a moment after Kirk sat down; Spock, his usual emotionless self once
more, came in quietly and sat at the very back of the room. Jim Kirk was
tempted to declare the discussion over before it had begun, but regulations
required a debriefing; he had to fill out a report afterward—
That’s
all I ever pay attention to anymore, he thought. Regulations and paperwork.
He
opened the meeting. He had been through it all a hundred times. The usual
protocol was to discuss with each student, in reverse order of seniority, what
they would have done had they been in command of the [22] ship. Today was no different, and Kirk had
heard all the answers before. One would have stuck to regulations and remained
outside the Neutral Zone. Another would have sent in a shuttle for
reconnaissance.
Kirk
stifled a yawn.
“Lieutenant
Saavik,” he said finally, “have you anything to add? Second thoughts?”
“No,
sir.”
“Nothing
at all?”
“Were I
confronted with the same events, I would react in the same manner. The details
might be different. I see no point to increasing your boredom with trivia.”
Kirk
felt embarrassed to have shown his disinterest so clearly. He reacted rather
harshly. “You’d do the same thing, despite knowing it would mean the destruction
of your ship and crew?”
“I
would know that it might mean the destruction of my ship and crew,
Admiral. If I could not prove that Kobayashi Maru were an illusion, I
would answer its distress call.”
“Lieutenant,
are you familiar with Rickoverian paradoxes?”
“No,
sir, I am not.”
“Let me
tell you the prototype. You are on a ship—a sailing ship, an oceangoing vessel.
It sinks. You find yourself in a life raft with one other person. The life raft
is damaged. It might support one person, but not two. How would you go about
persuading the other person to let you have the raft?”
“I
would not,” she said.
“No?
Why?”
“For
one thing, sir, I am an excellent swimmer.”
One of
the other students giggled. The sound broke off sharply when a classmate
elbowed him in the ribs.
“The
water,” Kirk said with some asperity, “is crowded with extremely carnivorous
sharks.”
“Sharks,
Admiral?”
[23] “Terran,” Spock
said from the back of the room. “Order Selachii.”
“Right,”
Kirk said. “And they are very, very hungry.”
“My
answer is the same.”
“Oh,
really? You’re a highly educated Starfleet officer. Suppose the other person
was completely illiterate, had no family, spent most of the time getting thrown
in jail, and never held any job a low-level robot couldn’t do. Then what?”
“I would
neither request nor attempt to order or persuade any civilian to sacrifice
their life for mine.”
“But a
lot of resources are invested in your training. Don’t you think you owe it to
society to preserve yourself so you can carry out your responsibilities?”
Her
high-arched eyebrows drew together. “Is this what you believe, Admiral?”
“I’m
not being rated, Lieutenant. You are. I’ve asked you a serious question, and
you’ve replied with what could be considered appalling false modesty.”
Saavik
stood up angrily. “You ask me if I should not preserve myself so I can carry
out my responsibilities. Then I ask you, what are my
responsibilities? By the criteria you have named, my responsibilities are to
preserve myself so I can carry out my responsibilities! This is a circular and
self-justifying argument. It is immoral in the extreme! A just society—and if I
am not mistaken, the Federation considers itself to be just—employs a military
for one reason alone: to protect its civilians. If we decide to judge that some
civilians are ‘worth’ protecting, and some are not, if we decide we are too
important to be risked, then we destroy our own purpose. We cease to be the
servants of our society. We become its tyrants!”
She was
leaning forward with her fingers clenched around the back of a chair in the
next row.
“You
feel strongly about this, don’t you, Lieutenant?”
[24] She straightened
up, and her fair skin colored to a nearly Vulcan hue.
“That
is my opinion on the subject, sir.”
Kirk
smiled for the first time during the meeting: this was the first time he had
felt thoroughly pleased in far too long.
“And
you make an elegant defense of your opinion, too, Lieutenant. I don’t believe
I’ve ever heard that problem quite so effectively turned turtle.”
She
frowned again, weighing the ambiguous statement. Then, clearly, she decided to
take it as a compliment. “Thank you, sir.” She sat down again.
Kirk
settled back in his chair and addressed the whole class. “This is the last of
the simulation exams. If the office is as efficient as usual, your grades won’t
be posted till tomorrow. But I think it’s only fair to let you know ... none of
you has any reason to worry. Dismissed.”
After a
moment of silence, the whole bunch of them leaped to their feet and, in an
outburst of talk and laughter, they all rushed out the door.
“My
God,” Jim Kirk said under his breath. “They’re like a tide.”
All,
that is, except Saavik. Aloof and alone, she stood up and strode away.
Spock
watched his class go.
“You’re
right, Spock,” Kirk said. “She is more volatile than a Vulcan.”
“She
has reason to be. Under the circumstances, she showed admirable restraint.”
The one
thing Spock did not expect of Lieutenant Saavik was self-control as complete as
his own. He believed that only a vanishingly small difference existed between
humans and Romulans when it came to the ability to indulge in emotional
outbursts. But Spock had had the benefit of growing up among Vulcans. He had
learned self-control early. Saavik had spent the first [25] ten years of her life fighting to survive in
the most brutal underclass of a Romulan colony world.
“Don’t
tell me you’re angry that I needled her so hard,” Kirk said.
Spock
merely arched one eyebrow.
“No, of
course you’re not angry,” Kirk said. “What a silly question.”
“Are
you familiar with Lieutenant Saavik’s background, Admiral?” He wondered how
Kirk had come to pose her the particular problem that he had. He could hardly
have made a more significant choice, whether it was deliberate or random. The
colony world Saavik had lived on was declared a failure; the Romulan military,
which was indistinguishable from the Romulan government, made the decision to
abandon it. They carried out the evacuation as well. They rescued everyone.
Everyone,
that is, except the elderly, the crippled, the disturbed ... and a small band
of half-caste children whose very existence they denied.
The
official Romulan position was that Vulcans and Romulans could not interbreed
without technological intervention. Therefore, the abandoned children could not
exist. That was a political judgment which, like so many political judgments,
had nothing to do with reality.
The
reality was that the evolution of Romulans and Vulcans had diverged only a few
thousand years before the present. The genetic differences were utterly
trivial. But a few thousand years of cultural divergence formed a chasm that
appeared unbridgeable.
“She’s
half Vulcan and half Romulan,” Kirk said. “Is there more I should know?”
“No,
that is sufficient. My question was an idle one, nothing more.” Kirk had shaken
her, but she had recovered well. Spock saw no point in telling Kirk things
which Saavik herself seldom discussed, even with Spock. If she chose to put her
past aside completely, he [26] must respect her
decision. She had declined her right to an antigen-scan, which would have
identified her Vulcan parent. This was a highly honorable action, but it meant
that she had no family, that in fact she did not even know which of her parents
was Vulcan and which Romulan.
No
Vulcan family had offered to claim her.
Under
the circumstances, Spock could only admire the competent and self-controlled
person Saavik had created out of the half-starved and violent barbarian child
she had been. And he certainly could not blame her for rejecting her parents as
completely as they had abandoned her. He wondered if she understood why she
drove herself so hard, for she was trying to prove herself to people who would
never know her accomplishments, and never care. Perhaps some day she would
prove herself to herself and be free of the last shackles binding her to her
past.
“Hmm,
yes,” Kirk said, pulling Spock back from his reflections. “I do recall that
Vulcans are renowned for their ability to be idle.”
Spock
decided to change the subject himself. He picked up the package he had retrieved
before coming into the debriefing room. Feeling somewhat awkward, he offered it
to Kirk.
“What’s
this?” Jim asked.
“It
is,” Spock said, “a birthday present.”
Jim
took the gift and turned it over in his hands. “How in the world did you know
it was my birthday?”
“The
date is not difficult to ascertain.”
“I
mean, why—? No, never mind, another silly question. Thank you, Spock.”
“Perhaps
you should open it before you thank me; it may not strike your fancy.”
“I’m
sure it will—but you know what they say: It’s the thought that counts.” He slid
his fingers beneath the outside edge of the elegantly folded paper.
“I have
indeed heard the saying, and I have always wanted to ask,” Spock said, with
honest curiosity, “if it [27] is the thought that counts, why do humans
bother with the gift?”
Jim
laughed. “There’s no good answer to that. I guess it’s just an example of the
distance between our ideals and reality.”
The
parcel was wrapped in paper only, with no adhesive or ties. After purchasing
the gift, Spock had passed a small booth at which an elderly woman created
simple, striking packages with nothing but folded paper. Fascinated by the
geometry and topology of what she was doing, Spock watched for some time, and
then had her wrap Jim’s birthday present.
At a
touch, the wrapping fanned away untorn.
Jim saw
what was inside and sat down heavily.
“Perhaps
... it is the thought that counts,” Spock said.
“No,
Spock, good Lord, it’s beautiful.” He touched the leather binding with one
finger; he picked the book up in both hands and opened it gently, slowly, being
careful of its spine.
“I only
recently became aware of your fondness for antiques,” Spock said. It was a
liking he had begun to believe he understood, in an odd way, once he paid
attention to it. The book, for example, combined the flaws and perfections of
something handmade; it was curiously satisfying.
“Thank
you, Spock. I like it very much.” He let a few pages flip past and read the
novel’s first line. “ ‘It was the best of times, it was the worst of times ...’
Hmm, are you trying to tell me something?”
“Not
from the text,” Spock said, “and with the book itself, only happy birthday.
Does that not qualify as ‘the best of times’?”
Jim
looked uncomfortable, and he avoided Spock’s gaze. Spock wondered how a gift
that had at first brought pleasure could so quickly turn into a matter of
awkwardness. Once again he had the feeling that Jim Kirk was deeply unhappy
about something.
“Jim—?”
[28] “Thank you, Spock,
very much,” Kirk said, cutting Spock off and ignoring the question in his
voice. “I mean it. Look, I know you have to get back to the Enterprise. I’ll
see you tomorrow.”
And
with that, he was gone.
Spock
picked up the bit of textured wrapping paper and refolded it into its original
shape, around empty air.
He
wondered if he would ever begin to understand human beings.
Duty Log: Stardate 8130.4: MOST SECRET
Log Entry by Commander Pavel Chekov, Duty Officer. U.S.S. Reliant on
orbital approach to Alpha Ceti VI, continuing our search for a planet to serve
as a test site for the Genesis experiment. This will be the sixteenth world we
have visited; so far, our attempts to fulfill all the requirements for the test
site have met with failure.
Reliant—better known to its crew, not necessarily
fondly, as “this old bucket”—plowed through space toward Alpha Ceti and its
twenty small, uninhabited, undistinguished, unexplored planets. Pavel Chekov,
on duty on the elderly ship’s bridge, finished his log report and ordered the
computer to seal it.
“Log
complete, Captain,” he said.
“Thank
you, Mr. Chekov.” Clark Terrell leaned back in the captain’s seat. “Is the
probe data for Alpha Ceti on-line?”
“Aye,
sir.” Chekov keyed the data to the viewscreen so that Captain Terrell could
display it if he chose. For now, the screen showed Alpha Ceti VI. The planet
spun slowly before them, its surface smudged blurrily in shades of sickly
yellow. Nitrogen and sulfur oxides dominated its atmosphere, and the sand that
covered it had been ground and blasted from its crust by eons of corrosive, high-velocity
winds.
Alpha
Ceti VI was a place where one would not [30]
expect to find life. If the crew of Reliant were lucky, this time their
expectations would be met.
And
about time, too, Chekov thought. We need a little luck.
At the
beginning of this voyage, Chekov had expected it to be boring, but short and
easy. How difficult could it be to find a planet with no life? Now, several
months later, he felt as if he were trapped in a journey that was boring,
unending, and impossible. Lifeless planets abounded, but lifeless worlds of the
right size, orbiting the proper sort of star, within the star’s biosphere, in a
star system otherwise uninhabited: such planets were not so easy to discover.
They had inspected fifteen promisingly barren worlds, but each in its turn had
somehow violated the strict parameters of the experimental conditions.
Chekov
was bored. The whole crew was bored.
At
first, the ship had traveled to worlds at least superficially documented by
previous research teams, but Reliant now had begun to go farther afield,
to places seldom if ever visited by crewed Federation craft. The computer
search Chekov had done on the Alpha Ceti system turned up no official records
except the ancient survey of an automated probe. He had been mildly surprised to
find so little data, then mildly surprised again to have thought he had ever
heard of the system. Alpha Ceti VI had come up on the list of Genesis
candidates for exactly the same reason no one had bothered to visit it after
the probe report of sixty years before: it was monumentally uninteresting.
Terrell
displayed the probe data as a corner overlay on the viewscreen and added a
companion block of the information they had collected on the way in.
“I see
what you mean about the discrepancies, Pavel,” he said. He considered the
screen and stroked the short black hair of his curly beard.
The
probe data showed twenty planets: fourteen small, rocky inner ones; three gas
giants; three outer [31] eccentrics. But what Reliant saw on
approach was nineteen planets, only thirteen of them inner ones.
“I’ve
been working on that, Captain,” Chekov said, “and there are two possibilities.
Alpha Ceti was surveyed by one of the earliest probes: their data wasn’t always
completely reliable, and some of the archival preservation has been pretty
sloppy. It’s also possible that the system’s gone through some alteration since
the probe’s visit.”
“Doesn’t
sound too likely.”
“Well,
no, sir.” Sixty years was an infinitesimal distance in the past, astronomically
speaking; the chances of any noticeable change occurring since then were very
small. “Probe error is a fairly common occurrence, Captain.”
Terrell
glanced back and grinned. “You mean maybe we think we’re headed for a ball of
rock, and we’ll find a garden spot instead?”
“Bozhe
moi!” Chekov said. “My God,
I hope not. No, sir, our new scans confirm the originals on the planet itself.
Rock, sand, corrosive atmosphere.”
“Three
cheers for the corrosive atmosphere,” Mr. Beach said, and everybody on the
bridge laughed.
“I
agree one hundred percent, Mr. Beach,” Terrell said. “Take us in.”
Several
hours later, on orbital approach, Chekov watched the viewscreen intently,
willing the ugly little planet to be the one they were looking for. He had had
enough of this trip. There was too little work and too much time with nothing
to do. It encouraged paranoia and depression, which he had been feeling with
distressing intensity on this leg of their voyage. On occasion, he even
wondered if his being assigned here were due to something worse than bad luck.
Could it be punishment for some inadvertent mistake, or the unspoken dislike of
some superior officer—?
He kept
telling himself the idea was foolish and, [32] worse, one that could become self-fulfilling
if he let it take him over and sour him.
Besides,
if he were being punished it only made sense to assume others in the crew were,
too. Yet a crew of troublemakers produced disaffection and disillusion: the
ship was free of such problems. Or anyway it had been until they pulled this
intolerable assignment.
Besides,
Captain Terrell had an excellent reputation: he was not the sort of officer
generally condemned to command a bunch of dead-enders. He was soft-spoken and
easygoing; if the days stretching into weeks stretching into months of
fruitless search troubled him, he did not show the stress. He was no James
Kirk, but ...
Maybe
that’s what’s wrong, Chekov thought. I’ve been thinking about the old days on
the Enterprise too much lately and comparing them to what I’m doing now.
And what I’m doing now simply does not compare.
But,
then—what would?
“Standard
orbit, Mr. Beach,” Captain Terrell said.
“Standard
orbit, sir,” the helm officer replied.
“What
do we have on the surface scan?”
“No
change, Captain.”
Chekov
got a signal on his screen that he wished he could pretend he had not noticed.
“Except
...”
“Oh,
no,” somebody groaned.
Every
crew member on the bridge turned to stare at Chekov with one degree or another
of disbelief, irritation, or animosity. On the other side of the upper bridge,
the communications officer muttered a horrible curse.
Chekov
glanced down at Terrell. The captain hunched his shoulders, then forced himself
to relax. “Don’t tell me you’ve got something,” he said. He rose and came up
the stairs to look at Chekov’s data.
It is
getting to him, Chekov thought. Even him.
“It’s
only a minor energy flux,” Chekov said, trying [33] to blunt the impact of
his finding. “It doesn’t necessarily mean there’s biological activity down
there.”
“I’ve
heard that line before,” Terrell said. “What are the chances that the scanner’s
out of adjustment?”
“I just
checked it out, sir,” Chekov said. “Twice.” He immediately wished he had not
added that last remark.
“Maybe
it’s pre-biotic,” Beach said.
Terrell
chuckled. “Come on, Stoney. That’s something we’ve been through before, too. Of
all the things Marcus won’t go for, tampering with pre-biotics is probably top
of the list.”
“Maybe
it’s pre-pre-biotic,” Beach said wryly.
This
time nobody laughed.
“All
right, get Dr. Marcus on the horn. At least we can suggest transplantation.
Again.”
Chekov
shook his head. “You know what she’ll say.”
On the
Regulus I Laboratory Space Station, Dr. Carol Marcus listened, frowning, as
Captain Terrell relayed the information Reliant had collected so far.
“You
know my feelings about disturbing a pre-biotic system,” she said. “I won’t be a
party to it. The long-range—”
“Dr.
Marcus, the long range you’re talking about is millions of years!”
“Captain,
we were pre-biotic millions of years ago. Where would we be if somebody
had come along when Earth was a volcanic hell-pit, and said, ‘Well, this will
never amount to anything, let’s mess around with it’?”
“Probably
we wouldn’t care,” Terrell said.
Carol
Marcus grinned. “You have it exactly. Please don’t waste your time trying to
change my mind about this; it simply isn’t a matter for debate.”
She
watched his reaction: he was less than happy with her answer.
“Captain,
the project won’t be ready for the next stage of the test for at least three
months. There’s no [34] pressure on you to find a place for it
instantaneously—” She stopped; the unflappable Clark Terrell looked like he was
about to start tearing out his very curly, handsomely graying black hair.
“Wrong thing to say, huh?”
“Doctor,
we’ve spent a long time looking for a place that would fit your requirements.
I’d match my crew against any in Starfleet. They’re good people. But if I put
them through three more months of this, I’ll have a mutiny on my hands. They
can take boredom—but what they’ve got is paralysis!”
“I
see,” Marcus said.
“Look,
suppose what our readings indicate is the end of an evolutionary line rather
than the beginning? What if some microbes here are about to go extinct? Just
barely hanging on. Would you approve transplantation then?”
“I
can’t do that,” she said. She chewed absently on her thumbnail but stopped
abruptly. You’re a little old to still be chewing your nails, Carol, she
thought. You ought at least to have cut it out when you turned forty.
Maybe
when I hit fifty, she replied to herself.
“Don’t
you leave any room for compromise?” Terrell asked angrily.
“Wait,
Captain,” she said. “I’m sorry, I didn’t mean that the way it sounded. It isn’t
that I wouldn’t give you a go-ahead. It’s that finding a species endangered by
its own environment is a fairly common occurrence. There are established
channels for deciding whether to transplant, and established places to take the
species to.”
“A
microbial zoo, eh?”
“Not
just microbes, but that’s the idea.”
“What
kind of time-frame are we talking about?” Terrell asked cautiously.
“Do you
mean how long will you have to wait before the endangered species subcommittee
gives an approval?”
“What’s
what I asked.”
“They’re
used to acting quickly—if they don’t it’s [35]
often too late. They need documentation, though. Why don’t you go down and have
a look?”
“We’re
on our way!”
“I
don’t want to give you false hopes,” Marcus said quickly. “If you find so much
as a pre-biotic spherule, a pseudo-membranous configuration, even a viroid
aggregate, the show’s off. On the other hand, if you have discovered an
evolutionary line in need of preservation, not only will you have found a
Genesis site, you’ll probably get a commendation.”
“I’ll
settle for the Genesis site,” Terrell said.
His
image faded.
Carol
Marcus sighed. She wished she were on board Reliant to keep an eye on
what they were doing. But her work on Genesis was at too delicate a point; she
had to stay with it. Clark Terrell had given her no reason to distrust him. But
he was obviously less than thrilled about having been assigned to do fetch-and-carry
work for her laboratory. He was philosophically indifferent to her requirements
for the Genesis site, while she was ethically committed to them. She could
imagine how Reliant’s crew referred to her and the other scientists in
the lab: a bunch of ivory-tower eggheads, test-tube jugglers, fantasy-world
dreamers.
She
sighed again.
“Mother,
why do you let them pull that stuff on you?”
“Hello,
David,” she said. “I didn’t hear you come in.”
Her son
joined her by the communications console.
“They’re
lazy,” he said.
“They’re
bored. And if they’ve found something that really does need to be transplanted
...”
“Come
on, mother, it’s the military mentality. ‘Never put off tomorrow what you can
put off today.’ If life is beginning to evolve there—”
“I
know, I know,” Carol said. “I’m the one who wrote the specs—remember?”
“Hey,
mother, take it easy. It’s going to work.”
[36] “That’s the
trouble, I think. It is going to work, and I’m a little frightened of
what will happen when it does.”
“What
will happen is that you’ll be remembered along with Newton, Einstein, Surak—”
“More
likely Darwin, and I’ll probably get as much posthumous flak, too.”
“Listen,
they might not even wait till you’re dead to start with the flak.”
“Thanks
a lot!” Carol said with mock outrage. “I don’t know what I can hope for from
other people; I can’t even get any respect from my own offspring.”
“That’s
me, an ingrate all the way.” He gave her a quick hug. “Want to team up for
bridge after dinner?”
“Maybe.
...” She was still preoccupied by her conversation with Terrell.
“Yeah,”
David said. “Every time we have to deal with Starfleet, I get nervous, too.”
“There’s
so much risk. ...” Carol said softly.
“Every
discovery worth making has had the potential to be perverted into a dreadful
weapon.”
“My
goodness, that sounds familiar,” Carol said.
David
grinned. “It ought to, it’s what you’ve been telling me for twenty years.”
Serious again, he said, “We just have to make damned certain that the military
doesn’t take Genesis away from you. There’re some who’ll try, that’s for sure.
That overgrown boy scout you used to hang out with—”
“Listen,
kiddo,” Carol said, “Jim Kirk was a lot of things ... but he was never a
boy scout.” Her son was the last person she wanted to talk about Jim Kirk with.
She gestured toward the file David was carrying. “Last night’s batch?”
“Yeah,
fresh out of the machine.” He opened the file of X-ray micrographs, and they
set to work.
Jim
Kirk pulled the reading light closer, shifted uncomfortably on his living room
couch, held the book [37] Spock had given him closer to his eyes, then
held it at arm’s length. No matter what he did, his eyes refused to focus on
the small print.
I’m
just tired, he thought.
It was
true: he was tired. But that was not the reason he could not read his book.
He
closed it carefully, set it on the table beside him, and lay back on the couch.
He could see the pictures on the far wall of the room quite clearly, even down
to the finest lines on the erotic Kvern black-and-white that was one of his
proudest possessions. He had owned the small drawing for a long time; it used
to hang in his cabin back on the Enterprise.
A few
of his antiques were alien artifacts, collected off world, but in truth he
preferred work from his own culture, particularly England’s Victorian era. He
wondered if Spock knew that, or if the Dickens first edition were a lucky
guess.
Spock,
making a lucky guess? He would be horrified. Jim grinned.
Only in
the last ten years or so had the beauty of antiques overcome his reluctance to
gather too many possessions, to be weighed down by things. It was a long
time since he had been able to pick up and leave with one small suitcase and no
glance back. Sometimes he wished he could return to those days, but it was
impossible. He was an admiral. He had too many other responsibilities.
The
doorbell chimed.
Jim
started and sat up. It was rather late for visitors.
“Come,”
he said. The apartment’s sensors responded to his voice. Leonard McCoy came in,
with a smile and an armful of packages.
“Why,
Doctor,” Jim said, surprised. “What errant transporter beamed you to my
doorstep?”
McCoy
struck a pose. “ ‘Quidquid id est, timeo Danaos et dona ferentes,’ ” he
said.
“How’s
that again?”
[38] “Well, that’s the
original. What people usually say these days is ‘Beware Romulans bearing
gifts.’ Not quite the same, but it seemed appropriate, considering—” he
rummaged around in one of the packages and drew out a bottle full of
electric-blue liquid, “—this. Happy birthday.” He handed Jim the chunky,
asymmetric bottle.
“Romulan
ale—? Bones, this stuff is so illegal—”
“I only
use it for medicinal purposes. Don’t be a prig.”
Jim
squinted at the label. “Twenty-two ... eighty-three?”
“It
takes the stuff a while to ferment. Give it here.”
Jim
handed it back, opened the glass-paneled doors of the cherry-wood Victorian
secretary where he kept his dishes, and took out a couple of beer mugs. McCoy
poured them both full.
“Is it
my imagination, or is it smoking?”
McCoy
laughed. “Considering the brew, quite possibly both.” He clinked his glass
against Jim’s. “Cheers.” He took a deep swallow.
Jim
sipped cautiously. It was a long time since he had drunk Romulan ale, but not
so long that he had forgotten what a kick it packed.
Its
electric hue was appropriate; he felt the jolt of the first taste, as if the
active ingredient skipped the digestive system completely and headed straight
for the brain.
“Wow,”
he said. He drank again, more deeply, savoring both the taste and the effect.
“Now
open this one.” McCoy handed him a package which, rather than being stuffed
into a brown paper bag, was gilt-wrapped.
Jim
took the package, turned it over in his hand, and shook it.
“I’m
almost afraid to. What is it?” He took another swallow of the ale, a real
swallow this time, and fumbled at the shiny silver tissue. Strange: he had not [39] had any trouble opening Spock’s present this
afternoon. A tremendously funny idea struck him. “Is it a tribble?” He started
to laugh. “Or maybe some contraband Klingon—”
“It’s
another antique for your collection,” McCoy said. “Your health!” He lifted his
glass and drank again.
“Come
on, Bones, what is it?” He got one end of the package free.
“Nope,
you gotta open it.”
Though
his hands were beginning to feel as if he were wearing gloves, Jim could feel a
hard, spidery shape. He gave up trying to get the wrapping off in one piece and
tore it away. “I know what it is, it’s—” He squinted at the gold and glass
construction, glanced at McCoy, and looked down at his present again. “Well,
it’s ... charming.”
“They’re
four hundred years old. You don’t find many with the lenses still intact.”
“Uh,
Bones ... what are they?”
“Spectacles.”
Jim
drank more ale. Maybe if he caught up with McCoy he would be able to figure out
what he was talking about.
“For
your eyes,” McCoy said. “They’re almost as good as Retinax Five—”
“But
I’m allergic to Retinax,” Jim said petulantly. After the buildup the
doctor gave about restoring the flexibility of his eyes with the drug, Jim had
been rather put out when he turned out to be unable to tolerate it.
“Exactly!”
McCoy refilled both their glasses. “Happy birthday!”
Jim
discovered that the spectacles unfolded. A curve of gold wire connected two
little half-rounds of glass; hinged hooks attached to each side.
“No,
look, here, like this.” McCoy slid one hook behind each of Jim’s ears. The wire
curve rested on his nose, holding the bits of glass beneath his eyes. [40] “They’re spectacles. Oh, and I was only
kidding about the lenses being antique. They’re designed for your eyes.”
Jim
remembered a picture in an old book he had. He lowered the spectacles on the
bridge of his nose.
“That’s
it,” McCoy said. “Look at me, over the top. Now look down, through the lenses.
You ought to be able to read comfortably with those.”
Jim got
them in the right position, did as McCoy said, and blinked with surprise. He
picked up Spock’s book, opened it, and found the tiny print in perfect focus.
“That’s
amazing! Bones, I don’t know what to say ...”
“Say
thank you.”
“Thank
you,” Jim said obediently.
“Now
have another drink.” McCoy drained the bottle into their mugs.
They
sat and drank. The Romulan ale continued to perform up to its usual standard.
Jim felt a bit as he had the first time he ever experienced zero gee—queasy and
confused. He could not think of anything to say, though the silence felt heavy
and awkward. Several times McCoy seemed on the verge of speaking, and several
times he stopped. Jim had the feeling that whatever the doctor was working up
to, he would prefer not to hear. He scowled into his glass. Now he was getting
paranoid. Knowing it was the result of the drink did nothing to relieve his
distress.
“Damn
it, Jim,” McCoy said suddenly. “What the hell’s the matter? Everybody has
birthdays. Why are we treating yours like a funeral?”
“Is that
why you came over here?” Jim snapped. “I really don’t want a lecture.”
“Then
what do you want? What are you doing, sitting here all alone on your
birthday? And don’t give me that crap about ‘games for the young’ again,
either! That’s a crock, and you know it. This has nothing to do with age. It
has to do with you jockeying a computer console instead of flying your ship
through the galaxy!”
[41] “Spare me your
notions of poetry, please. I’ve got a job to do—”
“Bull.
You never should have given up the Enterprise after Voyager.”
Jim
took another drink of Romulan ale, wishing the first fine glow had lasted
longer. Now he remembered why he had never developed a taste for this stuff.
The high at the beginning was almost good enough to compensate for the
depression at the end. Almost, but not quite.
He
chuckled sadly. “Yeah, I’d’ve made a great pirate, Bones.”
“That’s
bull, too. If you’d made a few waves, they wouldn’t have had any choice but to
reassign you.”
“There’s
hardly a flag officer in Starfleet who wouldn’t rather be flying than pushing
bytes from one data bank to another.”
“We’re
not talking about every flag officer in Starfleet. We’re talking about James T.
Kirk—”
“—who
has a certain amount of notoriety. It wouldn’t be fair to trade on that—”
“Jim,
ethics are one thing, but you’re crucifying yourself on yours!”
“There
are rules, and regulations—”
“Which
you are hiding behind.”
“Oh
yeah? And what am I hiding from?”
“From
yourself—Admiral.”
Jim
held back an angry reply. After a long pause he said, “I have a feeling you’re
going to give me more advice, whether I want it or not.”
“Jim, I
don’t know if I think this is more important because I’m your doctor, or
because I’m your friend. Get your ship back. Get it back before you really do
get old. Before you turn into part of your own collection.”
Jim
swirled the dregs of his drink around in his glass, then looked up and met
McCoy’s gaze.
The
wind nearly knocked Chekov over as soon as he lost the protection of the
transporter beam. Alpha Ceti [42] VI was one of the nastiest, most inhospitable
places he had ever been. Alpha Ceti VI was worse even than Siberia in the
winter.
Driven
by the storm, the sand screamed against his pressure suit. Captain Terrell
materialized beside him, looked around, and opened a channel to Reliant.
“Terrell
to Reliant.”
“Reliant.
Beach here, Captain.” The transmission wavered. “Pretty poor reception,
sir.”
“It
will do, Stoney. We’re down. No evidence of life—or anything else.”
“I
copy, sir.”
“Look,
I don’t want to listen to this static all afternoon. I’ll call you, say, every
half hour.”
“...
Aye, sir.”
Kyle
broke in. “Remember about staying in the open, Captain.”
“Don’t
fuss, Mr. Kyle. Terrell out.” He shut down the transmission and turned on his
tricorder.
Chekov
stretched out his arm; his hand almost disappeared in the heavy blowing sand.
Even if whatever they were seeking were macroscopic, rather than microbial,
they would never find it visually. He, too, began scanning for the signal that
had brought them to the surface of this wretched world.
“You
getting anything, Pavel?”
Chekov
could barely make out the captain’s words, not because the transmission was
faulty but because the wind and the sand were so loud they drowned out his
voice.
“No,
sir, nothing yet.”
“You’re
sure these are the right coordinates?”
“Remember
that garden spot you mentioned, Captain? Well, this is it.” Chekov took a few
steps forward. Sand ground and squealed in the joints of his suit. They could
not afford to stay on the surface very long, for these conditions would degrade
even an almost indestructible material. Chekov knew what would happen if his
suit were torn or punctured. The oxides of sulfur [43] that
formed so much of the atmosphere would contaminate his air and dissolve in the
moisture in his lungs. Chekov intended to die in some far more pleasant way
than by breathing sulfuric and sulfurous acids: some far more pleasant way, and
some far more distant time in the future.
“I
can’t see a damned thing,” Terrell said. He started off toward the slight rise
the tricorder indicated. Chekov trudged after him. The wind tried to push him
faster than he could comfortably walk in the treacherous sand.
Sweat
ran down the sides of his face; his nose itched. No one yet had invented a
pressure suit in which one could both use one’s hands and scratch one’s nose.
“I’m
getting nothing, Captain,” Chekov said. Nothing but one case of creeps. “Let’s
go.”
He got
no reply. He looked up. At the top of the hillock, Captain Terrell stood
staring before him, his form vague and blurry in the sand. He gestured quickly.
Chekov struggled up the sand dune, trying to run, sliding on the slick, sharp
grains. He reached Terrell’s side and stopped, astonished.
The
sand dune formed a windbreak for the small hollow before them, a sort of
storm’s eye of clearer air. Chekov could see perhaps a hundred meters.
In that
hundred meters lay a half-buried group of ruined buildings.
Suddenly
he shivered.
“Whatever
it is,” Clark Terrell said, “it isn’t pre-biotic.” He stepped over the
knife-sharp crest of the dune and slid down its concave leeward side.
After a
moment, reluctantly, Chekov followed. The unpleasant feeling of apprehension
that had teased and disturbed him ever since they started for Alpha Ceti
gripped him tighter, growing toward dread.
Terrell
passed the first structure. Chekov discarded any hope that they might have come
upon some weird formation of violent wind and alien geology. What they had
found was the wreckage of a spaceship.
[44] Chekov would have
been willing to bet that it was a human-made spaceship, too. Its lines were familiar.
Alien craft always appeared ... alien.
“These
look like cargo carriers,” Terrell said.
Chekov
leaned over to put his faceplate against a porthole, trying to see inside the
ruined ship.
A child
popped up, laughed silently, and disappeared.
“Bozhe
moi!” Chekov cried, starting
violently. He fell backward into the sand.
“Chekov!
What the hell—?” Terrell stumbled toward him.
“Face!
I saw—face of child!”
He
pointed, but the porthole was empty.
Terrell
helped him to his feet. “Come on. This place is getting to you.”
“But I saw
it,” Chekov said.
“Look,
there’s the airlock. Let’s check it out.”
“Captain,
I have bad feeling—I think we should go back to Reliant and look for
different test site and pretend we never came here. Lenin himself said ‘better
part of valor is discretion.’ ”
“Come
along,” Terrell said. His tone forbade argument. “And anyway, it was
Shakespeare.”
“No,
Captain, Lenin. Perhaps other fellow—” Chekov stopped and reminded himself of
the way Standard was constructed. “Perhaps the other fellow stole it.”
Terrell
laughed, but even that did not make Chekov feel any easier.
Though
sand half covered most of the cargo modules, testifying to some considerable
time since the crash, the airlock operated smoothly. In this environment, that
was possible only if the mechanism had been maintained.
Chekov
hung back. “Captain, I don’t think we should go in there. Mr. Kyle’s warning—”
The electrical disturbances in the atmosphere that had disrupted communications
and made scanning so difficult gave problems to the transporter as well; Kyle
had said that [45] even
a covering of tree branches, or a roof (knowing what they expected to find,
Chekov and Terrell had both laughed at that caution), could change beaming up
from “just barely possible” to “out of the question.”
“Mr.
Kyle has one flaw,” Terrell said, “and that is that he invariably errs far on
the side of caution. Are you coming?”
“I’ll
go in, Captain,” Chekov said reluctantly. “But you stay outside, pozhalusta,
and keep in contact with ship.”
“Pavel,
this is ridiculous. Calm down. I can tell you’re upset—”
On Reliant,
Chekov occasionally got teased for losing his Standard, in which he was
ordinarily fluent, when he was angry or very tired.
Or—though
his shipmates had no way of knowing this—when he was terrified.
“Look,”
Terrell said. “I’ll go in. If you want to, you can stay out here on guard.”
Chekov
knew that he could not let Terrell enter the cargo ship alone. Unwillingly he
followed the captain into the airlock.
The
inner doors slid open. Chekov had to wait a moment, but after his eyes adjusted
to the dimness he saw beds and tables, a book, an empty coffee cup: people
lived here. They must have survived the crash of the cargo ship. But where were
they?
“We’ve
got a breathable atmosphere,” Terrell said. He unfastened his helmet. Chekov
glanced at his tricorder. Terrell was right: the proportions of oxygen,
nitrogen, and carbon dioxide were all normal, and there was barely a trace of
the noxious chemicals that made up the outside air. Even so, Chekov opened his
helmet seal half expecting the burning pungency of acid vapors.
But the
place smelled like every dormitory Chekov had ever been in: of sweat and dirty
socks.
Outside,
the wind scattered sand against the walls. Terrell went farther into the
reconverted cargo hold. [46] His footsteps
echoed. There were no sounds of habitation; yet the place did not feel deserted.
It felt
evil.
“What
the hell is all this? Did they crash? And where are they?”
Terrell
stopped in the entrance to the next chamber, a kitchen.
On the
stove, a faint cloud of steam rose from a pot of stew.
Chekov
stared at it.
“Captain
...”
Terrell
was gone. Chekov hurried after him, entering a laboratory, where Terrell poked
around among the equipment. He stopped near a large glass tank full of sand.
Chekov went toward him, hoping to persuade him to return to the ship, or at
least call in a well-armed security team.
“Christ!”
Terrell
leaped away from the tank.
Chekov
ripped his phaser from the suit’s outer clip and crouched, waiting, ready, but
there was nothing to fire at.
“Captain—what—?”
“There’s
something in that damned tank!” He approached it cautiously, his hand on his
own phaser.
The
sand roiled like water. A long shape cut a stroke across the surface, and
Chekov flinched back.
“It’s
all right,” Terrell said. “It’s just some kind of animal or—”
The
quiet gurgle of a child, talking to itself, playing with sounds, cut him off as
effectively as a shout or a scream.
“I told
you!” Chekov cried. “I told you I saw—”
“Shh.”
Terrell started toward the sound, motioning Chekov to follow.
Chekov
obeyed, trying to calm himself. So what if there were a child? This was not a
world where Chekov would wish to father and try to raise a baby, but obviously
at least one couple among the survivors of [47] the cargo ship crash had felt differently.
Chekov’s fear was reasonless, close to cowardice—
He
stepped through a crumpled and deformed passageway and peered into the next
chamber.
The
crash had twisted the room around, leaving it tumbled on its side, one wall now
the floor, the floor and ceiling now walls. The change made the proportions odd
and disconcerting; worse, the floor was not quite flat, the walls not quite
straight.
All
alone, in the middle of the room, sitting on the floor—the wall—the baby
reached out to them and gurgled and giggled with joy. Terrell climbed down from
the sideways entrance and approached the child tentatively.
“Well,
kid, hi, didn’t your folks even leave a babysitter?”
Chekov
looked around the room. The wall that had become the ceiling displayed a
collection of sharp, shining swords; Chekov recognized only the wavy-bladed
kris. He recognized few of the titles of the books on a shelf nearby: King
Lear? That sounded like imperialist propaganda to him. Bible? Twentieth-century
mythology, if he recalled correctly.
And
then he saw, hanging from the floor-wall, the ship’s insignia, and the reason
for his terror came at him in a crushing blow.
Botany
Bay.
“Bozhe
moi!” Chekov whispered. “Botany
Bay, no, it can’t be. ...”
Terrell
chucked the baby gently under the chin with his forefinger. “What’d you say,
Pavel?”
Chekov
lunged forward, grabbed Terrell by the shoulder, and dragged him toward the
passageway.
“Wait a
minute! What’s the matter with you?”
“We’ve
got to get out of here! Now! Captain, please trust me, hurry!”
He
forcibly pushed the bigger man up and through the hatch and climbed after him.
Angry now, Terrell tried to turn back.
[48] “But the child—”
“I
can’t explain now!” Chekov cried. “No time! Hurry!” He pushed the captain down
the battered companionway, which was too narrow to allow Terrell to put up much
struggle. Chekov fumbled with his helmet, got it fastened, and turned on the
suit’s communicator.
“Chekov
to Reliant, come in Reliant. Mayday, mayday—”
Static
answered his pleas.
By the
time they reached the laboratory, Terrell had caught his urgency or decided to
humor him now and bust him back to ensign later—Chekov did not care which.
Terrell put on his helmet and fastened it as they reached the kitchen and ran
into the connecting hall. The dormitory was still deserted. Chekov began to
hope they might get outside and contact the ship in time. They plunged into the
airlock. Chekov continued to call Reliant, hoping to get through,
determined to reach it the instant he and Terrell left the building.
The
door opened. Chekov bolted forward.
He
stopped.
They
were surrounded by suited figures, each one armed, and every weapon pointed
straight at them.
“Beam
us up!” Chekov cried into his transmitter.
As he
grabbed at his phaser, one of the suited figures lunged forward, disarmed him,
and knocked him back into the airlock.
High
above, in Reliant, Mr. Kyle tried again to raise Terrell and Chekov.
They had only been out of touch for a little while, true, but the conditions
were so terrible on the surface of Alpha Ceti VI that he would have preferred
continuous contact.
“Try
again,” Beach said unnecessarily.
“Reliant
to Captain Terrell, Kyle here. Do you copy, Captain Terrell? Come in,
Captain, please respond. ...”
He got
no reply.
[49] Beach let out his
breath in an irritated snort.
“Let’s
give them a little more time.”
Kyle
knew as well as Beach did how much Clark Terrell hated to be second-guessed;
nevertheless, he was about to protest when a sudden squawk came through his
headphone and echoed on the speakers. He flinched.
“What
was that?” Beach said. “Did you hear it?”
“I
heard it.” He channeled the transmission through the computer, enhancing and
filtering it. “Stoney, I want to put more power to the sensors.”
“You
already overrode the alarm—much more and you’ll blow out the circuits
completely.”
“I
think they’re in trouble.”
The
transmission returned from enhancement.
“Eeeeebeeeesssss
...” squealed out of the speaker. Kyle slapped his console and forced the
signal through the program again.
“Beeeeeeussss
...”
And
again.
Though
flattened and distorted, it was Chekov’s voice.
“Beam
us ...”
Kyle
looked up at Beach.
“Beam
us ...”
“Okay—more
power,” Beach said. “Get a lock on them!”
“Beam
us ...”
“Beam
us ...”
“Beam
us ...”
When Captain Terrell tried to explain that he and Chekov
had been looking for survivors, that they were, in effect, a rescue party, one
of the survivors expressed gratitude by backhanding him with the full weight of
body and arm and massive suit glove. Terrell sagged.
Chekov did
not try to protest their capture. He knew the attempt would be futile.
He and
Terrell still wore their suits, though their helmets and phasers had been
taken. Escape seemed impossible. Besides the four people holding them, twelve
or fifteen others stood in silence around them.
As if
they were waiting.
Chekov
felt more frightened of what—whom—they were waiting for than of all of them
together. Without actually looking at his phaser, Chekov set himself to get to
it. He forced himself to relax; he pretended to give up. When in response one
of his captors just slightly relaxed the hold, Chekov lunged forward.
He was
not fast enough. His hands were jammed up under his shoulder blades, twisting
his arms painfully. He cried out. Terrell’s captors jerked him upright, too,
though he was still half-stunned.
Chekov
had no other chance to resist. The pressure on his arms did not ease: it
intensified. Through a haze of pain, he sought desperately through old memories
to recall everything he could about Botany Bay. So much had happened in
so short a time that while he remembered the incident itself with terrible
clarity, some of [51] the details had blurred. It was a long time
ago, too, fifteen years ...
The
airlock hummed into a cycle. The guards forced Chekov to attention, pulled
Terrell upright, and turned them both to face the doorway. The bruise on
Terrell’s face was deep red against his black skin. Sweat ran down Chekov’s
sides.
A tall
figure, silhouetted by the light, paused, stepped out of the chamber, and
slowly, deliberately, removed its helmet.
Chekov’s
breath sighed out in a soft, desperate moan.
“Khan.
...”
The man
had changed: he appeared far more than fifteen years older. His long hair was
now white, streaked with iron gray. But the aura of power and self-assurance
was undiminished; the changes meant nothing. Chekov recognized him instantly.
Khan
Singh glanced toward him; only then did Chekov realize he had spoken the name
aloud. Khan’s dark, direct gaze made the blood drain from Chekov’s face.
Khan
approached and looked them over. The unrelenting inspection shocked Terrell
fully back to consciousness, but Khan dismissed him with a shrug.
“I
don’t know you,” he said. He turned toward Chekov, who shrank away.
“But you,”
he said softly, gently, “I remember you, Mr. Chekov. I never hoped to see you
again.”
Chekov
closed his eyes to shut out the sight of Khan’s terrifying expression, which
was very near a smile.
“Chekov,
who is this man?” Terrell tried vainly to reassert some authority.
“He was
... experiment, Captain. And criminal.” Though he feared angering Khan, he
could think of no other way, and no satisfactory way at all, to describe him.
“He’s from ... twentieth century.” He was an experiment, a noble dream gone
wrong. Genetic [52] engineering had enhanced his vast intelligence; nature had conveyed upon
him great presence and charisma. What had caused his overwhelming need for
power, Pavel Chekov did not know.
Khan
Singh’s only reaction to Chekov’s statement was a slow smile.
“What’s
the meaning of this treatment?” Terrell said angrily. “I demand—”
“You,
sir, are in a position to demand nothing.” Khan’s voice was very mild. He could
be charming—Chekov recalled that all too well. “I, on the other hand, am in a
position to grant nothing.” He gestured to the people, to the surroundings.
“You see here all that remains of the crew of my ship, Botany Bay, indeed
all that remains of the ship itself, marooned here fifteen years ago by Captain
James T. Kirk.”
The
words were simply explanatory, but the tone was chilling.
“I can
grant nothing, for we have nothing,” Khan said.
Terrell
appealed to Khan’s ragtag group of men and women.
“Listen
to me, you people—”
“Save
your strength, Captain,” Khan said. “They have been sworn to me, and I to them,
since two hundred years before you were born. We owe each other our lives.” He
glanced kindly at Chekov. “My dear Mr. Chekov, do you mean you never told him
the tale?” He returned his attention to Terrell. “Do you mean James Kirk never
amused you by telling the story of how he ‘rescued’ my ship and its company
from the cryogenic prison of deep space? He never made sport of us in public?
Captain, I’m touched.”
His
words were filled with quiet, deadly venom.
“I
don’t even know Admiral Kirk!”
“Admiral
Kirk? Ah, so he gained a reward for his brave deeds and his acts of
chivalry—for exiling seventy people to a barren heap of sand!”
“You
lie!” Chekov shouted. “I saw the world we left [53] you on! It was beautiful; it was like a garden—flowers, fruit trees,
streams ... and its moon!” Chekov remembered the moon most clearly, an enormous
silver globe banging over the land, ten times the size of the moon on Earth,
for Captain Kirk had left Khan and his followers on one of a pair of worlds, a
twin system in which planet and satellite were of a size. But one was living,
the other lifeless.
“Yes,”
Khan said, in a rough whisper. “Alpha Ceti V was that, for a while.”
Chekov
gasped. “Alpha Ceti V!” The name came back, and all the pieces fell into
place: no official records, for fear Khan Singh would free himself again; the
discrepancies between the probe records and the data Reliant collected.
Now, too late, Chekov understood why he had lived the last few days under an
increasing pall of dread.
“My
child,” Khan said, his tone hurt, “did you forget? Did you forget where you
left me? You did, I see ... ah, you ordinaries with your pitiful memories.”
If the
twin worlds had still existed, Chekov would have seen them on approach and
remembered, and warned Terrell away.
“Why
did you leave Alpha Ceti V for its twin?” Chekov asked. “What happened to it?”
“This
is Alpha Ceti V!” Khan cried.
Chekov
stared at him, confused.
Khan
lowered his voice again, but his deep black eyes retained their dangerous
glitter.
“Alpha
Ceti VI, our beautiful moon—you did not survey that, did you, Mr. Chekov? You
never bothered to note its tectonic instability. It exploded, Mr. Chekov. It
exploded! It laid waste to our planet. I enabled us to survive, I, with
nothing to work with but the trivial contents of these cargo holds.”
“Captain
Kirk was your host—” Chekov said.
“And he
never appreciated the honor fate offered him. I was a prince on Earth; I stood
before millions [54] and
led them. He could not bear the thought that I might return to power. He could
only conquer me by playing at being a god. His Zeus to my Prometheus: he put me
here, in adamantine chains, to guard a barren rock!”
“You
tried to steal his ship—”
Ignoring
his words, Khan bent down and looked straight into Pavel Chekov’s eyes. “Are
you his eagle, Mr. Chekov? Did you come to tear out my entrails?”
“—and
you tried to murder him!”
Khan
turned away, and gazed at Clark Terrell. “What of you, Captain? Perhaps you are
my Chiron. Did you come to take my place in purgatory?”
“I ...
I don’t know what you mean,” Terrell said.
“No, you
do not! You know nothing of sacrifice. Not you, not James T. Kirk—” he snarled
the name, “—no one but the courageous Lieutenant McGiver, who defied your
precious admiral, who gave up everything to join me in exile.”
Khan’s
voice broke, and he fell silent. He turned away.
“A
plague upon you all.”
He
swung around on them again. His eyes were bright with tears, but his
self-control had returned. The horrifying gentleness of his voice warned of
anger under so much pressure it must, inevitably, erupt.
“You did
not come seeking me,” he said. “You believed this was Alpha Ceti VI. Why would
you choose to visit a barren world? Why are you here?”
Chekov
said nothing.
“Foolish
child.” As carefully as a father caressing a baby, Khan touched his cheek. His
fingers stroked down to Pavel’s chin. Then he grabbed his jaw and brutally
forced up his head.
Just as
suddenly he spun away, grabbed Terrell by the throat, and jerked him off his
feet.
“Why?”
Terrell
shook his head. Khan gripped harder.
Choking,
Terrell clawed at Khan’s gloved hand. [55]
Khan watched, a smile on his face, while the captain slowly and painfully lost
consciousness.
“It
does not please him to answer me,” Khan said. His lips curled in a cruelly
simple smile. “Well, no matter.” He opened his fist, and Terrell’s limp body
collapsed on the floor.
Chekov
twisted, trying to free himself. The two men holding him nearly broke his arms.
Chekov gasped. Terrell curled around himself, coughing. But at least he was
alive.
“You’ll
tell me willingly soon enough,” Khan said. He made a quick motion with his
head. His people dragged Chekov and Terrell into the laboratory and dumped them
next to the sand tank.
Khan
strode past them, picked up a small strainer, and dipped it into the tank. He
lifted it, and sand showered out, sifting down through the mesh and flung up by
the struggling of the creatures he had snared.
“Did
you, perhaps, come exploring? Then let me introduce you to the only remaining
species native to Alpha Ceti V.” He thrust the strainer in front of Chekov. “Ceti
eels,” Khan said. The last of the sand spilled away. The two long, thin eels
writhed together, lashing their tails and snapping their narrow pointed jaws.
They were the sickly yellow of the sand. They had no eyes. “When our world
became desert, only a desert creature could survive.” Khan took Chekov’s helmet
from one of his people, an intense blond young man.
“Thank
you, Joachim.” He tilted the strainer so one of the eels flopped into the
helmet.
Joachim
spilled the second eel into Terrell’s helmet.
“They
killed, they slowly and horribly killed, twenty of my people,” Khan said. “One
of them ... was my wife.”
“Oh,
no. ...” Chekov whispered. He remembered Lieutenant McGiver. She had been tall
and beautiful and classically elegant; but more important, kind and sweet and
wise. He had had only one conversation with her, and that by chance—he was an
ensign, assigned to [56] the night watch,
when she was on the Enterprise, and ensigns and officers did not mix
much. But once, she had talked with him. For days afterward, he had wished he
were older, more experienced, of a more equivalent rank. ... He had wished many
things.
When
she left the Enterprise to go with Khan, Ensign Pavel Chekov had locked
himself in his cabin and cried. How could she go with Khan? He had never
understood. He did not understand now.
“You
let her die,” he said.
Khan’s
venomous glance transfixed him.
“You
may blame her death on your Admiral Kirk,” he said. “Do you want to know how
she died?” He swirled Chekov’s helmet in circles. Pavel could hear the eel
sliding around inside. “The young eel enters its victim’s body, seeks out the
brain, and entwines itself around the cerebral cortex. As a side effect, the
prey becomes extremely susceptible to suggestion.” He came toward Chekov. “The
eel grows, my dear Pavel Chekov, within the captive’s brain. First it causes
madness. Then the host becomes paralyzed—unable to move, unable to feel
anything but the twisting of the creature within the skull. I learned the
progression well. I watched it happen ... to my wife.”
He
lingered over the description, articulating every word with care and precision,
as if he were torturing himself, embracing the agony as a fitting punishment.
“Khan!”
Pavel cried. “Captain Kirk was only doing his duty! Listen to me, please—”
“Indeed
I will, Pavel Chekov: in a few moments you will speak to me as I wish.”
Pavel
felt himself being pushed forward in a travesty of a bow. He fought, but the
guards forced him down. Khan let him look into his helmet, where the eel
squirmed furiously.
“Now
you must meet my pet, Mr. Chekov. You will find that it is not ... quite ...
domesticated. ...”
Khan
slammed the helmet over Pavel’s head and locked it into its fastenings.
[57] The eel tumbled
against Pavel’s face, lashing his cheek with its tail. In a panic, he clawed at
his faceplate. Khan stood before him, watching, smiling. Pavel grabbed the
helmet latches, but Khan’s people pulled his hands away and held him still.
The
eel, sensing the heat of a living body, ceased its frantic thrashing and began
to crawl, probing purposefully with its sharp little snout. Pavel shook his
head violently. The eel curled its body through his hair, anchoring itself, and
continued its relentless search.
It
curved down behind his ear, slid beneath the lobe, and glided up again.
It
touched his eardrum.
He
heard the rush of blood, and its flowing warmth caressed his cheek.
Then he
felt the pain.
He
screamed.
On
board Reliant, Mr. Kyle tried again and again to reach Terrell and
Chekov. His voice was tight and strained.
“Reliant
to Terrell, Reliant to Terrell, come in, Captain. Captain Terrell,
please respond.”
“For
gods’ sake, Kyle, stop it,” Beach said.
Kyle
swung around on him. “Stoney, I can’t find them,” he said. “There’s no
signal at all!” Several minutes had passed since the cry from Pavel Chekov. The
sensor dials trembled in overload.
“I
know. Muster a landing party. Full arms. Alert the transporter room. I’m
beaming down right now.” He headed for the turbo-lift.
“Terrell
to Reliant, Terrell to Reliant, come in, Reliant.”
Beach
rushed back to the console.
“Reliant,
Beach here. For gods’ sake, Clark, are you all right?”
The
pause seemed slightly longer than the signal lag required, but Beach dismissed
it as his own concern and relief.
[58] “Everything’s fine,
Commander. I’ll explain when I see you. We’re bringing several guests aboard.
Prepare to beam up on my next signal.”
“Guests?
Clark, what—?”
“Terrell
out.”
Beach
looked at Kyle, who was frowning.
“
‘Guests’?” Kyle said.
“Maybe
we are transplanting something.”
“Enterprise
Shuttle Seven, you’re cleared for liftoff.”
“Roger,
Seattle, we copy.” Captain Hikaru Sulu powered up the gravity fields, and the
square little shuttlecraft rose smoothly from the vast expanse of the landing
field.
He
glanced around to make sure his passengers were all safely strapped in: Admiral
Kirk, Dr. McCoy, Commander Uhura. Almost like the old days. Kirk was reading a
book—was that a pair of spectacles he was wearing? It was, indeed—McCoy was
making notes in a medical file, and Uhura was bent over a pocket computer,
intent on the program she was writing.
Rain
the night before had left the day crystal clear and gleaming. The shuttle gave
a three-hundred-sixty-degree view of land so beautiful that Hikaru wanted to
grab everyone in the shuttle and shake them till they looked: two ranges of
mountains, the Cascades to the east and the Olympics to the west, gray and
purple and glittering white; the long wide path of Puget Sound, leading north,
studded with islands and sliced by the keen-edged wake of a hydrofoil. He
rotated the shuttle one hundred eighty degrees to starboard, slowly, facing in
turn the solitary volcanic peaks of Mount Baker, Mount Rainier, Mount St.
Helens, steaming and smoking again after a two-hundred-year sleep, Mount Hood,
and far to the south, rising through towering thunder-heads, Mount Shasta.
The
shuttle continued its ascent. Distance blurred the evidence of civilization,
even of life, stripping the [59] underlying geology
bare, until the lithic history of lava flows, glacial advance, and orogeny lay
clear before him. A lightning bolt flashed along Mount Shasta’s flank, arcing
through the clouds.
And
then the earth curved away beneath him, disappearing into the sun far to one
side and into the great shadow of the terminator on the other.
Uhura
reached out and brushed her fingertips against his arm. He glanced around. The
computer lay abandoned beside her.
“Thank
you,” she said very softly. “That was beautiful.”
Hikaru
smiled, glad to have someone to share it with.
“My
pleasure.”
She
went back to her computer. He homed in on the Starfleet Space Dock beacon and
engaged the autopilot. It would be a while before he had anything else to do.
He stretched out in one of the passenger seats, where he could relax but still
keep an eye on the control display.
The
admiral closed his book and pushed his glasses to the top of his head.
“You
look a bit the worse for wear, Mr. Sulu—is that from yesterday?”
Hikaru
touched the bruise above his cheekbone and grinned ruefully. “Yes, sir. I
didn’t realize I’d got it till too late to do anything about it.”
“There’s
one thing you can say about Mr. Spock’s protégés: They’re always thorough.”
Hikaru
laughed. “No matter what they’re doing. That was quite a show, wasn’t it?”
“It
was, indeed. I didn’t get much chance to speak to you yesterday. It’s good to
see you.”
“Thank
you, sir. The feeling’s mutual.”
“And by
the way, congratulations, Captain.”
Hikaru
glanced down at the shiny new braid on his uniform. He was not quite used to it
yet.
[60] “Thank you, Admiral.
You had a lot to do with it. I appreciate the encouragement you’ve given me all
these years.”
Kirk
shrugged. “You earned it, Captain. And I wasn’t the only commander you’ve had
who put in a good word. Spock positively gushed. For Spock, anyway. And you got
one of the two or three best recommendations I’ve ever seen from Hunter.”
“I
appreciate your letting me know that, Admiral. Both their opinions mean a lot
to me.”
Kirk
glanced around the shuttle. “Almost like old times, isn’t it? Do you still keep
in touch with your friend Commander Flynn?”
“Yes,
sir—I saw her off this morning, in fact. She made captain, early last spring.”
“Of
course she did; I’d forgotten. When the memory begins to go—” He stopped, then
grinned, making it into a joke. But he had sounded terribly serious. “They gave
her one of the new ships, didn’t they?”
“Yes,
sir, Magellan. It left today.” It will be a long time before I see her
again, Hikaru thought with regret.
A long
time. The new Galaxy-class ships were smaller than the Enterprise, but
much faster. They were most efficient around warp twelve. Only three as yet
existed: Andromeda, M-31, and Magellanic Clouds. Their purpose
was very long range exploration; commanding such a mission was the career
Mandala Flynn, who had been born and raised in space, had aimed for all her
life.
Jim
Kirk chuckled. Hikaru gave him a questioning glance.
“Do you
remember what she said to me at the officers’ reception the day she came on
board the Enterprise?”
“Uh—I’m
not sure, sir.” Actually he remembered it vividly, but if Admiral Kirk were by
chance thinking of something else, Hikaru felt it would be more politic not to
remind him of the other.
[61] “I asked her what
her plans were, and she looked me straight in the eye and said, ‘Captain, I
want your job.’ ”
Hikaru
could not repress a smile. Besides remembering that, he also remembered the
shocked silence that had followed. Mandala had not meant it as a threat, of
course, nor had Kirk taken it as one. Not exactly. But it had not been quite
the best foot for a field-promoted officer, a mustang—someone who had worked up
from the ranks—to start out on.
“She
got it, too,” Kirk said softly, gazing out the window and seeing, perhaps, not
the earth below or the angular chaos of the space station far ahead, but new
worlds and past adventures.
“Sir?
Do you mean you put in for a Galaxy ship?” Hikaru felt rather shocked, partly
because if Kirk had applied, he must have been turned down, but even more that
he had made the request in the first place.
“What?
Oh, no. No, of course not. I didn’t mean that the way it sounded. She earned
her command, just as you did yours. I don’t begrudge it to either of you.” He
grinned. “But if I were ten years younger, she might have had a fight on her
hands for one of the Galaxies.”
“I
can’t quite imagine you anywhere but on the bridge of the Enterprise, Captain
Kirk—uh, sorry—Admiral.”
“I
think I consider that a compliment, Captain Sulu.”
The
autopilot emitted a soft beep as it engaged the spacedock’s guide beacon. Kirk
nodded to Sulu, who returned to the controls, deactivated the autopilot, and
engaged the navigational computer and communications system.
“Shuttle
Seven to Enterprise. Admiral Kirk’s party on final approach.”
“Shuttle
Seven, welcome to Enterprise. Prepare for docking.”
“Thank
you, Enterprise, we copy.”
[62] When Sulu had
completed the preparations, Kirk caught his gaze again.
“By the
way, Captain, I must thank you for coming along.”
“I was
delighted to get your request, Admiral. A chance to go back on board the Enterprise,
to indulge in a bit of nostalgia—how could I pass it up?”
“Yes.
...” Kirk said thoughtfully. “Nevertheless, I remember how much there was to
do, and how little time there seemed to be to do it in, just before I got the Enterprise.
It’s not very long till the end of the month—when you take command of Excelsior.”
“I’m
ready, sir. I’ve looked forward to it for a long time.”
“I
know. I took a lot of pleasure in personally cutting the orders for your first
command.”
“Thank
you, Admiral.”
“But
I’m still grateful to have you at the helm for three weeks.” He grinned: for a
moment the somber cloud of responsibility thinned, letting out a flash of
Captain James Kirk of the Starship Enterprise. He leaned over and said,
with mock confidentiality, “Mr. Sulu, I don’t believe those kids can steer.”
Lieutenant
Saavik watched Enterprise Shuttle Seven as it settled into its transport
moorings; its pilot—Captain Sulu, she assumed—was excellent. The great doors of
the starship’s landing bay slid closed, and air sighed in to pressurize the
compartment.
The
other trainees waited nervously for Admiral Kirk. Saavik remained outwardly
impassive, though she felt uncomfortable about having to face Kirk after
yesterday’s disaster. He had merely added to her humiliation by rating her well
in the series of simulation exams. She believed he should have significantly
downgraded her overall score because of her performance on the final test. She
felt confused, and Saavik disliked confusion intensely.
Captain
Spock knew far more about humans in [63] general than Saavik thought she could ever
hope to learn, and more about Admiral Kirk in particular. Perhaps he could
explain Kirk’s motives. Since coming on board, though, Saavik had been too busy
to ask him.
“Docking
procedures completed,” the computer said.
“Prepare
for inspection,” Spock said. “Open airlock.”
All the
trainees came to rigid attention as the doors slid open. The computer,
surrogate bo’sun, piped the Admiral onto the ship. Kirk paused, saluted the
Federation logo before him, and exchanged salutes with Spock.
“Permission
to come aboard, Captain?”
“Permission
granted, Admiral, and welcome.”
Kirk
stepped on board the Enterprise.
“I
believe you know my trainees,” Spock said. “Certainly they have come to know
you.”
Kirk
looked straight at Saavik. “Yes,” he said, “we’ve been through death and life
together.”
Saavik
maintained her composure, but only the techniques of biocontrol that Spock had
taught her saved her from a furious blush. She could not make out Kirk’s tone
at all. He might be attempting humor.
For the
first ten years of her life, Saavik had never laughed; for the first ten years
of her life, she had never seen anyone laugh unless they had caused another
person pain.
Humor
was not Saavik’s forte.
Kirk
held her gaze a moment, then, when she did not respond, turned away.
“Hello,
Mr. Scott,” he said to the chief engineer. “You old spacedog, Scotty, are you
well?”
“Aye,
Admiral. I had a wee bout, but Dr. McCoy pulled me through.”
“ ‘A
wee bout’? A wee bout of what?”
Saavik
paid particular attention to the interchange between the humans. Spock said
their words were not necessarily significant. Observe their actions toward [64] one another, their expressions. Assign at
least as much importance to the tone of voice as to what is said.
The
first thing that occurred after the admiral’s question was a pause. Inability
to answer the question? Saavik dismissed that immediately. Surprise or
confusion? Those were possibilities. Reluctance, perhaps?
Mr.
Scott glanced at Dr. McCoy—quickly, as if he hoped no one would notice. So:
reluctance it was. McCoy returned his look, adding a slight shrug and a small
smile.
“Er,
shore leave, Admiral,” Mr. Scott said.
“Ah,”
Kirk said.
His
tone indicated comprehension, though in fact his question had been not answered,
but avoided. Saavik dissected the encounter in her mind and put it back
together as best she could. Mr. Scott and Dr. McCoy knew of some event in Mr.
Scott’s life that the admiral wished to know, but which Mr. Scott would be
embarrassed to reveal. Dr. McCoy agreed, by his silence, to conspire in the
concealment; the admiral, by his tone of understanding, had appeared to accede
to their plan, yet put them both on notice that he intended to find out exactly
what had happened, but at some more convenient, perhaps more private, time.
Saavik
felt some satisfaction with the intellectual exercise of her analysis; it
remained to be seen if it were accurate.
Admiral
Kirk strode along before the line, giving each trainee a stern yet not
unfriendly glance. Spock and Scott accompanied him.
“And
who is this?” Kirk said, stopping in front of the child.
Peter
drew himself up so straight and serious that Saavik wanted to smile. He was
blond and very fair, under the admiral’s inspection his face turned bright
pink. He was a sweet child, so enthusiastic he practically glowed, so proud to
be in space at fourteen that he lived within a radiating sphere of joy which
could not help but affect those around him.
[65] Even Saavik.
Now,
undergoing his very first admiral’s inspection, Peter replied to Kirk
breathlessly. “Cadet First Class Peter Preston, engineer’s mate, sir!” He
saluted stiffly, fast, and with great eagerness.
Kirk
smiled, came to attention, and saluted in the same style.
If he
laughs at Peter, Saavik thought, I shall certainly rip out his liver.
The
civilized part of her, taking over again after the infinitesimal lapse,
replied: You most certainly shall not; besides—do you even know where the liver
is in a human?
“Is
this your first training voyage, Mr. Preston?”
“Yes, sir!”
“I see.
In that case, I think we should start the inspection with the engine room.”
“Aye,
sir!”
“I
dinna doubt ye’ll find all in order,” Mr. Scott said.
“We
shall see you on the bridge, Admiral,” the captain said.
“Very
good, Mr. Spock.”
Engineer
Scott started toward the turbo-lift with Kirk; the engine room company
followed. Peter flashed Saavik a quick, delighted grin, and hurried after them.
The
rest of the ship’s personnel dispersed quickly to attend their posts. Spock and
Saavik left for the bridge.
“Have
you any observations to make, Lieutenant Saavik?” Spock asked.
“The
admiral is ... not quite what I expected, Captain.”
.”And
what did you expect?”
Saavik
paused in thought. What had she expected? Spock held James Kirk in high
regard, and she had based her preconceptions almost entirely on this fact. I
expected him to be like Spock, she thought. But he resembles him not at all.
“He’s
very ... human. ...”
“You
must remember that, as a member of Starfleet, [66] you are unlikely ever to escape the presence of humans, or their
influence. Tolerance is essential; in addition, it is logical.”
“You
are my mentor, Captain. Your instruction has been invaluable to me—indeed, it
is indispensable.” They stepped into the main turbo-lift.
“Bridge,”
Spock said. “Saavik, no one exists who has experiences and heritage similar
enough to yours to advise you competently. Even I can only tell you that, as a
Vulcan and a Romulan in a world of humans, you are forever a stranger. You will
have to deal with strangers who may, at times, seem incomprehensible to you.”
“Captain,”
Saavik said carefully, “I confess that I had not expected the admiral to be
quite so representative of his culture. However, I intended no prejudice
against Admiral Kirk, nor intolerance of human beings.”
The
doors to the turbo-lift opened onto the bridge, ending the conversation.
Peter
Preston stood at attention next to the control console that was his
responsibility. It was the second backup system for auxiliary power, and its
maintenance records showed that except for testing, it had not even been
directly on-line for two years. Nevertheless, Peter had checked out every
circuit and every memory nexus and every byte of its data base a dozen times
over. Sometimes, late at night when the ship was docked without even a skeleton
crew on duty, Peter came down and ran his console through its diagnostic
programs. He loved being here all alone in the enormous engine room with the
echoes of tremendous energy fluxes scintillating around him.
Peter
stood last in line for inspection. He could hardly bear the wait. He knew his
console was in perfect shape. But what if Admiral Kirk found something wrong?
What if—
The
admiral stopped in front of him, looked him up [67] and down, and drew one finger along the edge of the console. Looking
for dust? There definitely was not any dust.
“I
believe you’ll find everything shipshape, Admiral,” Peter said, and immediately
wished he had kept his mouth shut.
“Oh, do
you?” Kirk said sternly. “Mr. Preston, do you have any idea, any idea at all,
how often I’ve had to listen to Mr. Scott tell me that one more warp factor
will blow the ship to bits?”
“Uh, no
sir,” Peter said, quite startled.
“Mr.
Preston, do you know how they refer to the Enterprise in the officers’
mess?”
“Uh, no
sir,” Peter said again, and then thought, brilliant line, kid. Why don’t you
use it one more time and make a really good impression?
“Why,
they call it ‘the flying deathtrap.’ And they aren’t referring to the food.”
“Sir,
that’s not true! This is the best ship in the whole Starfleet!”
The
admiral started to smile, and Mr. Scott chuckled. Peter felt the blood rising
to his face. Oh, no, he thought, I fell for it; Dannan warned me, and I still
fell for it. Dannan, his oldest sister, was already a commander; she was
twelve years older than he, and he had absorbed her stories, practically
through his skin, since before he could remember. If she saw him now, he knew
she would tease him about looking like a ripe tomato, he blushed so hard. That
is, if she would even speak to him once she found out he’d acted like such a
dope.
“And
begging the admiral’s pardon, sir,” Peter said, “but the only
person who couldn’t see the truth about this ship would have to be as blind as
a Tiberian bat! Sir.”
Kirk
looked at him for a moment. Then he reached into his pocket and pulled out a
small spidery little construction of glass and gold wire. He unfolded it,
balanced it on his nose, hooked some of the wires [68] around his ears, peered closely through the
lenses at the console and over the tops of the lenses at the rest of the engine
room, and finally turned to Peter again.
“By
God, you’re right, Mr. Preston. It is a good ship.”
Dr.
McCoy laughed, and so did Mr. Scott. For a horrible moment, Peter was afraid
one of the three men was going to reach out and pat him on the head, but they
spared him that. As they walked away, he could not help but hear their
conversation.
“Scotty,
your cadet’s a tiger.”
“My
sister’s youngest, Admiral.”
Oh, no,
Peter thought, why did he have to tell the admiral he’s my uncle? Peter himself
had told no one in the training group, and he had hoped that Uncle Montgomery
hadn’t, either. Peter valued his uncle’s advice and love and even his
occasional crotchetiness, but things would have been easier, clearer somehow,
if he were training under someone unrelated to him.
“Crazy
to get to space,” Mr. Scott said. “Always has been.”
“Every
youngster’s fancy,” Admiral Kirk said. “I seem to remember it myself.”
They
stopped at the far end of the engine room; the admiral listened as Mr. Scott
pointed out improvements added since Kirk’s last visit.
Peter
ducked out of line, sprinted to the tool bay, rummaged around in his bin for a
moment, and hurried to his place again.
At the
console next to him, Grenni glanced at him sidelong and muttered, “What the
hell you doin’, Pres? We’re not dismissed yet.”
“You’ll
see,” Peter whispered.
Kirk
and Scott and McCoy strolled back along the length of the engine room. When
they reached Peter, the cadet saluted hard.
Kirk
stopped. “Yes, Mr. Preston?”
Peter
offered him a complicated instrument.
“I
believe the admiral asked after this?”
[69] Kirk inspected it.
“What
is it, Mr. Preston?”
“Why,
sir, it’s a left-handed spanner, of course.”
Mr.
Scott looked completely and utterly shocked. The admiral’s mouth twitched. Dr.
McCoy choked down a smile, then gave up and started to laugh. After a moment,
Kirk followed suit. Mr. Scott managed nothing better than a stiff, grim smile.
Peter watched them with his very best total-innocent look.
“Mr.
Scott,” Kirk said, but he was laughing too hard to continue. Finally he stopped
and wiped his eyes. “Mr. Scott, I think we’d better get these kids on their
training cruise before they take over completely. Are your engines up to a
little trip?”
“Just
give the word, Admiral.”
“Mr.
Scott, the word is given.”
“Aye,
sir.”
Kirk
handed the “left-handed spanner” back to Peter and started away. A few steps
later, he glanced over his shoulder and winked.
As soon
as the turbo-lift doors slid closed, Jim Kirk collapsed into laughter again.
“Do you believe it, Bones?” He was laughing so hard he had to pause between
every phrase. “God, what a terrific kid. A left-handed spanner!” Jim wiped the
tears from his eyes. “I deserved that one, didn’t I? I forgot how much I hated
being teased when I was his age.”
“Yes,
once in a while we old goats need to be reminded how things were back in the
mists of prehistory.”
Kirk’s
amusement subsided abruptly. He still disliked being teased, and McCoy
was well aware of the fact. Jim frowned, not knowing how to take McCoy’s
comment. “Bridge,” he said to the turbo-lift voice sensor.
“What
about the rest of your inspection ... Admiral?” McCoy said. He let the tone of
his voice creep over into not completely benign mockery. [70] Needling Jim Kirk was one of the few ways to
get him to take a good hard look at himself.
Getting
him drunk certainly had not worked.
“I’ll
finish it later, Doctor,” Jim said mildly. “After we’re under way.”
“Jim,
do you really think that a three-week training cruise once a year is going to
make up for forty-nine other weeks of pushing paper? Do you think it’s going to
keep you from driving yourself crazy?”
“I
thought we got this conversation over with last night,” Jim said. “You want to
know something? It’s getting extremely tedious.”
“Yeah,
concern from one’s friends is a bore, isn’t it?”
“Sometimes
it is,” Jim said. “You’re a lot better surgeon than you are a psychotherapist.”
The
turbo-lift doors opened, and McCoy repressed a curse. A few more minutes and he
might have made some kind of breakthrough with Jim.
Or got
myself punched in the mouth, he thought. Some breakthrough.
Admiral
Kirk stepped out onto the bridge of the Enterprise, and Dr. McCoy
followed him.
McCoy
had to admit it was pleasant to be back. He nodded to Uhura, and she smiled at
him. Mr. Sulu had the helm, though just now it appeared that Lieutenant Saavik,
first officer and science officer for the training cruise, would be piloting
the Enterprise for practice. The main difference, of course, was that
now Mr. Spock was the captain. He did not relinquish his place to Kirk; to do
so would be improper. Heaven forbid that Spock might do anything improper.
“Admiral
on the bridge!” Mr. Sulu said.
“As you
were,” Kirk said before anyone could stand up or salute.
“Starfleet
Operations to Enterprise. You are cleared for departure.”
“Lieutenant
Saavik, “ Spock said, “clear all moorings.”
“Aye,
sir.”
[71] She set to work.
Kirk and McCoy descended to the lower bridge.
“Greetings,
Admiral.” Spock nodded to McCoy as well. “Dr. McCoy. I trust the inspection
went well.”
“Yes,
Captain, I’m very impressed,” Kirk said.
“Moorings
clear, Captain,” Saavik said.
“Thank
you, Lieutenant.” Spock paused a moment, and then his eyes got that hooded look
that McCoy had learned in self-defense to recognize.
“Lieutenant
Saavik,” Spock said, “how many times have you piloted a starship out of
spacedock?”
“One
hundred ninety-three, sir,” Saavik said promptly. And then added: “In
simulation.”
Kirk
absolutely froze.
“In
real-world circumstances,” Saavik said, “never.”
McCoy
got the distinct impression that Jim Kirk simultaneously thought of two
possible courses of action. The first was to pitch Spock out of the captain’s
seat and order Mr. Sulu to take the helm. The second was to do nothing. He
chose the latter. But it was close to a photo finish.
You
damned leprechaun! McCoy directed the delighted thought at Spock. Vulcan
discipline, indeed!
Deliberately
avoiding a look at Kirk, pretending ignorance of the admiral’s discomfort,
Spock glanced at McCoy with a very slight smile. For the Vulcan, that was
almost as extreme a reaction as Jim’s fit of laughter in the turbo-lift was for
Kirk.
“Take
us out, Lieutenant Saavik,” Spock said.
“Aye,
sir. Reverse thrust, Mr. Sulu, if you please.”
“Reverse
thrust, Lieutenant.”
“It is
always rewarding to watch one’s students examine the limits of their training,”
Spock said. “Wouldn’t you agree, Admiral?”
“Oh,
definitely, Captain. To be sure. First time for everything, after all.”
The
viewscreen showed the spacedock recede majestically, then spin slowly from
their sight as Saavik rotated the Enterprise away.
[72] “Ahead one-quarter
impulse power, if you please, Captain Sulu,” Saavik said.
Jim
opened his mouth to speak, took a deep breath and closed his mouth abruptly, and
grabbed his hands together behind his back. McCoy leaned toward him.
“Hey,
Jim,” he whispered, “want a tranquilizer?”
Kirk
glared at him and shook his head.
The
ship accelerated.
“One-quarter
impulse power,” Mr. Sulu said; then, a moment later, “Free and clear.”
Kirk
quietly released the breath he had been holding.
“Course,
Captain?” Saavik asked.
Spock
turned to Kirk and raised one eyebrow.
“At
your discretion, Captain,” Kirk said.
Spock
got that expression again, and McCoy’s suspicion that the Vulcan was as
concerned about Kirk as he was intensified.
“Out
there, Lieutenant Saavik.”
Kirk
started.
“Sir?”
Saavik glanced back.
“Out
there” was something Jim Kirk had said the last time the Enterprise was
under his command.
“I
believe the technical term is ‘thataway,’ ” Spock said.
“Aye,
sir,” Saavik said, obviously not understanding.
But
McCoy could see that Jim understood.
As soon as the inspection ended, Peter dropped the
“left-handed spanner” into its bin and sprinted to his locker. He was late for
his math lesson. He scooped up his little computer, banged the locker door
closed, turned around, and ran smack into his Uncle Montgomery.
“Uh—”
Peter came to attention and saluted. “I’m due in tutorial, sir, with your
permission—”
“Permission
denied, Cadet. I’ll have a few words wi’ ye first.”
“But,
sir, I’ll be late!”
“Then
ye’ll be late! What did ye mean wi’ that display of impertinence?”
Oh,
boy, Peter thought. Now I’m in for it.
“Sir?”
he said innocently, stalling for time.
“Dinna
‘sir’ me, ye young scoundrel! Were ye trying to embarrass me in front of the
admiral? In front of James Kirk himself?”
“You
didn’t have to tell him who I was!” Peter said. “Nobody knew, till now!”
“Aye,
is that so? Ye are embarrassed to be my nephew?”
“You
know I’m not! It just seems like everybody will think I only got here because
of it.”
Montgomery
Scott folded his arms across his chest. “Ye have so little faith in ye’sel’?”
“I just
want to pull my share,” Peter said, and saw that that was not the right
thing to say, either.
“I
see,” Uncle Montgomery said. “ ’Tis not ye’sel’ ye [74] doesna trust, ’tis me. Ye think I’d do ye
the disservice of letting ye off easy? If ye think ye havna been working hard
enough, we’ll see if we canna gi’ ye a bit o’ a change.”
I’m
definitely going to be late to math, Peter thought. Lieutenant Saavik will
cancel the lesson, and on top of everything else it’s going to take me three
days to get uncle over his snit. Well, smart kid, was it worth it?
He
remembered the look on the admiral’s face when he gave him the “left-handed
spanner” and decided that it was.
But
not, unfortunately, as far as Uncle Montgomery was concerned.
“You
know I don’t think that, uncle,” Peter said, trying to placate him.
“Ah, now
it’s ‘uncle’! And stop changing the subject! Ye havna explained thy
behavior!”
“He was
testing me, uncle, to see how dumb I am. If that happened, Dannan said—”
“Dannan!”
Uncle Montgomery cried. “That sister o’ thine has only just missed being thrown
in the brig more times than thy computer can count! I’d not take thy sister as
a model, mister, if ye know what’s good for ye!”
“Wait a
minute!” Peter cried. “Dannan is ... she’s—”
It was
true she had been disciplined a lot; it was even true that she had nearly been
thrown out of Starfleet. But even Uncle Montgomery had told him a million times
that once in a while you had to work on your own initiative, and that was what
Dannan did. It didn’t matter anyway. Dannan was Peter’s sister, and he adored
her.
“You
can’t talk about her that way!”
“I’ll
talk about her any way I please, young mister, and ye shall listen with a civil
tongue in thy head.”
“Can I
go now?” Peter asked sullenly. “I’m already five minutes late, and Lieutenant
Saavik won’t wait around.”
[75] “That’s another
thing. Ye spend far too much time hanging around after her. D’ye think she’s
naught to do but endure the attentions of a puppydog?”
“What’s
that supposed to mean?” Peter asked angrily.
“Dinna
play the fool wi’ thine old uncle, boy. I can see a schoolboy crush—and so can
everyone else. My only advice for ye,” he said condescendingly, “is dinna wear
thy heart on thy sleeve.”
“You
don’t know what you’re talking about!”
“Nay?
Well, then, be off wi’ ye, Mister Know-It-All, if ye are too wise to listen to
the advice o’ thine elders.”
Peter
fled from the locker room.
Saavik
arrived at tutorial rather late, for the inspection and undocking disarrayed
the usual schedule. She was surprised to find that Peter was not there yet,
either. Perhaps he had arrived and, not finding Saavik, assumed that the training
cruise would change the routine. But she thought he would wait more than two or
three minutes. Perhaps Mr. Scott had lectured his trainees after the engine
room inspection.
That
could take considerable extra time, Saavik thought. I will wait.
When Spock
first requested that Saavik tutor Peter Preston in advanced theoretical
mathematics, she had prepared herself to decline. Peter, fourteen, was nearly
the same age as Saavik had been when the Vulcan research team landed on her
birth-world.
Saavik
had feared she would compare the charming and well-brought-up young Peter to
the creature she had been on Hellguard. She had feared she would resent the
advantages childhood had presented to him and withheld from her. She feared her
own anger and how she might react if she released it even for a moment.
When
she tried to explain all this to the captain, he listened, considerately and
with all evidence of understanding. Then he apologized for his own lack of [76] clarity:
he had not made a request; he had given an order which he expected Saavik to
carry out as a part of her training. Unquestioning obedience was illogical, but
trust was essential. If, in all the years that Saavik had known Spock, she had
not found him worthy of trust, then she was of course free to refuse the order.
Many avenues of training and advancement would still lie open to her. None,
however, would permit her to remain under Spock’s command.
Spock
had been a member of the Vulcan exploratory expedition to Hellguard. He alone
forced the other Vulcans to accept their responsibility to the world’s
abandoned inhabitants, though they had many logical reasons—and unspoken
excuses far more involved—for denying any responsibility. Saavik owed her
existence as a civilized being, and possibly her life—for people died young and
brutally on Hellguard—to Spock’s intervention.
She
obeyed his order.
Saavik
heard Peter running down the hall. He burst in, out of breath and distracted.
“I’m
really sorry I’m late,” he said. “I came as fast as I could—I didn’t think
you’d wait.”
“I was
late, too,” she admitted. “I thought perhaps you were delayed by the
inspection, as I was.” Saavik had to be honest with herself, though: one of the
reasons she waited was that she thoroughly enjoyed the time she spent teaching
the young cadet. Peter was intelligent and quick, and while their ages were
sufficiently different that Peter was still a child and Saavik an adult, they
were in fact only six years apart.
“Well
... sort of.”
“Are
you prepared to discuss today’s lesson?”
“I guess
so,” he said. “I think I followed projecting the n-dimensional hyperplanes into
n-1 dimensional spaces, but I got a little tangled up when they started to
intersect.”
Saavik
interfaced Peter’s small computer with the larger monitor.
[77] “Let me look,” she
said, “and I will try to see where you began ... getting a little tangled up.”
As she
glanced through Peter’s work, Saavik reflected upon her own extraordinarily
erroneous assumption about the way she would react to Peter. Far from resenting
the boy, she found great comfort in knowing that her own childhood was
anomalous, rather than being the way of a deliberately cruel universe. Cruelty
existed, indeed: but natural law did not demand it.
She
learned at least as much from Peter as he did from her: lessons about the joy
of life and the possibilities for happiness, lessons she could never feel
comfortable discussing with Spock, and in fact had avoided even mentioning to
him.
But the
captain was far more subtle and complex than his Vulcan exterior permitted him
to reveal. Perhaps he had not, as she had believed, given her this task to test
her control of the anger she so feared. Perhaps she was learning from Peter
precisely what Spock had intended.
“Here,
Peter,” she said. “This is the difficulty.” She pointed out the error in one of
his equations.
“Huh?”
He
looked blankly at the monitor, his mind a thousand light-years from anything.
“Your
tangle,” she said. “It’s right here.”
“Oh.
Yeah. Okay.” He looked at it and blinked, and said nothing.
“Peter,
what’s wrong?”
“Uh,
nothing.”
Saavik
remained silent for a moment; Peter fidgeted.
“Peter,”
Saavik said, “you know that I sometimes have difficulty understanding the way
human beings react. I need help to learn. If everything is all right,
determining why I thought something might be wrong will pose me a serious
problem.”
“Sometimes
there’s stuff people don’t want to talk about.”
[78] “I know—I don’t
wish to invade your privacy. But if, in truth, you are not troubled, I must
revise many criteria in my analyses of behavior.”
He took
a deep breath. “Yeah, something happened.”
“You
need not tell me what,” Saavik said.
“Can I,
if I want?”
“Of
course, if you wish.”
He
hesitated, as if sorting out his thoughts. “Well,” he said, “I had this fight
with Commander Scott.”
“A fight!”
Saavik said with considerable distress.
“Not
like punching or anything. But that isn’t it; he gets snarked off about little
stuff all the time.”
“Peter,
I think it would be better if you did not speak so of your commanding officer.”
“Yeah,
you’re right, only he’s been doing it my whole life—his whole life, I guess. I
know because he’s my uncle.”
“Oh,”
Saavik said.
“I
never told anybody on the ship, only now he’s started telling people. He told
the admiral—can you believe it? That’s one of the things I got mad
about.” He stopped and took a deep breath and shook his head. “But ...”
Saavik
waited in silence.
Peter
looked up at her, started to blush, and looked away. “He said ... he said you
had better things to do with your time than put up with me hanging around, he
said I’m a pest, and he said ... he said I ... Never mind. That part’s too
dumb. He said you probably think I’m a pain.”
Saavik
frowned. “The first statement is untrue, and the second is ridiculous.”
“You
mean you don’t mind having to give me math lessons?”
“On the
contrary, I enjoy it very much.”
“You
don’t think I’m a pest?”
“Indeed,
I do not.”
“I’m
really glad,” Peter said. “He thinks I’ve [79] been ... well ... acting really dumb. He was
laughing at me.”
“You
deserve better than to be laughed at.”
He felt
humiliated—Saavik could see that. She knew a great deal about humiliation. She
would not wish to teach it to another being. She wished she knew a way to ease
his pain, but she felt as confused as he did.
“Peter,”
she said, “I can’t resolve your disagreement with your uncle. I can only tell
you that when I was a child, I wished for something I could not name. Later I
found the name: it was friend. I have found people to admire and people
to respect. But I never found a friend. Until now.”
He
looked up at her. “You mean—me?”
“Yes.”
Inexplicably,
he burst into tears.
Pavel
Chekov screamed.
Nothing
happened. ...
His
mind and his memory were sharp and clear. He was hyperaware of everything on
the bridge of Reliant: Joachim beside him at the helm, Terrell sitting
blank and trapped at first officer’s position, and Khan.
Khan
lounged in the captain’s seat. The screen framed a full-aft view: Alpha Ceti V
dwindled from a globe to a disk to a speck, then vanished from their sight. Reliant
shifted into warp, and even Alpha Ceti, the star itself, shrank to a point
and lost itself in the starfield.
“Steady
on course,” Joachim said. “All systems normal.”
“It was
kind of you to bring me a ship so like the Enterprise, Mr. Chekov,” Khan
said.
Fifteen
years before, Khan Singh had flipped through the technical data on the Enterprise;
apparently he had memorized each page with one quick look. As far as Chekov
could tell, Khan remembered the information perfectly to this day. With the
knowledge, and with Terrell under his control, Khan had little trouble taking [80] over
Reliant. Most of the crew had worked on unaware that anything was wrong,
until Khan’s people came upon them, one by one, took them prisoner, and beamed
them to the surface of Alpha Ceti V.
The
engine room company remained, working in concert with each other, and with
eels.
Out of
three hundred people, Khan had found only ten troublesome enough to bother
killing.
“Mr.
Chekov, I have a few questions to ask of you.”
Don’t
answer him, don’t answer him.
“Yes.”
The
questions began.
He
answered. He screamed inside his mind; he felt the creature writhing inside his
skull; he answered.
Khan
questioned Terrell only briefly, but it seemed to give him great pleasure to
extract information from Chekov. By the time he finished, he knew each tiny
detail of what precious little anyone on Reliant had been told about the
classified Project Genesis. He knew where they had been, he knew where they
were going, and he knew they reported to Dr. Carol Marcus.
“Very
good, Mr. Chekov. I’m very pleased with you. But tell me one more thing. Might
my old friend Admiral Kirk be involved in your project?”
“No.”
“Is he
aware of it?”
“I do
not know.”
With an
edge in his voice, Khan asked, “Could he find out about it?”
Kirk
was a member of the Fleet General Staff; he had access to any classified
information he cared to look up. Chekov tried desperately to keep that
knowledge from Khan Singh. His mind was working so fast and well that he knew,
without any doubt, what Khan planned. He knew it and he feared it.
“Answer
me, Mr. Chekov.”
“Yes.”
Khan
chuckled softly, the sound like a caress.
[81] “Joachim, my
friend, alter our course. We shall pay a visit to Regulus I.”
“My
lord—!” Joachim faced his leader, protest in his voice.
“This
does not suit your fancy?”
“Khan
Singh, I am with you. We all are. But we’re free! This is what we’ve waited for
for two hundred years! We have a ship; we can go where we will—”
“I made
a promise fifteen years ago, Joachim. You were witness to my oath, then and when
I repeated it. Until I keep my word to myself, and to my wife, I am not free.”
“Khan,
my lord, she never desired revenge.”
“You
overstep your bounds, Joachim,” Khan said dangerously.
The
younger man caught his breath, but plunged on. “You escaped the prison James
Kirk made for you! You’ve proved he couldn’t hold you, Khan, you’ve won!”
“He
tasks me, Joachim. He tasks me, and I’ll have him.”
The two
men stared at each other; Joachim wavered and turned his head away.
“In
fifteen years, this is all I have asked for myself, Joachim,” Khan said. “I can
have no new life, no new beginning, until I achieve it. I know that you love
me, my friend. But if you feel I have no right to any quest, say so. I will
free you from the oath you swore to me.”
“I’ll
never break that oath, my lord.”
Khan
Singh nodded. “Regulus I, Joachim,” he said gently.
“Yes,
Khan.”
“That’s
it,” Carol Marcus said to the main computer. “Genesis
eight-two-eight-point-SBR. Final editing. Save it.”
“Ok,”
the computer said.
Carol
sighed with disbelief. Finally finished!
[82] “Fatal error,” the
computer said calmly. “Memory cells full.”
“What
do you mean, memory full?” She had checked memory space just the day before.
The
damned machine began to recite to her the bonehead explanation of peripheral memory.
“The memory is full when the size of the file in RAM exceeds—”
“Oh,
stop,” Carol said.
“Ok.”
“Damn!
David, I thought you were going to install the Monster’s new memory cells!”
All
their computers stored information by arranging infinitesimal magnetic bubbles
within a matrix held in a bath of liquid hydrogen near absolute zero. The
storage was very efficient and very fast and the volume extremely large; yet
from the beginning, Genesis had been plagued by insufficient storage. The
programs and the data files were so enormous that every new shipment of memory
filled up almost as quickly as it got installed. The situation was particularly
critical with the Monster, their main computer. It was an order of magnitude
faster than any other machine on the station, so of course everyone wanted to
use it.
David
hurried to her side. “I did,” he said. “I had to build a whole new bath for
them, but I did it. Are they filled up already?”
“That’s
what it says.”
He
frowned and glanced around the lab.
“Anybody
have anything in storage here they’ve just been dying to get rid of?”
Jedda,
who was a Deltan and prone to quick reactions, strode over with an expression
of alarm. “If you delete my quantum data I’ll be most distressed.”
“I
don’t want to delete anything,” Carol said, “but I just spent six weeks
debugging this subroutine, and I’ve got to have it.”
At a
lab table nearby, Del March glanced at Vance Madison. Vance grimaced, and Carol
caught him at it.
[83] “All right, you
guys,” Carol said. “Del, have you been using my bubble bath again?”
Del
approached, hanging his head; Vance followed, walking with his easy slouch.
They’re like a couple of kids, Carol thought. Like kids? They are kids.
They were only a few years older than David.
“Geez,
Carol,” Del said, “it’s just a little something—”
“Del,
there’s got to be ninety-three computers on Spacelab. Why do you have to put
your games on the main machine?”
“They
work a lot better,” Vance said in his soft, beautiful voice.
“You
can’t play Boojum Hunt on anything less, Carol,” Del said. “Hey, you ought to
look at what we did to it. It’s got a black hole with an accretion disk that
will jump right out and grab you, and the graphics are fantastic. If I do say
so myself. If we had a three-d display ...”
“Why do
I put up with this?” Carol groaned. The answer to that was obvious: Vance
Madison and Del March were the two sharpest quark chemists in the field, and
when they worked together their talents did not simply add, but multiplied.
Every time they published a paper, they got another load of invitations to
scientific conferences. Genesis was lucky to have them, and Carol knew it.
The two
young scientists played together as well as they worked; unfortunately, what
they liked to play was computer games. Del had tried to get her to play one
once; she was not merely uninterested, she was totally disinterested.
“What’s
the file name?” she asked. She felt too tired for patience. She turned back to
the console. “Prepare to kill a file,” she said to the computer.
“Ok,”
it replied.
“Don’t
kill it, Carol,” Del said. “Come on, give us a break.”
[84] She almost killed
it anyway; Del’s flakiness got to her worst when she was exhausted.
“We’ll
keep it out of your hair from now on, Carol,” Vance said. “I promise.”
Vance
never said anything he did not mean. Carol relented.
“Oh—all
right. What’s the file name?”
“BH,”
Del said.
“Got
one in there called BS, too?” David asked.
Del
grinned sheepishly. Carol accessed one of the smaller lab computers.
“Uh,
Carol,” Del said, “I don’t think it’ll fit in that one.”
“How
big is it?”
“Well
... about fifty megs.”
“Christ
on a crutch!” David said. “The program that swallowed Saturn.”
“We
added a lot since you played it last,” Del said defensively.
“Me? I
never play computer games!”
Vance
chuckled. David colored. Carol hunted around for enough peripheral storage
space and transferred the program.
“All
right, twins,” she said. She liked to tease them by calling them twins: Vance
was two meters tall, slender, black, intense, and calm, while Del was almost
thirty centimeters shorter, compact, fair, manic, and quick-tempered.
“Thanks,
Carol,” Vance said. He smiled.
Jedda
folded his arms. “I trust this means my data is safe for another day.”
“Safe
and sound.”
The
deepspace communicator signaled, and he went to answer it.
Carol
stored the Genesis subroutine again.
“Ok,”
the computer said; and a moment later, “Command?”
Carol
breathed a sigh of relief. “Load Genesis, complete.”
[85] A moment’s pause.
“Ok.”
“And
run it.”
“Ok.”
“Now,”
Carol said, “we wait.”
“Carol,”
Jedda said at the communicator, “it’s Reliant.”
She got
up quickly. Everyone followed her to the communicator. Jedda put the call up on
the screen.
“Reliant
to Spacelab, come in Spacelab.”
“Spacelab
here, Commander Chekov. Go ahead.”
“Dr.
Marcus, good. We’re en route to Regulus. Our ETA is three days from now.”
“Three
days? Why so soon? What did you find on Alpha Ceti VI?”
Chekov
stared into the screen. What’s wrong? Carol wondered. There shouldn’t be any
time lag on the hyper channel.
“Has
something happened? Pavel, do you read me? Has something happened?”
“No,
nothing, Doctor. All went well. Alpha Ceti VI checked out.”
“Break
out the beer!” Del said.
“But
what about—”
Chekov
cut her off. “We have new orders, Doctor. Upon our arrival at Spacelab, we will
take all Project Genesis materials into military custody.”
“Bullshit!”
David said.
“Shh,
David,” Carol said automatically. “Commander Chekov, this is extremely
irregular. Who gave this order?”
“Starfleet
Command, Dr. Marcus. Direct from the General Staff.”
“This
is a civilian project! This is my project—”
“I have
my orders.”
“What
gold-stripe lamebrain gave the order?” David shouted.
Chekov
glanced away from the screen, then turned back.
[86] “Admiral James T.
Kirk.”
Carol
felt the blood drain from her face.
David
pushed past her toward the screen.
“I knew
you’d try to pull this!” he shouted. “Anything anybody does, you just can’t
wait to get your hands on it and kill people with it!” He reached to cut off
the communication.
Carol
grabbed his hand. Keep hold of yourself, she thought, and took a deep breath.
“Commander
Chekov, the order is improper. I’ll permit no military personnel access to my
work.”
Chekov
paused again, glanced away again.
What’s
going on out there? Carol thought.
“I’m
sorry you feel that way, Dr. Marcus,” Chekov said. “The orders are confirmed.
Please be prepared to hand over Genesis upon our arrival in three days. Reliant
out.”
He
reached forward; the transmission faded.
On
Spacelab, everyone started talking at once.
“Will
everybody please shut up!” Carol said. “I can’t even think!”
The
babble slowly subsided.
“It’s
got to be a mistake,” Carol said.
“A
mistake! Mother, for gods’ sake! It’s perfect! They came sucking up to us with
a ship. ‘At our disposal!’ Ha!”
“Waiting
to dispose of us looks more like it,” Jedda said.
“David—”
“And
what better way to keep an eye on what we’re doing? All they had to do was wait
till practically everybody is on leave; they can swoop in here and there’s only
us to oppose them!”
“But—”
“They
think we’re a bunch of pawns!”
“David,
stop it! You’re always accusing the military of raving paranoia. What do you
think you’re working up to? Starfleet’s kept the peace for a hundred
years. ...”
[87] Silence fell. David
could not deny what she had said. At the same time, Carol could not explain
what had happened.
“Mistake
or not,” Vance said, “if they get Genesis, they aren’t likely to give it back.”
“You’re
right,” Carol said. She thought for a moment. “All right, everybody. Get your
gear together. Start with lab notes and work down from there. Jedda, is Zinaida
asleep?” Carol knew that Zinaida, Genesis’s mathematician, had been working on
the dispersal equations until early that morning.
“She
was when I left our room,” he said. Like Jedda, Zinaida was a Deltan. Deltans
tended to work and travel in groups, or at the very least in pairs, for a
Deltan alone was terribly isolated. They required emotional and physical
closeness of such intensity that no other sentient being could long survive
intimacy with one of them.
“Okay,
you’d better wake her. Vance, Del, Misters Computer Wizards: I want you to
start transferring everything in the computers to portable storage, because any
program, any data we can’t move we’re going to kill—that goes for BH or BS or
whatever it is, too. So get to work.”
“But
where are we going?” Del asked.
“That’s
for us to know and Reliant to find out. But we’ve only got three days.
Let’s not waste time.”
The
doors of the turbo-lift began to close.
“Hold,
please!”
“Hold!”
Jim Kirk said to the sensors. The doors opened obediently, sighing.
Lieutenant
Saavik dashed inside.
“Thank
you, sir.”
“My
pleasure, Lieutenant.”
She
gazed at him intently; Kirk began to feel uneasy.
“Admiral,”
she said suddenly, “may I speak?”
“Lieutenant,”
Kirk said, “self-expression does not seem to be one of your problems.”
[88] “I beg your pardon,
sir?”
“Never
mind. What was it you wanted to say?”
“I wish
to ask you about the high efficiency rating.”
“You
earned it.”
“I did
not think so.”
“Because
of the results of Kobayashi Maru?”
“I
failed to resolve the situation,” Saavik said.
“You
couldn’t. There isn’t any resolution. It’s a test of character.”
She
considered that for a moment.
“Was
the test a part of your training, Admiral?”
“It
certainly was,” Jim Kirk said with a smile.
“May I
ask how you dealt with it?”
“You
may ask, Lieutenant.” Kirk laughed.
She
froze.
“That
was a little joke, Lieutenant,” Kirk said.
“Admiral,”
she said carefully, “the jokes human beings make differ considerably from those
with which I am familiar.”
“What
jokes exactly do you mean?”
“The
jokes of Romulans,” she said.
Do you
want to know? Jim Kirk asked himself. You don’t want to know.
“Your
concept, Admiral,” Saavik said, “the human concept, appears more complex and
more difficult.”
Out of
the blue, he thought, My God, she’s beautiful.
Watch
it, he thought; and then, sarcastically, You’re an admiral.
“Well,
Lieutenant, we learn by doing.”
She did
not react to that, either. He decided to change the subject.
“Lieutenant,
do you want my advice?”
“Yes,”
she said in an odd tone of voice.
“You’re
allowed to take the test more than once. If you’re dissatisfied with your
performance, you should take it again.”
The
lift slowed and stopped. The doors slid open and [89] Dr. McCoy, who had been waiting impatiently, stepped inside.
All
this newfangled rebuilding, he thought, and look what comes of it: everything’s
even slower.
“Who’s
been holding up the damned elevator?—Oh!” he said when he saw Kirk and Saavik.
“Hi.”
“Thank
you, Admiral,” Saavik said as she stepped off the lift. “I appreciate your
advice. Good day, Doctor.”
The
doors closed.
Jim
said nothing but stared abstractedly at the ceiling.
Doing
his very best dirty old man imitation, McCoy waggled his eyebrows.
“Did
she change her hair?”
“What?”
“I
said—”
“I
heard you, Bones. Grow up, why don’t you?”
Well,
McCoy thought, that’s a change. Maybe not a change for the better, but
at least a change.
“Wonderful
stuff, that Romulan ale,” McCoy said with a touch of sarcasm.
Kirk
returned from his abstraction. “It’s a great memory restorative,” he said.
“Oh—?”
“It
made me remember why I never drink it.”
“That’s
gratitude for you—”
“Admiral
Kirk,” Uhura said over the intercom. “Urgent message for Admiral Kirk.”
Jim
turned on the intercom. “Kirk here.”
“Sir,
Regulus I Spacelab is on the hyperspace channel. Urgent. Dr. Carol Marcus.”
Jim
started.
Carol
Marcus? McCoy thought. Carol Marcus?
“Uh ...
Uhura, I’ll take it in my quarters,” Jim said.
“Yes,
sir.”
He
turned the intercom off again and glared at [90] McCoy, as if having any witnesses to his reaction
irritated him.
“Well,
well, well,” McCoy said. “It never rains but it—”
“Some
doctor you are,” Jim said angrily. “You of all people should appreciate the
danger of opening old wounds.”
The
lift doors opened, and Kirk stormed out.
“Sorry,”
McCoy said after the doors had closed once more. Well, Old Family Doctor,
he thought, needling him isn’t working; you’d better change your tack if you
want to bring him out of his funk.
On the
other hand, McCoy said to himself, depending on what that call is about, you
may not have to.
Jim
Kirk strode down the corridor of the Enterprise, trying to maintain his
composure. Carol Marcus, after all these years? It would have to be something
damned serious for her to call him. And what, in heaven’s name, was going on
with McCoy? Every word the doctor had said in the past three days was like a
porcupine, layered over with little painful probes veiled and unveiled.
He
hurried into his room and turned on the viewscreen.
“Dr.
Marcus, Admiral,” Uhura said.
The
image snowed and fluttered across the viewscreen. For an instant, he could make
out Carol’s face; then it fragmented again.
“Uhura,
can’t you augment the signal?”
“I’m
trying, sir, it’s coming in badly scrambled.”
“...
Jim ... read me? Can you ...”
What
did come through clearly was Carol Marcus’s distress and anger.
“Your
message is breaking up, Carol. What’s the matter? What’s wrong?”
“...
can’t read you. ...”
“Carol,
what’s wrong?” He kept repeating that, [91] hoping enough would get through for her to
make out his question.
“...
trying ... take Genesis away from us. ...”
“What?”
he asked, startled. “Taking Genesis? Who? Who’s taking Genesis?”
“...
can’t hear you. ... Did you order ... ?”
“What
order? Carol, who’s taking Genesis?”
The
transmission cleared for a mere few seconds. “Jim, rescind the order.” It began
to break up again. “... no authority ... I won’t let ...”
“Carol!”
“Jim,
please help. I don’t believe—”
The
picture scrambled again and did not clear. Jim slammed his hand against the
edge of the screen.
“Uhura,
what’s happening? Damn it!”
“I’m
sorry, sir. There’s nothing coming through. It’s jammed at the source.”
“Jammed!”
“That’s
what the pattern indicates, Admiral.”
“Damn,”
Jim said again. “Commander, alert Starfleet HQ. I want to talk to Starfleet
Command.”
“Aye,
sir.”
Jim
Kirk strode onto the bridge.
“Mr.
Sulu,” he said, “stop impulse engines.”
Sulu
complied. “Stop engines.”
The
bridge crew waited, surprised, expectant, confused.
“We
have an emergency,” Kirk said stiffly. “By order of Starfleet Command, I am assuming
temporary command of the Enterprise. Duty Officer, so note in the ship’s
log. Mr. Sulu, plot a new course: Regulus I Spacelab.” He paused as if waiting
for an objection or an argument. No one spoke. He opened an intercom channel to
the engine room. “Mr. Scott.”
“Aye,
sir?”
“We’ll
be going to warp speed immediately.”
“Aye,
sir.”
[92] “Course plotted for
Spacelab, Admiral,” Mr. Sulu said.
“Engage
warp engines.”
“Prepare
for warp speed,” Saavik said. Her voice was tense and suspicious; only the
regard in which Captain Spock held this human kept her from rebelling. She
shifted the ship to warp mode.
“Ready,
sir,” said Mr. Sulu.
“Warp
five, Mr. Sulu.”
The
ship gathered itself around them and sprang.
Kirk
stepped back into the turbo-lift and disappeared.
In his
cabin, Spock lay on a polished slab of Vulcan granite, his meditation stone. He
was preparing himself to sink from light trance to a deeper one when he felt
the Enterprise accelerate to warp speed. He immediately brought himself
back toward consciousness. A moment later, he heard someone at his door.
“Come,”
he said quietly. He sat up.
Jim
Kirk entered, hitched one hip on the corner of the stone, and stared at the
floor.
“Spock,
we’ve got a problem.”
Spock
arched his eyebrow.
“Something’s
happened at Regulus I. We’ve been ordered to investigate.”
“A
difficulty at the Spacelab?”
“It
looks like it.” He raised his head. “Spock, I told Starfleet all we have is a
boatload of children. But we’re the only ship free in the octant. If something is
wrong ... Spock, your cadets—how good are they? What happens when
the pressure is real?”
“They
are living beings, Admiral; all living beings have their own gifts.” He paused.
“The ship, of course, is yours.”
“Spock
... I already diverted the Enterprise. Haste seemed essential at the
time. ...”
“The
time to which you are referring, I assume, is [93] two minutes and
thirteen seconds ago, when the ship entered warp speed?”
Kirk
grinned sheepishly. “I should have come here first, I know—”
“Admiral,
I repeat: The ship is yours. I am a teacher. This is no longer a training
cruise, but a mission. It is only logical for the senior officer to assume
command.”
“But it
may be nothing. The transmission was pretty garbled. If you—as captain—can just
take me to Regulus—”
“You
are proceeding on a false assumption. I am a Vulcan. I have no ego to bruise.”
Jim
Kirk glanced at him quizzically. “And now you’re going to tell me that logic
alone dictates your actions.”
“Is it
necessary to remind you of something you know well?” He paused. “Logic does
reveal, however, that you erred in accepting promotion. You are what you were:
a starship commander. Anything else is a waste.”
Kirk
grinned. “I wouldn’t presume to debate you.”
“That
is wise.” Spock stood up. “In any case, were the circumstances otherwise, logic
would still dictate that the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few.”
“Or the
one?”
“Admiral—”
Spock said. He stopped, then began again. “Jim, you are my superior officer.
But you are also my friend. I have been, and remain, yours. I am offering you
the truth as I perceive it, for myself and for you.”
“Spock—”
Kirk said quietly. He reached out.
Spock
drew back within himself.
Kirk
respected the change. He let his hand fall.
“Will
you come to the bridge? I didn’t do much explaining, and I think your students
wonder if I’ve mutinied.”
“Yes,
Admiral. But perhaps we’d best talk with Mr. [94] Scott first, so he may
explain the situation to his cadets as well.”
That
day at lunchtime, Saavik went to the cafeteria and got in line. All around her,
her classmates speculated about the change in plan, the Enterprise’s new
course, the admiral’s unusual move in taking over the ship. Saavik, too,
wondered what all these abrupt changes meant. She leaned toward the view that
it was another, more sophisticated, training simulation.
A few
minutes after the admiral’s order, Captain Spock had returned to the bridge
accompanying Admiral Kirk. He assured the crew that Kirk’s action had his
consent. Yet Saavik still felt uncomfortable about the whole procedure.
She
hesitated over her choice of lunch. She would have preferred steak tartare, but
the captain considered eating meat—raw meat in particular—an uncivilized
practice at best; consequently Saavik ordinarily chose something else when she
was to take a meal in his company. She had tried for a long time to conform to
the Vulcan ideal, vegetarianism, but had succeeded only in making herself
thoroughly sick.
She
compromised, choosing an egg dish which came out of the galley in a profoundly
bland state, but which could be made nearly palatable by the addition of a
large amount of sesame oil and pippali, a fiery spice. Peter Preston had taken
a taste of it once, and Saavik had not warned him to use it sparingly. She had
had no idea of the effect it would have on a human being. Once he stopped
coughing and drinking water and could talk again, he described it as “a sort of
combination of distilled chili and nuclear fission.”
She
wondered where Peter was. They occasionally ate together; but though now was
his lunch break, he was not in the cafeteria.
Saavik
stopped beside Captain Spock’s table. He was eating a salad.
“May I
join you, sir?”
[95] “Certainly,
Lieutenant.”
She sat
down and tried to think of a proper way to voice her concern about the
admiral’s having taken command of the Enterprise.
“Lieutenant,”
Spock said, “how are Mr. Preston’s lessons proceeding?”
“Why—very
well, sir. He’s an excellent student and has a true aptitude for the subject.”
“I
thought perhaps he might be finding the work too difficult.”
“I’ve
seen no evidence of that, Captain.”
“Yet
Mr. Scott has asked me to suspend Mr. Preston’s tutorial.”
“Why?”
Saavik asked, startled.
“His
explanation was that the engines require work, and that Preston’s help is
needed.”
“The
engines,” Saavik said, “just scored one hundred fifteen percent on the
postoverhaul testing.”
“Precisely,”
Spock said. “I have considered other explanations. An attempt by Mr. Scott to
shield Preston from overwork seemed a possibility.”
Saavik
shook her head. “First, Captain, I believe Peter feels comfortable enough
around me that he would let me know if he felt snowed under—”
“
‘Snowed under’?”
“Severely
overworked. I beg your pardon. I did not intend to be imprecise.”
“I
meant no criticism, Lieutenant—your progress in dealing with human beings can
only be improved by learning their idioms.”
Saavik
compared Scott’s odd request to her earlier conversation with Peter. “I believe
I know why Mr. Scott canceled Cadet Preston’s tutorial.”
She
explained what had happened.
Spock
considered. “The action seems somewhat extreme. Mr. Scott surely realizes that
proper training is worth all manner of inconvenience—for student and teacher.
Did Mr. Preston say anything else?”
[96] “He preferred not
to repeat part of it. He said it was ... ‘too dumb.’ He seemed embarrassed.”
“Indeed.”
Spock ate a few bites of his salad; Saavik tasted her lunch. She added more
pippali.
“Saavik,”
Spock said, “has the cadet shown any signs of serious attachment to you?”
“What
do you mean, sir?”
“Does
he express affection toward you?”
“I
suppose one might say that, Captain. He appeared quite relieved when I told him
that I do not consider him a ‘pest.’ And I must confess ...” she said, somewhat
reluctantly, “I am ... rather fond of him. He’s a sweet-natured and
conscientious child.”
“But he
is,” Spock said carefully, “a child.”
“Of
course.” Saavik wondered what Spock was leading up to.
“Perhaps
Mr. Scott is afraid his nephew is falling in love with you.”
“That’s
ridiculous!” Saavik said. “Even were it not highly improper, it would be
impossible.”
“It would
be improper. But not impossible, or even unlikely. It is, rather, a flaw of
human nature. If Cadet Preston develops what humans call a ‘crush’ on you—”
“Sir?”
Now she felt confused.
“A
crush, for humans, is something like falling in love; however, it occurs only
in very young members of the species and is looked upon with great amusement by
older members.”
The
reasons for Peter’s behavior suddenly became much clearer. If this were what he
was too embarrassed to tell her about, no wonder. She was well aware how much
he disliked being laughed at.
Spock
continued. “You must deal with it as best you can, as gently as you can. Human
beings are very vulnerable in these matters, and very easily hurt. And, as you
quite correctly pointed out, it would be improper—”
Saavik
felt both shocked and uncomfortable. “Mr. Spock,” she said, returning to the
title she had used for [97] him for many years, “Peter is a child. And
even if falling in love is a flaw of human nature, it is not one of Vulcan
nature.”
“But
you are not a Vulcan,” Spock said.
Saavik
dropped her fork clattering onto her plate and stood up so fast that her chair
rattled across the floor.
“Sit
down,” Spock said gently.
Unwillingly,
she obeyed.
“Saavik,
do not misunderstand me. Your behavior as regards Cadet Preston is completely
proper—I entertain no doubts of that. I am not concerned with him for the
moment, but with you.”
“I’ve
tried to learn Vulcan ways,” she said. “If you will tell me where I’ve failed—”
“Nor
are we speaking of failure.”
“I—I
don’t understand.”
“I
chose the Vulcan path when I was very young. For many years, I considered it
the best, indeed the only, possible choice for any reasoning being. But ...” He
stopped for a moment, then appeared to change the subject. “I spoke to you of
tolerance and understanding—”
Saavik
nodded.
“I have
come to realize that what is proper for one being may not be correct for
another. In fact, it may be destructive. The choice is more difficult for
someone with two cultures—”
“I have
only one!”
“—who
must choose between them, or choose to follow another’s lead, or choose a path
that is unique. You are unique, Saavik.”
“Mr.
Spock, what does this have to do with Peter Preston?”
“It has
nothing at all to do with Mr. Preston.”
“Then
what are you trying to say to me?”
“What I
am trying to say—and I am perhaps not the most competent person to say it, but
there is no other—is that some of the decisions you make about your life may
differ from what I might decide, or even [98] from what I might advise. You should be
prepared for this possibility, so that you do not reject it when it appears. Do
you understand?”
She was
about to tell him that she did not, but she felt sufficiently disturbed and
uneasy—as, to her surprise, Mr. Spock appeared to feel also—that she wanted to
end the conversation.
“I’d
like to think about what you’ve said, Captain.” Saavik put herself, and Spock,
back into their relationship of subordinate and commander.
“Very
good, Lieutenant,” he said, acquiescing to the change.
She
stood up. “I must get back to the bridge, sir.”
“Dismissed,
Lieutenant.”
She
started to go, then turned back. “Sir—what about Cadet Preston’s tutorial?”
Spock
folded his hands and considered the question. “It must resume, of course.
However, Mr. Scott has made a statement about the condition of the engine room
which would be indelicate to challenge. I will wait a day or two, then suggest
that the lessons continue. Do you find that agreeable?”
“Yes,
sir. Thank you.”
Saavik
returned to her post. She had a great deal to think about.
Peter Preston stood stiffly at attention. His shoulders
ached. He had been there close to an hour, waiting for Commander Scott to
inspect—for the third time today—the calibration of Peter’s control console.
This is
getting old real fast, Peter thought.
His
uncle had not cracked a smile or spoken to him in anything but a completely
impersonal tone for two days. He was showing considerable displeasure in work
that before the training cruise—and before their disagreement—he had
unstintingly approved. Just now he was unsatisfied with Peter’s maintenance of
the console.
Finally
the engineer strode over and stopped in front of him.
“Ye ha’
stood here a considerable while, Cadet. Are ye so sure this is fixed that ye
can afford to waste time lounging?”
“The
console was ready at eleven hundred hours, as you ordered, sir.”
“So, ye
think this time ye ha’ it working properly, do ye?”
“Aye,
sir.”
“We’ll
see abou’ that.”
Commander
Scott ran it through a diagnostic or two.
“Nay,”
he said, “now ye ha’ a field imbalance; ye’ve overcompensated. Calibrate it
again, Cadet.”
In a
hesitation of a fraction of a second, Peter thought: Dannan said there are
times when you have to [100] stick up for yourself, but there are times
when you have to prove you can take whatever they can dish out.
“Aye,
sir,” Peter said, “Sorry, sir.”
“As
well ye’ might be. Will ye try to do it right?”
“Aye,
sir.”
This is
definitely one of those times when you have to prove you can take it, Peter
thought.
And I can
take it, too.
He set
to work on the console again.
He was
still at it when the trainees came back from lunch. Grenni sat down at his
station.
“Hey,
Pres,” he said out of the side of his mouth, “the Old Man’s really got it in
for you today, doesn’t he?”
“Why’re
you talking like you’re in an old prison movie?” Peter said. “He’s not going to
put you on bread and water just for talking to me.”
“You
never know.”
Peter
snorted.
“I told
you you shouldn’t have pulled that dumb stunt with the admiral,” Grenni said.
“Yeah,
and I guess you’ll keep on telling me, huh?” Peter said. Grenni had all the
self-righteousness of twenty-twenty hindsight. That was getting as old as Uncle
Montgomery’s bad humor.
“Geez,
Pres, you’re working so hard it makes me tired just to watch you,” Grenni said.
“Don’t
worry,” Peter told him. “You won’t have to endure the torture much longer.
Commander Scott’s tantrums never last more than three days. Or hadn’t you
noticed?”
“No,”
Grenni said, “I hadn’t noticed. But then I haven’t had the opportunity to observe
him like some people—not being his nephew and all.”
Damn,
Peter thought. Grenni heard,
and that means even if nobody else did, they all know now. Damn.
“Enterprise
to Regulus I Spacelab, come in, Space-lab. Dr. Marcus, please respond.”
[101] Uhura’s
transmissions met with no reply.
She
glanced up at Spock.
“It’s
no use. There’s just nothing there.”
“But
the transmissions are no longer jammed?”
“No,
there’s no jamming—no nothing.”
Spock
turned to Kirk, back in his old familiar place on the bridge.
“There
are two possibilities, Admiral,” Spock said. “That they are unwilling to
respond, or that they are unable to respond.”
“How
long—?”
“We
will reach Spacelab in twelve hours and forty-three minutes at our present
speed.”
Kirk
folded his arms and hunched down in the captain’s chair. “ ‘Give up Genesis,’
she said. What in God’s name does that mean? Give it up to whom?”
“It
might help my analysis if I knew what Genesis was,” Spock said.
Kirk
wrestled with conflicting duties, conflicting necessities.
“You’re
right,” he said finally. “Something’s happened—something serious. It would be
dangerous not to tell you.” He stood up. “Uhura, please ask Dr. McCoy to join
us in my quarters. Lieutenant Saavik, you have the conn.”
The
three officers gathered in Jim Kirk’s cabin. Spock and McCoy waited while Kirk
proved himself to the highest security safeguards.
“Computer,”
he said. “Security procedure: access to Project Genesis summary.”
“Identify
for retinal scan,” the computer replied.
“Admiral
James T. Kirk, Starfleet General Staff. Security Class One.”
An
instant’s pulse of bright light recorded his eyes’ patterns; then the screen
blinked in filtered colors as the computer ran its comparison programs.
“Security
clearance Class One: granted.”
“Summary,
please,” Kirk said.
[102] The computer
flashed messages to itself across its screen for several more seconds, until
finally an approval overlay masked the safeguards and encodings.
The
summary tape began. Carol Marcus, in her lab, faced the camera.
Kirk
recognized her son at the next table. David resembled his mother strongly:
slender, with high cheekbones, very fair. His curly hair was more gold, while
Carol’s was ash blond, but they had the same eyes.
Jim had
met David Marcus once, years ago, by chance. He recalled the encounter with no
particular pleasure. Though David Marcus did not seem to have anything personal
against Jim Kirk—for which Jim was grateful if only for the sake of his
memories of Carol—the young scientist clearly had little use for military
personnel.
Carol
faced the camera like an adversary, and began to speak.
“I’m
Dr. Carol Marcus, director of the Project Genesis team at Regulus I Spacelab.
Genesis is a procedure by which the molecular structure of matter is broken
down, not into subatomic parts as in nuclear fission, or even into elementary
particles, but into sub-elementary particle-waves. These can then, by
manipulation of the various nuclear forces, be restructured into anything else
of similar mass.”
“Fascinating,”
Spock said.
“Wait,”
said Kirk.
“Stage
one of the experiment has been completed here in the lab. We will attempt stage
two underground. Stage three involves the process on a planetary scale, as
projected by the following computer simulation.”
The
tape switched to the sharp-edged ultrarealistic scenes of computer graphics.
“We
intend to introduce the Genesis device via torpedo into an astronomical body of
Earth’s mass or smaller.”
[103] A gray barren,
cratered world appeared on the screen.
“The
planet will be scrupulously researched to preclude the disruption of any life
forms or pre-biotics.”
Jim,
who had already seen the tape, watched the reactions of Spock and McCoy.
Relaxed and intent, Spock took in the information. McCoy sat on the edge of his
chair, leaning forward, scowling as the images progressed before him.
“When
the torpedo impacts the chosen target,” Carol said, “the Genesis effect
begins.”
On the
screen, the planet quivered; then, just perceptibly, it expanded. For an
instant, it glowed as intensely as a star.
“The
Genesis wave dissociates matter into a homogenous mass of real and virtual
sub-elementary particles.”
The
forces of gravity and rotation warred, until it became clear that no structure
remained to the planet at all.
“The
sub-elementaries reaggregate instantaneously.”
An entire
world had become a translucent cloud. The mass spread into a disk and almost as
quickly coalesced again, reenacting planetary evolution at a billion times the
speed.
“Precisely
what they reform into depends on the complexity of the quantum resonances
of the original Genesis wave, and on the available mass. If sufficient matter
is present, the programming permits an entire star system to be formed. The
simulation, however, deals only with the reorganization of a planetary body.”
The
sphere solidified, transformed into a new world of continents, islands, oceans.
Clouds misted the globe in pinwheel weather patterns.
“In
other words,” Carol said, “the results are completely under our control. In
this simulation, a barren rock becomes a world with water, atmosphere, and a [104] functioning ecosystem capable of sustaining
most known forms of carbon-based life.”
Wherever
the clouds thinned, they revealed a tinge of green.
“It
represents only a fraction of the potential that Genesis offers, if these
experiments are pursued to their conclusion.”
An
eerily Earth-like world revolved silently before them on the screen.
“When
we consider the problems of population and food supply, the value of the
process becomes clear. In addition, it removes the technical difficulties and
the ethical problems of interfering with a natural evolutionary system in order
to serve the needs of the inhabitants of a separate evolutionary system.”
Carol
Marcus returned to the screen.
“This
concludes the demonstration tape. I and my colleagues, Jedda Adzhin-Dall, Vance
Madison, Delwin March, Zinaida Chitirih-Ra-Payjh, and David Marcus, thank you
for your attention.”
The
tape ended.
“It
literally is genesis,” Spock said.
“The
power,” Kirk said, “of creation.”
“Have
they proceeded with their experiments?”
“Carol
made the tape a year ago. The team got the Federation grant they were applying
for, so I assume they’ve reached phase two by now.”
“Dear
Lord ...” McCoy said. He looked up, stricken. “Are we—can we control this?
Suppose it hadn’t been a lifeless satellite? Suppose that thing were used on an
inhabited world?”
“It
would,” Spock said, “destroy all life in favor of its new matrix.”
“Its
‘new matrix’? Spock, have you any idea what you’re saying?”
“I was
not attempting to evaluate its ethical implications, Doctor.”
“The
ethical implications of complete destruction!”
Spock
regarded him quizzically. “You forget, Dr. [105]
McCoy, that sentient beings have had, and used, weapons of complete destruction
for thousands of years. Historically it has always been easier to destroy than
to create.”
“Not
anymore!” McCoy cried. “Now you can do both at once! One of our myths said
Earth was created in six days; now, watch out! Here comes Genesis! We’ll do it
for you in six minutes!”
“Any
form of power, in the wrong hands—”
“Whose
are the right hands, my cold-blooded friend? Are you in favor of these
experiments?”
“Gentlemen—”
Kirk said.
“Really,
Dr. McCoy, you cannot ban knowledge because you distrust its implications.
Civilization can be considered an attempt to control new knowledge for the
common good. The intent of this experiment is creation, not destruction.
Logic—”
“Don’t
give me logic! My God! A force that destroys, yet leaves what was destroyed
still usable? Spock, that’s the most attractive weapon imaginable. We’re
talking about Armageddon! Complete, universal, candy-coated Armageddon!”
“Knock
it off!” Kirk said. “Both of you. Genesis is already here, Spock; you don’t
need to argue for its existence.”
McCoy
started to speak, but Kirk swung around and silenced him with a look.
“Bones,
you don’t need to argue how dangerous it might be if it falls into the wrong
hands. We know that. And it may already have happened. I need you both—and not
at each other’s throats.”
Spock
and McCoy looked at each other.
“Truce,
Doctor?” Spock said.
Grudgingly,
McCoy replied, “Truce.” Then he added, “Besides, that was a simulation. The
whole idea’s preposterous—it probably won’t even work in real life.”
“On the
contrary, the probability of success appears extremely high.”
[106] “And how would you
know, Spock? You haven’t known about it any longer than I have.”
“That
is true. But Marcus is an excellent scientist, and her research team carries
impressive credentials.”
“Do you
know them, Spock?” Kirk asked.
“Adzhin-Dall
is a quantum physicist, and Chitirih-Ra-Payjh is a mathematician. Neither is
well known, because their work is not translatable from the original Deltan.
But the work itself contains fascinating implications. As for Madison and
March, I encountered them some two years ago at a symposium they attended
immediately after attaining their doctoral degrees.” He spoke rather dryly,
because their presentation had been, to say the least, unique.
A
decade before, Jaine and Nervek had done the theoretical work in “kindergarten physics”—so-called
because it dealt with sub-elementary particles. Madison and March
experimentally validated the theory. Their first breakthrough was the
dissolution of elementary particles into sub-elementary particles.
Quarks
have fractional charge of one-third or two-thirds, and attributes, such as
charm and strangeness. The sub-elementary particles had fractional charge as
well: four-ninths and one-ninth, the squares of the charges of the quark.
According to Madison, they could be sorted further by “five unmistakable
marks,” which the team had proposed designating taste, tardiness, humor,
cleanliness, and ambition.
All
this had begun to sound peculiarly familiar to Spock. He searched his memory
for resonances. Just as he finally came upon the proper reference, March took
over to offer terminology for the particles themselves.
When
March recited several stanzas of a poem by a Terran nonsense writer, half the
audience had responded with delighted laughter, and the other half with
offended silence.
Spock
had maintained his reserve, but in truth he had been very tempted to smile.
“We’d
like to propose that the sub-elementary [106]
particles be designated snarks and boojums,” March had
said. “When we picked the names, we didn’t realize quite how appropriate they
were. But after we worked on the math for a while, we discovered that the two
entities are actually images of one another—one real, one virtual.” He
displayed on the auditorium screen a set of formulas, a transformation which
proved the mathematical equivalence of the two separate particle-waves.
“Now,”
March had said with a completely straight face, “and with apologies to Lewis
Carroll:
“In the
midst of the word we were trying to say,
In the
midst of our laughter and glee.
We will
softly and silently vanish away—
For the
Snark was a Boojum, you see.”
He and
Madison then left the podium.
After
the presentation, Spock had heard one normally dignified elder scientist say,
laughing, “If they get bored with science they can go straight into stand-up
comedy,” to which her colleague, who was not quite so amused, replied, “Well,
maybe. But the jokes are pretty esoteric, don’t you think?”
Spock
had made a point of attending their question-and-answer session later that day,
and during the week-long seminar became fairly well acquainted with them. He
had more in common with Madison, whose intellect was firmly based in
rationality, than with the high-strung March, whose brilliance balanced on a
fine edge of intensity. But Spock had found their company stimulating; he would
be pleased to encounter the two young humans again on Space lab.
“Spock?”
Kirk said.
Spock
returned from his reminiscences. “Yes, Admiral?”
“I
said: Were they your students?”
“Indeed
not, Admiral. They are pioneers in the field [108] of sub-elementary
particle physics. I am honored to have been a student of theirs.”
Del
March glared at the computer terminal. No way was he going to be able to
transfer Boojum Hunt. Every portable byte of memory was already packed full of
essential Genesis data, and the team still would have to let some go when they
blanked the built-in memory cells.
He had
a hard copy of the program, of course, a printout, but it would take a couple
of hours for the optical-scan to read it back in, and it always made mistakes.
Boojum was a real pain to debug. Well, no help for it.
He was
glad they would not lose the program entirely. Boojum was the best piece of
software he and Vance had ever written. It was an adventure game; yet it
paralleled their real-world work of the last few years. Vance referred to it as
“the extended metaphor” but agreed that “Boojum Hunt” was a lot more
commercial.
Then
Del got an idea. When the storm troopers arrived tomorrow, they would be
looking for something. It would be a shame to disappoint them.
Vance came
over and put his hand on Del’s shoulder.
“Might’s
well get it over with, don’t you think?”
Del
grinned. “No, Vance, listen—don’t you think it’s about time Mad Rabbit got
going again?”
Vance
gave him a quizzical look, then began to laugh. He had a great laugh. Del did
not have to explain his plan; Vance understood it completely.
Carol
returned to the lab. Most of the really sensitive data had already been moved.
Only the mechanism of Genesis itself remained. They had another whole day to
finish collecting personal gear and to be sure they had erased all clues to
their whereabouts.
“I
could use a good joke about now,” Carol said. She sounded both tired and
irritable.
Among
other things, she’s probably sick of hassling [109] with Dave about Starfleet, Del thought. He really had it in for
them—now he had good reason, but it was hardly his newest theme.
“Vance
and I just decided to leave something for the troops,” Del said. “The latest
Mad Rabbit.”
“What
in heaven’s name is a Mad Rabbit?”
“Do you
believe it, Vance? She never heard of us.” Del feigned insult. “Carol, we were
famous.”
“What
do you mean, ‘were’? You’re pretty famous now.”
“We
were famous in Port Orchard, Del,” Vance said mildly. “That isn’t exactly big
time.”
“Port
Orchard?” Carol said.
“See?”
“What’s
Mad Rabbit?”
“I’m
Mad,” Vance said, “and he’s Rabbit.”
“As in
March Hare. We started a minor revival of Lewis Carroll all by ourselves.”
Carol
flung up her hands in resignation. “Del, I guess you’ll let me in on the secret
when you get good and ready, right?”
Del
started to explain. “We used to have a company when we were kids. It still
exists; we just haven’t done anything with it since—before grad school, I
guess, huh, Vance?”
“Reality
is a lot more interesting,” Vance said. He pulled a chair around and got Carol
to sit down.
Del
grinned. “If you call quark chemistry reality.”
Vance
took heed of Carol’s impatience, and as usual brought Del back on track. “We
used to write computer game software,” he said. “Our company was called Mad
Rabbit Productions. It did pretty well. In Port Orchard, we were ‘local kids
make good’ for a while.” He started to rub the tension-taut muscles of Carol’s
neck and shoulders.
“I had
no idea,” Carol said. She flinched as Vance
found a particularly sore spot, and then began to relax.
“The
thing is,” Del said, “where the game sold best was to Starbases.”
[110] “The more isolated
the better,” Vance added. “They don’t have much else to do.”
“Not
unlike Spacelab,” Del said.
But it
was true. Spacelab was quite possibly the Federation’s least exciting
entertainment spot. There wasn’t much to do but work. After concentrating on
the same subject eighteen hours a day, seven days a week, for close to a year,
Del had been getting perilously close to burnout. He had begun having bizarre and
wistful dreams about going out to sleazy dives, getting stoned to the brainstem
on endorphin-rock and beer, and picking a fight with the first person to look
at him side wise.
He
thought he had outgrown that kind of thing a couple of years before.
When he
told Vance about one of his nightmares, his friend and partner suggested they
revive their old business. It was perfectly possible, on Spacelab, to get drunk
or stoned or both, and Vance was not anxious to have to start dragging Del out
of brawls again.
“We
wrote Boojum just to play it,” Del said. “But why not leave it for Reliant—”
Carol
giggled. “What a great idea. It seems a shame for them to come all this way for
nothing.”
They
all laughed.
The
last couple of days had actually been rather exciting. Everyone had managed to
convince each other that the Starfleet orders were some ridiculous, awful
mistake, and that as soon as they could get through to somebody in the
Federation Assembly or in the Federation Science Network, everything would be
straightened out. Some overzealous petty-tyrant Starfleet officer would get
called on the carpet, maybe even cashiered out of the service, and that would
be that. All they needed to do was keep Genesis and the data out of the hands
of Reliant’s captain until he got bored with looking for it and went
away, or until they could recruit civilian scientific support and aid.
[111] Looked at that
way, it became a big game of hide-and-seek. It was a change in routine, with a
tiny potential for danger, just scary enough to be fun.
“I’ll
put it in the Monster,” Del said.
“Oh, I
see,” Carol said smiling. “This whole thing is a ploy for you guys to get room
to play in the main machine.”
“You
got it,” Vance said.
They
all laughed again. They had been working forty-eight hours straight. Del felt
punchy with exhaustion and marvelously silly.
Carol
patted Vance’s hand and stood up. “Thank you,” she said. “That feels a lot
better.”
“You’re
welcome,” he said. “You looked like you needed it.”
Zinaida
entered the lab.
Over
the past year, Del had got used to working with her, but he never had managed
to get over a sharp thrill of attraction and desire whenever he saw her.
Deltans affected humans that way. The stimulus was general rather than
individual. Del understood it intellectually. Getting the message through to
his body was another thing.
No
Deltan would ever permit her- or himself to become physically involved with a
human being. The idea was ethically inconceivable, for no human could tolerate
the intensity of the intimacy.
Dreaming
never hurt anyone, though, and sometimes Del dreamed about Zinaida
Chitirih-Ra-Payjh; in his dreams he could pretend that he was different, that
he could provide whatever she asked and survive whatever she offered.
The
Deltans, Zinaida and Jedda both, were unfailingly cordial to the humans on the
station; they comported themselves with an aloofness and propriety more
characteristic of Vulcans than of the uninhibited sensualists Deltans were said
to be. They seldom touched each other in public, and never anyone else. [112] They kept a protective wall of detachment
between themselves and their vulnerable co-workers, most of whom were acutely
curious to know what it was they did in private, but who knew better than to
ask.
Zinaida
greeted them and turned on the subspace communicator. Ever since the call from Reliant,
one or another of the scientists tried to contact the Federation every hour
or so. Except for Carol’s half-completed transmission to James Kirk, no one had
met with any success.
This
time it was just the same. Zinaida shrugged, turned off the communicator, and
joined her teammates by the computer.
“Genesis
is about ready,” she said to Carol. “David and Jedda thought you would want to
be there.”
Her
eyebrows were as delicate and expressive as bird wings, and her lashes were
long and thick. Her eyes were large, a clear aquamarine blue flecked with
bright silver, the most beautiful eyes Del had ever seen.
“Thanks,
Zinaida,” Carol said. “We’ll get it out of here—then I guess all we can do is
wait.” She left the lab.
Del
knew she still hoped Reliant might be called off: if it was, they would
not have to purge the computer memories. Once that was done, getting everything
back on-line would be a major undertaking. The last thing they planned to do
before fleeing was to let the liquid hydrogen tanks—the bubble baths—purge
themselves into space. The equipment only worked when it was supercooled; at
room temperature, it deteriorated rapidly. Rebuilding would take a lot of time.
Jan,
the steward, came in a moment after Carol left.
“Yoshi
wants to know what anybody wants him to bring in the way of food.”
Yoshi,
the cook, had put off his leave till the rest of the station personnel returned
from holiday. He was convinced the scientists would kill themselves with food
poisoning or malnutrition if they were left completely to their own devices.
[113] “He really
shouldn’t have to worry about it,” Del said.
Jan
shrugged cheerfully. “Well, you know Yoshi.”
“How
about sashimi?” Del said.
“Yechh,”
said Vance.
“I
think he had in mind croissants and fruit and coffee.”
“Jan,
why did he put you to the trouble of asking, if he’d already decided?”
“I
don’t know. I guess so you have the illusion of being in charge of your own
fate. Do you know when we’re going? Or how long we’ll be?”
“No to
both questions. We may be gone for a while.
Maybe
you ought to tell him we suggested pemmican.”
“Hell,
no,” Jan said. “If I do, he’ll figure out a way to make some, and it sounds
even worse than sashimi.”
After
Jan left, Del poured himself a cup of coffee, wandered down to his office, and
checked to be sure he had got all his lab notes. The top of his desk was clear
for the first time since he came to Spacelab. The office felt bare and
deserted, as if he were moving out permanently. The framed piece of calligraphy
on the wall was the only thing left: he saw no need to put it away, and it
seemed silly to take it. He read it over for the first time in quite a while:
Come, listen, my men, while I tell you again
The five unmistakable marks
By which you may know, wheresoever you go,
The warranted genuine Snarks.
Let us take them in order. The first is the taste,
Which is meagre and hollow, but crisp:
Like a coat that is rather too tight in the waist,
With a flavor of Will-o-the-Wisp.
Its habit of getting up late you’ll agree
That it carries too far, when I say
That it frequently breakfasts at five-o’clock tea,
And dines on the following day.
[114] The
third is its slowness in taking a jest.
Should you happen to venture on one,
It will sigh like a thing that is deeply distressed:
And it always looks grave at a pun.
The fourth is its fondness for bathing-machines,
Which it constantly carries about,
And believes that they add to the beauty of scenes—
A sentiment open to doubt.
The fifth is ambition. It next will be right
To describe each particular batch:
Distinguishing those that have feathers, and bite,
From those that have whiskers, and scratch.
For although common Snarks do no manner of harm,
Yet I feel it my duty to say
Some are Boojums—
—Lewis Carroll
“The Hunting of the Snark”
Del sat
on the corner of his desk and sipped his coffee. Exhaustion was beginning to
catch up with him, dissolving the fine thrill of defiance into doubt.
Vance
came in and straddled a chair, folding his arms across its back. Del waited,
but his partner did not say anything. He reached for Del’s cup. Del handed it
to him and Vance drank some of the coffee. He had always had a lot more
endurance than Del, but even he was beginning to look tired.
“I
can’t figure out what to take.”
“I
don’t know, either,” Del said. “A toothbrush and a lot of books?”
Vance
smiled, but without much conviction. He drank some more of Del’s coffee,
grimaced, and handed back the cup. “How many times has that stuff boiled?”
“Sorry.
I forgot to turn down the heat.”
[115] Vance suddenly
frowned and looked around the room. “Little brother ...” he said.
Del
started. Vance had not called him that since high school.
“Little
brother, this is all bullshit, you know.”
“I don’t
know. What are you talking about?”
“If the
military decides to take Genesis, they will, and there’s not a damned thing
we’ll be able to do about it.”
“There’s
got to be! You’re beginning to sound like Dave.”
“For
all our Lewis Carroll recitations, for all our doing our amateur comedian number
at seminars—hell, even for all the fun we’ve had—we’ve been hiding out from the
implications of our work. This has been inevitable since the minute we figured
out how to break up quarks en masse without a cyclotron.”
“What
are you saying we ought to do? Just turn everything over to Reliant when
it gets here?”
“No!
Gods, Del, no.”
“Sorry,”
Del said sincerely. He knew Vance better than that. “That was a stupid thing to
say. I’m sorry.”
“I mean
the exact opposite. Only ... I don’t really know what I mean by meaning the
exact opposite. Except, we can’t let them have it. No matter what.”
All of
a sudden the lights started flashing on and off, on and off, and a siren
howled. Vance jumped to his feet.
“What
the hell—!”
“That’s
the emergency alarm!” Del said.
They
sprinted out of Del’s office.
Something
must have happened when they tried to move Genesis, Del thought.
Vance,
with his longer stride, was ten meters ahead of him by the time they reached
the main lab. He ran into the room—
Two
strangers stepped out of hiding and held phasers on him. He stopped and raised
his hands but kept on [116] walking forward,
drawing their attention farther into the lab and away from the corridor. Del
ducked into a doorway and pressed himself against the shadows, taking the chance
his friend had given him.
“What
the hell is going on?” he heard Vance say. “Who are you people?”
“We’ve
come for Genesis.”
Damn,
Del thought. We spent the
last two days running around in a fit of paranoia about the military, and not
one of us thought to wonder if they were telling the truth about arriving in
three days.
He
opened the door behind him, slipped into the dark room, and locked the door. He
felt his way to the communications console and keyed it on.
“Hi,
Del,” David said cheerfully. “Can you wait a minute? We’re just about to move.”
“No!”
Del whispered urgently. “Dave, keep your voice down. They’re here! They’ve got
Vance and Zinaida.”
“What?”
“They
lied to us! They’re here already. Get Genesis out, fast.”
He
heard a strange noise in the corridor, searched his mind for what the sound
could be, and identified it: a tricorder.
“Dave,
dammit, they’re tracking me! Get Genesis out, and get out yourselves before
they find you, too!”
“But—”
“Don’t
argue! Look, they’re not gonna hurt us. What can they do? Maybe dump us in a
brig someplace. Somebody’s got to be loose to tell the Federation what’s going
on. To get us out if they try to keep us incommunicado. Go!”
“Okay.”
Del
slammed off the intercom and accessed the main computer. He had to wipe
the memories before he got caught. The tricorder hummed louder.
The
computer came on line.
“Ok,”
it said.
[117] “Liquid hydrogen
tanks, purge protocol,” Del said softly.
The
door rattled.
“We
know you’re in there! Come out at once!”
“That’s
a safeguarded routine,” the computer said.
“I
know,” Del said.
“Ok.
Which tanks do you wish to purge?”
Somebody
banged on the locked door, but it held. Del answered the computer’s questions
as quickly and as softly as he could speak. As a safety precaution, the liquid
hydrogen tanks would not accept the purge command without several codes and a
number of overrides. Del assured the program that he wanted everything purged
except for one memory bath.
The
banging and thumping grew louder. He was almost done.
“All
right!” he yelled. “All right, I’m coming.” They didn’t hear him, or they
didn’t believe him, or they didn’t care.
“What?”
the computer said.
“I
wasn’t talking to you that time.”
“Ok.
Codes acceptable. Safeguards overridden. Purge routine ready. Please say your
identity password.”
“March
Hare,” Del said.
“Ok.
Purge initiated.”
A
moment later, the computer’s memory began to fail, and the system crashed.
A
laser-blaster exploded the door inward. The concussion nearly knocked Del to
the floor. He grabbed at the console and turned it off. The screen’s glow faded
as the invaders rushed him.
He
raised his hands in surrender.
The
tanks were venting into space. In about one minute, nothing at all would be
left in any of the station’s computers. Except Mad Rabbit Productions’ Boojum
Hunt.
Four
strangers came through the ruined door, three with phasers, one with a blaster.
[118] “Come with us.”
The one with the blaster gestured toward the exit.
Del
raised his hands a little higher. “All right, all right,” he said to her. “I
told you I was coming.”
They
herded him into the main lab. About twenty people guarded Vance, Zinaida, Jan,
and Yoshi. The strangers, rough and wild, sure did not look like Starfleet
personnel.
Vance
gave Del a questioning glance. Del nodded very slightly: mission accomplished.
A
white-haired, cruel-faced man stood up and approached them. Nearly as tall as
Vance, he was arrogant and elegant despite his ragged clothing.
“I’ve
come for Genesis,” he said. “Where is it?”
“The
scientists shipped out of here a couple hours ago,” Vance said. “They didn’t
tell us where they went or what they took. We’re just technicians.”
The
leader of the group turned to one of his people.
Del
recognized Pavel Chekov, and cursed under his breath. Captain Terrell stood a
bit farther back in the group. Neither appeared to be a prisoner—in fact, they
both carried phasers.
“Is
this true, Mr. Chekov?”
“No,
Khan.” Pale and blank-looking, Chekov spoke without expression.
“Who is
he?” Khan gestured toward Vance.
“Dr.
Vance Madison.”
Khan
took a step toward him. Two of his people grabbed Vance’s arms. Del saw what
was coming and fought to go to Vance’s aid. One of the people behind him put a
choke-hold on him.
Khan
struck Vance a violent backhand blow to the face, flinging him against his
captors. Dazed, Vance shook his head. He straightened up. A thin trickle of
blood ran down his chin.
“Do not
lie to me again, Dr. Madison.”
Khan
went back to questioning Chekov.
“Who
are these others?”
Chekov
said he did not know Yoshi or Jan, but he [119]
identified Zinaida and Del. Del
tried to figure out what was going on. What were Chekov and Terrell doing with
this bunch of pirates?
“You
can save yourselves a great deal of unpleasantness by cooperating,” Khan said.
No one
spoke.
“My
lord—”
“Yes,
Joachim?”
“There’s
nothing in the computer but this.”
Khan
joined Joachim and gazed down at the computer screen. At first he smiled. That
scared Del, because it indicated that Khan had either seen Carol’s grant
application or otherwise knew a good deal about Genesis. The opening Boojum
graphics closely resembled a Genesis simulation.
Del
looked across at Vance, worried about him.
“You
okay?”
The
woman behind Del tightened her hold on his throat so that he shut up. But Vance
nodded. The dazed look, at least, had disappeared.
Khan suddenly
shouted, incoherent with rage. “A game!” he screamed. “What do you mean, a
game!”
Yoshi
was the nearest to him of the station personnel. Khan swung around and grabbed
him.
“A
game! Where is Genesis?” He picked Yoshi up and shook him violently.
“I don’t
know!”
“He’s
telling the truth! Leave him alone!” Vance struggled but could not get free.
Khan
set Yoshi down gently.
“This
one knows nothing of Genesis?” he asked kindly.
“That’s
right. Whatever you’re after, Jan and Yoshi have nothing to do with it. Leave
them alone.”
Khan
drew a knife from his belt. Before anyone understood what he planned, he
grabbed Yoshi by the hair, jerked his head back, and cut his throat. Yoshi did
not even cry out. Blood spurted across the room. Warm droplets spattered Del’s
cheek.
[120] “My God!”
Someone—one
of Khan’s own people—screamed. Khan reached for Jan. Del wrenched himself out
of his captors’ hands and lunged. The knife flashed again. Jan’s scream stopped
suddenly, and arterial blood sprayed out. Del grabbed Khan, who turned smoothly
and expertly and sank his blade to its hilt in Del’s side.
“Del!”
Vance cried.
Del
felt the warmth of the blade, but no pain: he thought it had slid along his
skin just beneath his ribs.
He
grappled with Khan, straining to reach his throat, but was outnumbered. Within
a few seconds, they had powered him to the floor. That was the worst show he’d
put up since the last time Vance dragged him drunk and stoned and bruised out
of a bar and made him promise to quit mixing recreational drugs. He had kept
the promise, too.
Weird
to remember that now.
He
pushed himself to his hands and knees.
Someone
kicked him.
Del
cried out in shock and surprise at the pain. He fell, then rolled over onto his
back. The ceiling lights glared in his eyes. Everyone was staring at him, Khan
with a faint smile. Del put his hand to his side, which should have ached, but
which hurt with a high, throbbing pain.
His
hand came away soaked with blood. That was the first time he realized Khan had
stabbed him.
They
dragged him to his feet. His knees felt weak, and he was dizzy.
Four
people barely succeeded in holding Vance down.
Khan
stood just near enough to tempt Del to kick at him, just far enough away to
make any attempt futile and stupid. Del pressed his hand hard against the knife
wound. It was very deep. Blood flowed steadily against the pressure.
Yoshi
was dead, but Jan moved weakly, bleeding pulsebeats. Someone moved to help him.
[121] “Leave him!” Khan
snarled.” “Let him die; he is worthless to me.” He gestured at Del. “Hold his
arms.”
They
already held him tightly, but they forced his hands behind his back. The wound
bled more freely.
Khan
turned away and strolled to a nearby workbench. “Your laboratory is excellently
equipped,” he said matter-of-factly, while everyone else in the room, even his
people, stared horrified at Jan slowly bleeding to death.
“My
God,” Vance whispered in fury. “You’re insane!” He strained around. “Chekov!
Terrell! You can’t just stand there and let him die!”
“Be
quiet, Dr. Madison,” Khan said easily. “My people and I do what we must; as for
young Pavel here, and his captain—I own them. I intend to own you.” He idly
picked up a large tripod.
“My
lord Khan, yes!” Joachim said. “Control them completely! There are eels on Reliant.
I’ll return to the ship and get them—”
“That
will not be necessary, Joachim,” Khan said. “Thank you for your suggestion.”
“Sir—”
“Tie
them up.” He fiddled with the tripod.
Khan’s
people dragged them to a smaller room down the corridor. There they bound
Zinaida and Vance to chairs. Del watched as if from a great distance. He could
feel himself slipping down into shock. The whole side of his shirt and his left
hip and thigh were soaked with blood. He could not believe what was happening.
His reality had suddenly turned far more fantastic than any game he had ever
invented.
Del
focused on the thought: At least Carol got Genesis away. She must have.
Khan’s
followers flung a rope over the ceiling strut, then dragged Del beneath it and
tied his hands. The rope jerked him upright, and he cried out. When his feet
barely touched the floor, they tied the other end of the rope to a built-in lab
table.
[122] “Khan Singh, my
lord,” Joachim pleaded, “this effort is unnecessary. It would only take a
moment—”
“No.
Our dear friend the admiral must know what I plan for him when he is in my
grasp.”
“But,
my lord—”
Khan
stopped in front of Del.
“Leave
us, Joachim.”
He had
taken the tripod apart; now he held one of its legs, a steel rod half a meter
long and a centimeter through.
“Leave
us!” He touched Del’s face with his long, fine hand. Del tried to turn away,
and Khan chuckled.
His
people left.
Jan and
Yoshi were dead.
Khan
Singh smiled.
Vance
struggled furiously against the ropes, cursing. Zinaida sat quietly with her
eyes closed.
Del met
Khan’s gaze. His expression was kind, almost pitying.
“Tell
me about Genesis, Dr. March.”
Del
tried to take a breath. The knife wound radiated pain.
“No.
...” he said.
Khan
hardly moved. The steel rod flicked out and struck Del’s side.
It hurt
so much Del could not even cry out. He gasped.
“Don’t!”
Vance yelled. “For gods’ sake, stop it!”
Khan
Singh did not even bother to ask another question. Slowly, methodically, with
the precision of obsession, he beat Del unconscious.
Joachim
waited.
Khan
opened the door. He gripped Joachim by the shoulder.
“We are
close to the prize, Joachim. Dr. March will speak to me when he regains
consciousness,” he said. “Let it be soon, my friend.”
Joachim
watched him stride away.
[123] He did not want to
enter the lab. He had heard what was happening. He did not want to see it. But
he obeyed.
Dark
streaks soaked through March’s shirt where the steel rod, striking, had broken
his skin. He had lost a great deal of blood, and the stab wound still bled
slowly.
Vance
Madison raised his head.
“If
there’s anything human left in you,” he whispered, “untie me. Let me help him.”
His voice was hoarse.
“I have
no wish to die as your hostage.” Joachim searched for March’s pulse and found
it only with difficulty. He was deep in shock. Left alone, he would soon die.
Joachim
found an injector in Reliant’s portable medical kit. He chose the
strongest stimulant it offered, pressed the instrument to the side of March’s
throat, and introduced the drug directly into the carotid artery.
Del
March shuddered and opened his eyes.
Joachim
had never seen such an expression before, so much pain and fear and
bewilderment. He ran water onto a cloth and reached toward him. The young man
flinched back.
“I’m
sorry,” Joachim said. “I’ll try not to hurt you.” He gently wiped the sweat
from March’s face. He need not speak to him at all. But he said, again, “I’m
sorry.”
Joachim
had no excuse to delay Khan any longer. Nevertheless, he stopped before Madison
and Chitirih-Ra-Payjh. Madison looked at him with the awful intensity of a
gentle man driven to hatred.
“Do you
want some water?”
“It’s
blood I want,” Madison said. “Your leader’s. Or yours.”
Joachim
ignored the empty threat. He glanced at Chitirih-Ra-Payjh, who had not moved or
spoken or opened her eyes.
“Did
Khan Singh question her?”
Madison
shook his head.
[124] “Tell him what he
wants to know,” Joachim said urgently. “He’ll break one of you, eventually, and
the pain will be for nothing.”
“You
hate this!” Madison said. “You can’t stand what he’s doing! Help us stop him!”
“I cannot.”
“How
can you obey somebody like that? He’s crazy, he’s flat out of his mind!”
Joachim
came close to striking Madison, who had no idea what he was saying. For fifteen
years, Khan Singh had dedicated himself to the survival of his followers, when
he himself had nothing left to live for. Nothing but revenge. Bitterness and
hatred had overwhelmed him. Joachim held desperately to the conviction that
when his vengeance was behind him, Khan could find himself again, that somehow,
someday, Joachim would regain the man to whom he had sworn his loyalty and his
life.
“I gave
my word,” Joachim said.
“When
there’s no one left,” Madison said, “it’s you he’ll turn on. You must know
that.”
“I will
not oppose him!” Joachim bolted from the room.
Del
cringed, expecting Khan to return immediately. But the door slid shut and
remained so.
Zinaida
opened her eyes and stood up. She flung the ropes aside. Her wrists were raw.
She untied Vance.
“Del—”
Vance lifted him so the strain on his arms eased. Blood rushed back into Del’s
hands, stinging hot. The world sparkled. Vance tried not to hurt him, but any
touch was like another blow. The stimulant made the pain more intense and
prevented his passing out again.
Zinaida
loosened the far end of the rope. Vance let him down as gently as he could.
“Oh,
God, Vance, what the hell is happening?”
“I
don’t know, little brother.” He gave Del some water.
[125] They heard a noise
from the hallway outside. Del froze.
“I
can’t take any more—” He looked up at Vance, terrified. “If he starts on me
again ... I’m scared, Vance.”
“It’s
all right,” Vance said desperately, “it’s all right. I won’t let him ...” He
stopped. They both knew it was a futile promise.
Zinaida
knelt beside them. She touched Del’s forehead. Her hands were wondrously cool
and soothing. She had never touched him before.
She
bent down and gently kissed his lips. Vance grabbed her shoulder and pulled her
away.
“What
are you doing?”
“Vance,
even a Deltan cannot kill with one kiss,” she said softly. “But I can give him
... Vance, I can give him the strength to die. If he chooses.”
The
strength to die. ...
Del
felt his best friend shudder.
“I—”
Vance’s voice caught.
“Del,
can you hear me?” Zinaida said.
He
nodded.
“I’ll
do whatever you wish.”
“Please
...” he whispered.
She
kissed him once more, then placed her fingertips along his temples. His pain
increased, but the fear gradually disintegrated.
Zinaida
took her hands away. Del felt very weak, very calm. The stimulant had stopped
working. Zinaida turned aside, trembling.
They
heard Khan outside, his words indistinguishable but his voice unmistakable. Del
took a deep breath.
“Damn,
Vance,” he whispered, “I would have liked to see your dragons.”
“Me,
too, little brother. Me, too.” He eased Del to the floor.
The
only times Vance had ever been hurt in a [126]
fight—the only times he ever got in fights—was getting his partner out of
trouble. Del tried to reach out for him, to stop him from doing anything
stupid, to tell him it was too late.
Just
try to stall him, brother, Del thought. For yourself. ...
But he
could not move.
Vance
pressed himself against the wall beside the door. Seeing what he planned,
Zinaida did the same on the other side.
The
door opened.
Vance
got both hands around Khan’s throat before Joachim shot him with a phaser set on
stun. Zinaida clawed his eyes, scoring his cheek, before the phaser beam
enveloped her, too, and she fell.
Khan’s
people lifted Del from the floor. Their hands were like burning coals. Khan
gazed straight into his eyes. Del started to understand Joachim’s dedication.
“Dr.
March ...” Khan said.
Del wanted
to tell him about Genesis. He wanted the hurt to stop, and he wanted Khan
Singh to speak a kind word to him—
Del
gathered together all the pain and concentrated on it, and gave way to it.
He
could see only shadows.
When
Dr. March collapsed, Joachim sprang to his side with Reliant’s medical
kit, numb with shock, and dread of Khan, at his own failure.
Joachim
could not forget what Vance Madison had said. As he tried desperately to revive
March, he could feel his leader’s vengeful gaze.
“He’s
dead,” Joachim said. And then he lied to Khan for the first time in his life.
“I’m sorry, my lord.”
Khan
said nothing to him. He turned his back.
Madison
started to revive from the phaser blast. Khan dragged him to his feet.
“I do
not have time to be gentle with you, Dr. Madison,” Khan said, “as I was with
your friend. I [127] have other, more important quarry to hunt
down.” He drew his knife. “It takes perhaps ten minutes for a human being to
bleed to death. If you say one word or make one gesture of compliance in that
time, I will save your life.”
Haunted
by grief, Madison stared through him. Joachim knew that he would never speak.
Khan
ordered his people to tie Madison’s ankles and suspend him from the ceiling
strut. They obeyed.
Khan
would make a small, quick cut, just over the jugular vein; the bleeding would
be slower than if he slashed the artery, and Madison would remain conscious
longer. But he would die all the same.
Joachim
could not bear to watch Khan destroy another human being. He fled.
In the
main lab, he contacted Reliant and beamed on board. He ran to the
captain’s cabin, which Khan Singh had taken over as his own. A sand tank stood
on the desk. Joachim dug frantically through it with the strainer until he caught
two eels. He dumped them into a box, raced back to the starship’s transporter
room, and returned to Spacelab. He ran, gasping for breath, to the small lab
Khan had made a prison.
Joachim
was too late to save Madison. He stopped, staring horrified at the pool of
blood.
Khan
stood before Zinaida Chitirih-Ra-Payjh. She met his gaze without flinching; he
seemed offended that she did not fear him.
“My
lord!” Joachim said when he could speak again. His voice shook. “Khan, they’re
all too weak to stand against your force—”
“So it
seems. ...” Khan said softly.
“There’s
no need for you to ... to ...” Joachim stopped. He thrust the box into Khan
Singh’s hands. “She cannot keep Genesis from you now, my lord.” He held his
breath, for he could not know how Khan would react.
Khan
opened the box, looked inside, and smiled. He set it down and put his arms
around Joachim.
[128] “You know my needs
better than I myself,” Khan said. “I’m grateful to you, Joachim; I could not
love you more if you were my son.”
He will
be himself again, Joachim thought, close to tears. As soon as this is over.
...
Khan
broke the embrace gently and turned toward Zinaida Chitirih-Ra-Payjh.
Deltans
seek out intensity of experience. Zinaida, like most, had concentrated on the
limits of pleasure. Some few Deltans preferred pain; Zinaida had always thought
them quite mad. But here, now, she knew she had no other choice than to
experience whatever came and learn what she could from it. Jedda and Carol and
David needed time to get away. She must give it to them. Besides, Carol was
convinced rescue was coming. Perhaps, if Zinaida were strong enough, she might
even survive until then. She did not want to die. She thought out toward the
empathic link between herself and Jedda, and touched it with reassurance. She
knew that if she let him know what had happened, he would try to help her
rather than escape.
Khan
Singh’s hand darted into the box his aide had brought him. He drew it out
again. He was holding, pinched between thumb and forefinger, a long, slender,
snakelike creature. It probed the air blindly with its sharp snout.
“Mr.
Chekov would tell you,” Khan said, “that the pain is brief.”
Zinaida
drew back in terror, realizing what they had done to Chekov and Terrell.
This,
she could not withstand.
Khan’s
people pushed her forward and turned her head to the side. The eel slithered
across her smooth scalp and over her ear, still probing, searching,
“Jedda—”
she whispered. She thought to him all that had happened, so he would know there
was no hope, so he would flee, and then she broke the link between herself and
her lover forever.
[129] The eel punctured
her eardrum. Zinaida screamed in pure horror and despair.
She
gave herself to the shadows.
Carol
and David and Jedda crept up the emergency stairs toward the main lab. Genesis
was safe for the moment, but they were afraid for the others. No matter how
reassuring Del had sounded over the intercom, Carol was sure she had, a few
minutes later, heard the echo of a cry of pain and fear. David had heard something
too. But Jedda kept insisting that everything was all right.
“Dammit!”
Carol said again. “Something’s happening up there, and we can’t just run
away and leave our friends. Not even to save Genesis!”
“Del
said—”
“David,
Del lives in a fantasy world half the time!” She wished Del were half as steady
as Vance; she would be a lot less worried about them both. If Del tried
unnecessary heroics, if the Starfleet people overreacted, he could get himself
and everybody else up there in more trouble than they could handle.
Carol
reached the main level and opened the door at the top of the stairs just a
crack.
Zinaida’s
terrified cry echoed through the hallway. Carol froze.
Jedda’s
knees buckled, and he fell.
“Jedda!
What is it?”
Carol
knelt beside him. Jedda flung his arms across his face, trying to keep her from
touching him. He rolled away from her, pushed himself to hands and knees, and
slowly, painfully, got to his feet.
“We
must flee,” he said dully. “Zinaida is dead; Vance and Del are dead. We can’t
help them.”
“But
you said—”
“She
was trying to protect us! But she’s gone! If we don’t run, they’ll find us and
take Genesis and kill us!”
They
ran.
That evening, Captain Spock and Dr. McCoy dined with
Admiral Kirk in his quarters. Their argument about Genesis continued on and
off, but not at such a high level of reciprocal abuse that Kirk became
sufficiently irritated to tell them again to shut up.
The
intercom broke into the conversation.
“Admiral,”
Saavik said, “sensors indicate a vessel approaching us, closing fast.”
“What
do you make of it, Lieutenant?”
“It’s
one of ours, Admiral. Reliant.”
“Why is
Reliant here?” Spock said.
Kirk
wondered the same thing. Starfleet had said only the Enterprise was free
and near enough to Spacelab to investigate Carol’s call.
He
hurried out of his cabin. Spock and McCoy followed.
“Isn’t
Pavel Chekov on Reliant?”
They
entered the turbo-lift. It rose.
“I
believe that is true, Admiral,” Spock said.
The
lift doors opened. Kirk stepped out onto the bridge and turned immediately to
Uhura.
“Reliant
isn’t responding, sir,” she said.
“Even
the emergency channels ... ?”
“No,
sir,” she said, and tried again. “Enterprise to Reliant, come in,
Reliant.”
“Visual,
Lieutenant Saavik.”
“It’s
just within range, Admiral.”
Saavik
turned the forward magnification up full. [131]
Reliant showed as a bare speck on the screen, but it was growing larger
quickly.
“Attempt
visual communication,” Spock said.
“Aye,
sir.” Uhura brought the low-power visible light comm-laser on-line and aimed it
toward Reliant’s receptors.
“Maybe
their comm systems have failed. ...” Kirk said doubtfully.
“It
would explain a great many things,” said Spock.
Joachim,
still numbed by what had happened back at the Spacelab, blankly watched the Enterprise
grow on Reliant’s viewscreen.
Behind
him, Khan chuckled softly.
With
Terrell and Chekov gone, Khan Singh was surrounded only by his own loyal
people. Soon his revenge would be complete. Then—would he finally be free?
Joachim feared the answer.
“Reduce
acceleration to one-half impulse power,” Khan said; and then, with a crooning,
persuasive, ironic tone, “Let’s be friends. ...”
“One-half
impulse,” the helm officer said.
The
laser receptors registered a signal.
“They’re
requesting visual communications, Khan,” Joachim said.
“Let
them eat static.”
“And
they’re still running with shields down.”
“Of
course they are. Didn’t I just say we’re friends? Kirk, old friend, do you know
the Klingon proverb, ‘Revenge is a dish best served cold’?”
Joachim
risked a glance at his leader. Khan was leaning forward with his hands clenched
together into fists and his hair wild around his head; his eyes were deep with
exhaustion and rage.
“It is
very cold in space,” Khan whispered.
On the
viewscreen of the Enterprise, Reliant’s image grew slowly.
[132] “Reliant’s delta-vee
just decreased to one-half impulse; power, Admiral,” Mr. Sulu said.
“Any
evidence of damage?”
“None,
sir.”
“Sir,”
Saavik said, “if I may quote general order twelve: ‘On the approach of any
vessel, when communications have not been established—’ ”
“The
admiral is aware of the regulations.”
Saavik
forced herself not to react. “Yes, sir,” she said stiffly.
“This
is damned peculiar,” Kirk said, almost to himself. “Yellow alert.”
“Energize
defense fields,” Saavik said.
The
Klaxon sounded; the lights dimmed. It took only a moment for the backup crew to
arrive and staff their battle stations.
“Transmission
from Reliant, sir. ... A moment ... on the short-range band. They say
their Chambers coil is shorting out their main communications.”
“Spock?”
Spock
bent down to scan Reliant.
“They
still haven’t raised their shields,” Joachim said. Everything that was
happening seemed to exist at a very great distance. Only his memories stayed
close to him, terrifyingly immediate, flashing into his vision every time he
blinked or even let his attention drift: the expression in March’s eyes, the
blood flowing down Madison’s face, the suicide of Chitirih-Ra-Payjh. And he
could not forget what Madison had said to him.
“Be
careful, Joachim,” Khan said. “Not all at once. The engine room, lock on the
engine room. Be prepared to fire.”
Joachim
obeyed. Two hundred years ago, he had given his word; so he obeyed.
Spock
studied the scan results. They were precisely the same as the first set: no
evidence of damage. “Their coil emissions are normal, Admiral.” And [133] then
he saw the signal of a new change that was not normal. “Their shields are going
up—”
“Reliant’s
phasers are locking!” Sulu said at the same moment.
“Raise
shields!” Kirk said. “Energize phasers, stand by to—”
Reliant
fired.
Peter
stood ready at his console, wishing, wishing desperately, that he had something
he could really do. The ship was on battle alert, with the Klaxon alarm
sounding around him and all the engine room crew—the veterans—hurrying to their
places or already completely involved in their work. The trainees could only
wait at their backup positions and watch. And a lowly cadet could only grit his
teeth and try to pretend he was here for a reason.
Till
now, Peter had suspected that the whole trip was an elaborate charade, nothing
more than a simulation with real equipment. But maybe he had been wrong.
Surely, if this were another test, the veterans would stand back and let the
trainees handle everything. Peter’s heart beat faster. He wondered how Saavik
would analyze it, logically. It would be fun to talk to her about it as soon as
it was over, whether or not it was for real! He had not even seen her since
Commander Scott postponed his math lessons.
Uncle
Montgomery had told Captain Spock that Peter could not be spared because there
was too much work in the engine room; but to Peter he said that the lessons
would resume only when Peter “stopped neglecting his work.” Peter recognized
the disparity as an attempt to teach him a lesson without damaging his record,
which he appreciated—yet still resented, because he did not think that this was
a lesson he needed to learn.
He’ll
quit in another day or so, Peter thought. Maybe even as soon as we’re finished
with this. Whatever it is.
From
out of nowhere, a shock wave slammed him to [134]
the deck. A moment later, the
noise of the explosion struck. As Peter scrambled up, metal shrieked and a
great wind whipped past him. The breach in the hull sucked air from the engine
room. An eerie silence clamped down and Peter feared his eardrums had burst.
The emergency doors slid abruptly closed, and fresh air poured into the
partially depressurized area. Sound returned: he could hear screams, and
shrieks of pain, beyond the ringing in his ears.
He
grabbed the edges of his console to steady himself. The general alarms moaned
at a low pitch.
“Oh, my
God!” Grenni cried. His console was alight with warnings. “Pres; we gotta get
out of here—”
Peter
looked up. Right above them, a heat-transfer pipe hissed thick yellow-green
smoke through a crack in the triple-layered unbreakable matrix of the tube.
Peter watched with horror. Coolant leak was supposed to be impossible.
The
radiation signal flashed stroboscopically while the noxious-gas warning hooted.
The poisonous coolant gas flooded the trainees’ area. Peter’s eyes burned.
Grenni grabbed his arm and tried to pull him away as the rest of the group
fled.
“You’re
on-line!” Peter cried.
“Shit!”
Grenni yelled. He broke and ran.
Peter
fumbled for his respirator. He could barely see by the time he got it on. His
chest felt crushed.
The
primary control panel was damaged, and Lieutenant Kasatsuki lay unconscious on
the deck. She was responsible for the auxiliary power main controls that Grenni
and Peter were supposed to back up. Now, Grenni’s console blinked and beeped
for attention. If no one did anything, auxiliary power would fail completely.
The gas
closed in around Peter as he overrode the hardware hierarchy and brought his
own machine on-line. Despite the respirator, his eyes still teared and burned.
The
screams of pain and fear crashed over him like [135] waves. Commander Scott
shouted orders amid the chaos. Peter heard it all, but it was a light-year
away; he felt almost as if he had merged with the Enterprise—his actions
came so smoothly and he knew so easily and so certainly what he had to do.
Back on
the bridge, Jim Kirk had his hands full.
“Mr.
Sulu—the shields!”
“Trying,
sir!”
The
intercom broke through the disorder.
“Medical
alert, engine room!”
McCoy
was already halfway to the turbo-lift. He plunged into it and disappeared.
“I
can’t get any power, sir,” Sulu said.
Kirk
slammed his hand down on an intercom button. “Scotty!”
A
cacophony spilled from the intercom as every channel on the ship tried to break
through.
“Uhura,
turn off that damned noise!”
She hit
the main cutoff.
Silence.
“Mr.
Scott on discrete,” she said.
“Scotty,
let’s have it.”
His
voice sounded strange: throat mike, Jim thought. He’s wearing a respirator!
What the hell happened down there?
“We’re
just hanging on, sir. The main energizers are out.”
“Auxiliary
power,” Kirk said. “Damage report.”
The
forward viewscreen switched over to a schematic display of the Enterprise, with
a shockingly large red high-damage area spreading outward from the engine room.
Kirk and Spock surveyed the report.
“Their
attack indicates detailed knowledge of our vulnerabilities,” Spock said.
“But
who are those guys? Reliant is under—who?”
“Clark
Terrell,” Spock said. “A highly regarded commander, one likely neither to go
berserk nor to become the victim of a mutiny.”
“Then
who’s attacking us? And why?”
[136] “One thing is
certain,” Spock said. “We cannot escape on auxiliary power.”
“Visual!”
Kirk snapped. The screen flashed into a forward view from the bridge. Reliant,
very close, faced them head-on. “Mr. Sulu, divert everything to the
phasers.”
“Too
late—” Spock said.
In the
viewscreen, Reliant’s photon torpedoes streaked toward them with an
awful inevitability.
The
blast of energy sizzled through the ship, searing and melting computer chips,
blowing out screens, crashing whole systems. A fire broke out on the upper
deck. The acrid odor of singed plastic and vaporized metals clouded the air.
“Scotty!”
Kirk yelled. “What have we got left?”
“Only
the batteries, sir. I can have auxiliary power in a few minutes—”
“We
haven’t got a few minutes. Can you give me phasers?”
“No’
but a few shots, sir.”
“Not
enough,” Spock said, “against their shields.”
“Who
the hell are they?” Kirk said again.
“Admiral,”
Uhura said, “Commander, Reliant, is signaling. ...” She hesitated. “He
wishes to discuss ... terms of our surrender.”
Kirk
looked at Spock, who met his gaze impassively; he glanced at Saavik,
expecting—he did not know what to expect from Saavik. Her self-control was as
impenetrable as Spock’s.
“On screen,”
Kirk said.
“Admiral
...” Uhura said.
“Do
it—while we still have time.”
The
viewscreen changed slowly, pixel by pixel, filling in a new image that
gradually took the form of a face.
“Khan!”
Jim Kirk exclaimed.
“You
remember, Admiral, after all these years. I cannot help but be touched. I
feared you might have forgotten me. Of course I remember you.”
[137] “What’s the
meaning of this?” Kirk said angrily. “Where’s Reliant’s crew?”
“Have I
not made my meaning plain?” Khan said dangerously. “I mean to avenge myself,
Admiral. Upon you. I’ve deprived your ship of its power, and soon I intend to
deprive you of your life.”
“Reliant’s
maneuvering, sir,” Sulu said very quietly. “Coming around for another
shot.”
“But I
wanted you to know, as you die, who has beaten you: Khan Noonian Singh, the
prince you tried to exile.”
“Khan,
listen to me!” Kirk said. “If it’s me you want, I’ll beam aboard your ship. All
I ask is that you spare my crew. You can do what you want to me!”
Khan
lounged back, smiling pleasantly. He stretched his hands toward Kirk, palms up,
as if weighing James Kirk, at his disposal, in one, against the Enterprise and
Jim Kirk’s certain but more remote death, in the other.
“That
is a most intriguing offer. It is—” his voice became low and dangerous, “—typical
of your sterling character. I shall consider it.”
He
paused for perhaps as much as a second.
“I
accept your terms—”
Kirk
stood up. Spock took one step toward him but halted when Kirk made an abrupt
chopping gesture, back and down, with his hand.
“—with
only a single addition. You will also turn over to me all data and material
regarding Project Genesis.”
Jim
Kirk forced himself not to react. “Genesis?” he said. “What’s that?”
“Don’t
play with me, Kirk. My hand is on the phaser control.”
“I’ll
have to put a search on it, Khan—give me some time. The computer damage—”
“I give
you sixty seconds, Admiral.”
Kirk
turned to Spock.
“You
cannot give him Genesis, Admiral,” the Vulcan said.
[138] Kirk spoke softly
and out of range of the highly directional transmitter mike. “At least we know
he hasn’t got it. Just keep nodding as though I’m giving orders. Lieutenant
Saavik, punch up the data charts on Reliant’s command console. Hurry.”
“Reliant’s
command—?”
“Hurry
up!” Jim whispered angrily.
“The
prefix code?” Spock asked.
“It’s
all we’ve got.”
“Admiral,”
Khan said, “you try my patience.”
“We’re
finding it, Khan! You know how much damage you inflicted on my ship. You’ve got
to give us time!”
“Time,
James Kirk? You showed me that time is not a luxury, but a torture. You have
forty-five seconds.”
Mr.
Sulu turned toward Kirk. “Reliant’s completed its maneuver, sir—we’re
lined up in their sights, and they’re coming back.”
Saavik
found the information Kirk sought, but could see no way it could be of use. “I
don’t understand—”
“You’ve
got to learn why things work on a starship, not just how,” Kirk turned
back to Khan, trying to put real conviction in his dissembling. “It’s coming
through right now, Khan—”
“The
prefix code is one-six-three-zero-nine,” Spock said.
He set
quickly to work. Saavik watched the prefix code thread its way through the
schematics and dissolve Reliant’s defenses. She understood suddenly what
Kirk intended to do: transfer control of Reliant to the Enterprise and
lower its shields.
“You
have thirty seconds,” Khan said, lingering over each word.
“His
intelligence is extraordinary,” Spock said. “If he has changed the code ...”
“Spock,
wait for my signal,” Kirk said urgently. “Too soon, and he’ll figure it out;
he’ll raise the shields again. ...”
[139] Spock nodded, and
Kirk turned back to the viewscreen.
“Khan,
how do I know you’ll keep your word?”
“Keep
my word, Admiral? I gave you no word to keep. You have no alternative.”
“I see
your point. ...” Kirk said. “Mr. Spock, is the data ready?”
“Yes,
Admiral.”
“Khan,
stand by to receive our transmission.” He glanced down at Sulu. “Mr. Sulu—?”
“Phasers
locked. ...” Sulu said quietly.
“Your
time is up, Admiral,” Khan said.
“Here
it comes—we’re transmitting right now. Mr. Spock?”
Spock
stabbed the code through to Reliant and followed it instantly with the
command to lower shields.
Saavik’s
monitor changed. “Shields down, Admiral!”
“Fire!”
James Kirk shouted as Khan, on the viewscreen, cried, “What—? Joachim, raise
them—Where’s the override?”
Mr.
Sulu bled off all the power the crippled ship could bear and slammed it through
to the phasers.
A thin
bright line of light sprang into existence, connecting Enterprise and Reliant
with a lethal filament. Reliant’s hull glowed scarlet just at its
bridge.
On the
viewscreen, Khan cried out in rage and pain as his ship shuddered around him.
His transmission faded and the Enterprise’s viewscreen lost him.
“You
did it, Admiral!” Sulu said.
“I
didn’t do a damned thing—I got caught with my britches down. Damn, damn, I must
be going senile.” He glanced up at Saavik and shook his head. “Lieutenant
Saavik, you just keep on quoting regulations. Spock, come with me—we have to
find out how bad the damage is.”
[140] He strode to the
turbo-lift; Spock followed. The doors closed—
Joachim
bore Khan’s hoarse rage as quietly, and with as much pain, as he would have
borne the lash.
“Fire!
Fire! Joachim, you fool! Why don’t you fire!”
“I
cannot, Khan. They damaged the photon controls and the warp drive. We must
withdraw.”
“No!”
“My
lord, we must; we have no choice. We must repair the ship. Enterprise cannot
escape.” He wanted to close his eyes, he wanted to sleep, but he was afraid of
his memories and terrified of his dreams. He felt sick unto death of killing
and revenge.
—the
lift dropped, and the doors opened at the level of the engine room. Kirk took
one step forward and stopped, aghast.
“Scotty!
My God!”
The
engineer stood trembling, spattered with blood, holding Peter Preston in his
arms. The boy lay limp, his eyes closed, blood flowing steadily from his nose
and mouth.
“I
canna reach Dr. McCoy; I canna get through; I must get the boy to sick bay—”
Tears tracked the soot on his face. He staggered into the lift. Kirk and Spock
caught him. Kirk steadied him while Spock took the child gently from his arms.
“Sick
bay!” Kirk yelled.
The
turbo-lift accelerated.
Spock
stepped onto the bridge. His shirt was bloody—red blood darkening to brown: not
his own.
Saavik
did not show the relief she felt. In silence, Spock joined her at the science
officer’s station. As Saavik continued to coordinate the work of the repair
crews, Spock slid a roster into the input drive. The information quickly sorted
itself across the screen: [141] ENGINE ROOM CREW: SLIGHTLY
INJURED. SERIOUSLY INJURED. CRITICAL.
PETER PRESTON.
Saavik
caught her breath. Spock glanced at her—she felt has gaze but could not meet
it.
Saavik’s
hands began to tremble. She stared at them, thinking, this is shameful. You
shame yourself and your teacher: must you bring even more humiliation to
Vulcans?
Her
vision blurred. She squeezed her eyes closed.
“Lieutenant
Saavik,” Spock said.
“Yes,
Captain,” she whispered.
“Take
this list to Dr. McCoy.”
She
swallowed hard and tried to make her eyes focus on the sheet Spock handed her.
The
engine room casualty list—? Dr. McCoy had no use whatever for it: indeed it had
just come from him.
“Captain—?”
“Please
do not argue, Lieutenant,” Spock said. His cold tone revealed nothing. “The
assignment should take you no more than fifteen minutes; the bridge can spare
you no longer.”
She
stood up and took the copy from his hand. Her fingers clenched on it, crumpling
the paper. She looked into Spock’s eyes.
“The
bridge can spare you no longer, Lieutenant,” he said again. “Go quickly. I
am sorry.”
She
fled.
McCoy
worked desperately over Preston. He had to keep intensifying the anesthetic
field, for the boy struggled toward consciousness.
The
life-sign sensors would not stabilize. No matter what McCoy did, the boy’s
physical condition deteriorated. Lacerations, a couple of broken bones, some
internal injuries with considerable loss of blood, a hairline fracture of the
skull: nothing very serious. But Preston had been directly beneath the
coolant-gas leak. Everything depended on how much he had breathed [142] and
how long he had been within the cloud before the ventilators cleared it.
McCoy
cursed. The damned technicians claimed nothing else but this wretched,
corrosive, teratogenic, gamma-emitting poison had a high enough specific
heat to protect the engines against meltdown. Well, they also claimed its
protection was fail-safe.
“Dr.
Chapel!” he yelled. “Where’s the damned analysis?”
Scott
watched him from outside the operating room; the engineer slumped against the
glass.
Chris
Chapel came in, and McCoy knew the results from her expression.
She
handed him the analysis of Preston’s blood and tissue chemistry. “I’m sorry,
Leonard,” she said.
He
shook his head grimly. Several of the life-sign indicators were already close
to zero, and the boy had begun to bleed internally, massively, far worse than
before: the sutures were not holding. And would not. The cell structure had
already started to deteriorate.
“I knew
it already, Chris. I only hoped ...”
He
withdrew from the operating field and changed the anesthetic mode from general
to local. Preston began to come to, but he would not feel any pain.
When
McCoy looked up again, Jim Kirk stood next to Scott, gripping his shoulder.
McCoy
shook his head.
Scott
burst into the operating theater. Kirk followed.
“Dr.
McCoy, can ye no’—” His voice broke.
“It’s
coolant poisoning, Scotty,” McCoy said. “I’m sorry. It would be possible to
keep him alive for another half hour, at most—I can’t do that to him.”
Scott
started to protest, then stopped. He knew as well as any doctor, perhaps
better, the effects of the poison. He went to Preston’s side and touched the
boy’s forehead gently.
Preston
slowly opened his eyes.
[143] “Peter,” Scott
said, “lad, I dinna mean—” He stopped. Tears spilled down his cheeks.
Kirk
leaned over the boy.
“Mr.
Preston,” he said.
“Is ...
the word given?” Peter stared upward, intent on a scene that existed in his
sight alone.
“The
word is given,” Kirk said. “Warp speed.”
“Aye
...” Peter whispered.
Saavik
stopped at the door to sick bay. She was too late.
Mr.
Scott came out of the operating room, flanked and half-supported by Admiral
Kirk and Dr. McCoy. He was crying. Behind them, Peter’s body lay on the
operating table.
Dr.
Chapel drew a sheet over Peter’s face.
Saavik
hurled the crumpled list to the floor, turned, and bolted down the corridor.
She flung herself into the first room she came to and fumbled to lock the door
behind her.
In the
darkened, empty conference chamber, she tried to calm her breathing; she fought
to control the impossible surge of grief and rage that took her.
It
isn’t fair! she cried in her mind. It isn’t fair! He was only a child!
She
clenched her hands around the top of a chair. As if she were still on
Hellguard, she flung back her head and screamed.
For an
instant, the madness owned her. She wrenched the chair from the deck, twisting
and shearing the bolts, and flung it across the room. It crashed against the
bulkhead, dented the metal, and rebounded halfway to her.
When
Saavik knew anything again, she was crouched in a corner, huddled and
trembling. She raised her head.
Darkness
raised no barriers to her; she saw the damage she had done.
She was
so weak she could control herself once more. [144] Slowly she rose; slowly, without looking back, she left the conference
room.
Mr.
Scott was unable to speak for some minutes. Finally he looked up at Jim Kirk.
“Why?”
Jim
looked sadly at Cadet Preston’s body. “Khan wants to kill me for passing
sentence on him fifteen years ago ... and he doesn’t care who stands between
him and vengeance.”
“Scotty,”
McCoy said, “I’m sorry.”
“He
stayed at his post,” Scott said. “When my other trainees broke, he stayed.”
“If he
hadn’t, we’d be space by now,” Kirk said.
“Bridge
to Admiral Kirk,” Spock said over the intercom.
Kirk
hurried to open the channel. “Kirk here.”
“The
engine room reports auxiliary power restored. We can proceed on impulse
engines.”
Kirk
rubbed his temples, drawing himself away from Mr. Scott’s despair, back to the
ship and the whole crew’s peril. “Best speed to Regulus I, Mr. Spock.” He sat
on his heels beside Scott. “Scotty, I’m sorry, I’ve got to know—can you get the
main engines back on-line?”
“I ...
I dinna think so, sir. ...”
“Scotty—”
“...
but ye’ll have my best. ...” He stood up, moving apathetically, speaking by
rote. “I know ye tried, Doctor. ...” He left sick bay like a sleepwalker.
“Damn,”
McCoy muttered.
“Are
you all right?”
McCoy
shrugged; weariness lay over him. “I’ve lost patients before, Jim; God help me,
I’ve even lost kids before. Damn! Jim, Khan lured you here, that’s the only way
any of this makes sense! He must have used your name to threaten
Genesis—but how did he find out about it?”
[145] “I don’t know—and
I’m a lot more worried about keeping him from laying his hands on it. You said
it yourself: With a big enough bang, he could rearrange the universe.”
“There
may still be time. You gave as good as you got.”
“I got beat.
We’re only alive because I knew something about these ships that he
didn’t.” Jim sighed. “And because one fourteen-year-old kid ...” He stopped.
“Shit,”
he said, and left sick bay.
The Enterprise limped to Regulus I, its crews
working nonstop to repair the damage done by Khan. By the time they reached
Spacelab, Jim Kirk was able to stop worrying about the immediate fate of his
starship; but he became more and more concerned about what he would find at
their destination. The space station maintained complete radio silence.
Mr.
Sulu slid the Enterprise into orbit around Regulus I.
“Orbit
stabilized, sir.”
“Thanks,
Mr. Sulu. Commander Uhura, would you try again?”
“Aye,
sir. Enterprise to Regulus I Spacelab, come in, Spacelab. Come in,
please. ...” She received the same reply she had received to every one of the
many transmissions she had made in the hours since Dr. Marcus’s original call:
nothing. “Enterprise to Spacelab, come in, Spacelab. This is the U.S.S. Enterprise.
Please respond. ...” She turned to Kirk. “There’s no response at all, sir.”
“Sensors,
Captain?”
The
sensors are inoperative, Admiral,” Spock said. “There is no way to tell what is
inside the station.”
“And no
way of knowing if Reliant is still nearby, either,” Kirk said.
“That
is correct, Admiral.”
“Blind
... as a Tiberian bat,” Kirk said softly. “What about Regulus I?”
“Class
D planetoid, quite unremarkable: no [147]
appreciable tectonic activity.
It is essentially a very large rock.”
“Reliant
could be hiding behind that rock.”
“A
distinct possibility, Admiral.”
Kirk
opened a channel to the engine room. “Scotty, do we have enough power for the
transporters?”
“Just
barely, sir.” The engineer’s voice sounded tired and lifeless.
“Thanks,
Scotty.”
Jim
Kirk took his spectacles out of his belt pouch, looked at them, unfolded them,
turned them over, then folded them again and put them away.
“I’m
going down to Spacelab.”
“Jim,”
Dr. McCoy said, “Khan could be down there!”
“He’s been
there, Bones, and he hasn’t found what he wants. Can you spare someone?
There may be people hurt.”
“I can
spare me,” the doctor said.
“I beg
your pardon, Admiral,” Saavik said, “but general order fifteen specifically
prohibits the entry of a flag officer into a hazardous area without armed
escort.”
“There
is no such regulation,” Kirk said. That was easier than arguing with her.
She
began to speak, stopped, then frowned, trying to decide how to respond to such
a bald-faced representation of a lie as the truth.
On the
other hand, Kirk thought, she had a point.
“But if
you want to check out a phaser, Lieutenant Saavik, you’re welcome to join the
party. Mr. Spock, the ship is yours.”
“Aye,
sir.”
“You
and Mr. Scott keep me up-to-date on the damage reports.” He got up and started
for the turbo-lift.
“Jim—”
Spock said.
Jim
Kirk glanced at his old friend.
[148] “—be careful.”
Jim
nodded, with a grin, and left.
Dr.
McCoy materialized inside the station’s main laboratory with his phaser drawn,
the safety off.
Some
position for a doctor to be in, he thought—ready to shoot off somebody’s head.
Jim materialized beside him, at an angle, and Saavik behind them both, so they
formed a small protective circle.
“Hello!”
Jim yelled. “Anybody here?”
The
station replied with the echoes of abandonment and silence.
Saavik
went to the main computer and turned it on. She spoke to it, but it did not
answer her, a sure sign of a badly crashed system.
“Very
little remains in any of the computers, Admiral,” she said after working with
it for a few moments. “The on-line memories have been wiped almost clean.” She
loaded the single remaining file, started it running, and watched it for
several minutes.
McCoy
pulled out his tricorder and scanned the immediate area. He thought he saw a
blip—but, no, it faded before he could get a reading on it.
“Sir.
...” Saavik said.
“Yes,
Lieutenant?” Kirk replied.
“This
is extremely odd. Only a single program remains. It is very large. It is ...
unique in my experience.”
She
stood back so Kirk and McCoy could look at the screen display.
“I can
make nothing of it.”
They
frowned at the sizzling, sparking, colorful graphics.
“Another
Genesis simulation?” McCoy said doubtfully.
“No.
...” Kirk said. “My God, Bones, it’s a game—if that’s all Khan found when he
got here ...” He shook his head. “Phasers on stun. Move out. And be careful.”
[149] McCoy moved
cautiously down the hall. The lights were very dim, the shadows heavy. Spacelab
was enormous: besides the project scientists Spock regarded so highly, the
satellite supported and housed several hundred technicians and support
personnel. Most of them were on leave now, but there still should be eight or
ten people here. So where—?
He
caught his breath: a scratching noise, a faint beep from his tricorder. He turned
slowly.
A white
lab rat, free in the hallway, blinked at him from a dim corner, scrabbled
around, and fled, its claws slipping on the tiles.
“I’m
with you, friend,” McCoy muttered.
Feeling
a little easier, he continued. He glanced into the rooms he passed, finding
nothing but offices, a small lounge, sophisticated but familiar equipment for a
number of fields of study.
If they
had to search the entire station, room by room, it would take days. McCoy
decided to return to the main lab to see if Jim or Saavik had found anyone.
He
opened one last door. Beyond, it was dark.
The
hair on the back of his neck prickled. He took a step inside. No strange sound,
no strange sight—why did he feel so uneasy?
The
smell: sharp, salty, metallic. He smelled blood.
He turned,
and a cold hand gently slapped against his face.
“Lights!”
he cried, jumping back. His foot slipped, and he fell.
The
sensors responded to his voice. Lying on the floor, he looked up.
“My God
in heaven ... !”
Staring
at the hanging bodies, McCoy got slowly to his feet. He fumbled for his
communicator.
“Jim.
...”
Five
people—a Deltan and four human beings—hung upside down from a ceiling strut.
Each one’s throat had been slashed. McCoy approached the [150] nearest body, that of a tall black man. His own blood obscured his face.
The man next to him had been tortured.
As he
waited for Kirk to answer, McCoy gradually got hold of himself. The casual
ferocity of the killing gave him a deep, sick sensation.
Jim’s
voice on the communicator made him start.
“Yeah,
Bones?”
“I ...
found them.”
“I’ll
be right down.”
“No—!
Jim, Dr. Marcus isn’t here. She isn’t here. But the rest ... they’re
dead, Jim. Please stay where you are. I’ll get a medical team to beam down.” He
was already trying to think if there were anyone on the ship he could count on
besides Chris Chapel to help deal with this horror.
“Kirk
out.”
McCoy
cursed softly.
He took
tricorder readings on all the bodies and recorded their position and
surroundings. Three of the people had bled to death, one had died of shock, and
the Deltas ... he could detect no cause for the Deltan’s death.
What
chance is there, McCoy thought, that their murderer will ever come to trial?
Not very damned much.
“Oh, my
God. ...” Jim said from the doorway. He stared up, horrified.
“I told
you not to come down here,” McCoy said angrily. “There was no need for you
to see what happened.” He saw Saavik behind Kirk, her face Vulcan calm. “Or for
her to either, dammit!”
Kirk
glanced over his shoulder. “Lieutenant, I ordered—”
“I am
your escort, Admiral,” she said coldly. “Your safety is my responsibility, not
the reverse.”
“Stay
outside, then,” McCoy said gently. “Child, it isn’t necessary for you to be
exposed to this—”
“I am
neither a child nor in need of protection.”
[151] “Lieutenant Saavik—”
Kirk said sharply. “ Saavik cut him off. “Sir. In order to protect me
from sights such as this you would have had to start when I was still a
child. I will not leave you unguarded when a creature who takes such
great pleasure in killing—and who would take his most extreme pleasure in your
death—is free and in hiding somewhere near. Nor will I stand by idle!”
She
paused a moment, looking somewhat abashed by her outburst. She continued in a
tone more restrained, but with words no less definite.
“Admiral
Kirk, if you in truth prefer an escort who behaves differently, you must order
me back to the ship.”
Saavik
waited, but Kirk said nothing.
She
walked carefully across the blood-thick, sticky floor, hesitated a bare moment,
and lifted Vance Madison. His body lay limp in her arms, and the rope around
his ankles slackened.
“Please
cut him down.”
Kirk
complied.
They
lowered the five bodies and found sheets in which to shroud them. Three were
Project Genesis scientists, and two were service personnel.
“They
even killed the galley chief,” Kirk said. His voice sounded stunned.
“The
bodies are almost cold,” McCoy said. “But rigor hasn’t set in yet. Jim, they
haven’t been dead for very long.”
Jim
looked around the blood-spattered room.
“Carol.
...” he said.
The search
party returned to the main lab.
Saavik
heard a noise. She gazed around the lab, finding nothing. But the small sound
came again. She drew out her tricorder and scanned with it.
It
wailed plaintively. McCoy and Kirk heard it.
“Lieutenant—?”
Kirk asked.
“I
don’t know, sir.”
[152] She followed the
signal to a large storage locker. As Kirk and McCoy joined her, she reached out
and opened the door.
Two
more bodies fell out and sprawled at their feet.
Kirk
started violently. “My God!”
McCoy
knelt down and inspected them with his medical sensor. One was a dark-haired
youthful human, the other an older, bearded man, a captain. Both wore the
insignia of the Reliant.
“They’re
alive, Jim.”
Behind
them, the Spacelab’s communications screen glowed on. “Enterprise to
Admiral Kirk, come in, please,” Uhura said.
“Why,
it’s Chekov,” Kirk said.
“Enterprise
to Admiral Kirk,” Uhura said again. “Please respond.”
“This
is Clark Terrell, Jim,” McCoy said. “I’ve served with him.” In fact he had
known him, rather well, for years.
Chekov
moaned.
McCoy
frowned at the readings on his sensor. Apparently, Saavik thought, they looked
as odd to him as they did to her, despite his enormously greater experience.
Kirk
turned Chekov over and supported his shoulders. “Pavel, do you hear me? Pavel,
wake up.”
“Admiral
Kirk!” Uhura said. “Please respond.”
“Saavik,
tell her we’re all right, for gods’ sake.”
“Please
acknowledge our signal, Admiral.” Uhura’s tone became more urgent.
“Some
kind of brain disturbance,” McCoy said as Saavik hurried across the lab and
opened a channel to the Enterprise. “It’s drug-induced, as far as I can
tell.”
“Saavik
here, Commander Uhura. We’re all right. Please stand by. Saavik out.”
“Thank
you, Lieutenant,” Uhura said with relief. “Enterprise standing by.”
[153] Saavik left the
channel open and returned to McCoy and Kirk. Reliant’s Captain Terrell
was beginning to regain consciousness, and Chekov was almost awake. He opened
his eyes and stared blankly at Kirk.
“Pavel,
can you hear me?” Kirk said. “What happened?”
“Admiral
Kirk. ...” Chekov whispered. He took a deep breath that turned into a sob. “Oh,
God, sir—” His voice failed him, and he cried.
Kirk
held him. “It’s all right now, Pavel. You’re all right. Go on, don’t worry;
you’re with friends now.”
Terrell
moaned and tried to get up. McCoy hurried to him.
“It’s
Len McCoy, Captain.” McCoy shook him gently by the shoulders. “Clark, do you
remember me?”
Terrell’s
expression was that of a man faced with such horror that he had lost himself in
it. “McCoy. ...” he said slowly. “Len McCoy ... yes. Oh ... yes. ...”
Chekov
pulled away from Kirk and struggled to sit up. “Admiral—it was Khan! We found
him on Alpha Ceti V. ...”
“Easy,
Pavel. Just tell me what happened.”
“Alpha
Ceti VI was gone. My fault. ...”
McCoy
and Kirk glanced at each other, both frowning slightly; Saavik, too, wondered
how it could be the young commander’s fault that a whole world had disappeared.
He was clearly still badly confused.
“Khan
captured us. He—he can control people, Captain! His creatures—he—” Chekov began
trembling. He clamped his hands over his ears. “My head—!”
McCoy
came to his side and checked him over with the medical sensor. “It’s all right;
you’re safe now.”
Chekov’s
words came all in an incomprehensible rush. “He made us say things—lies—and
made us do ... other things, but we beat him; he thought he controlled us, but
he didn’t; the captain beat him—he was strong. ...” He was shaking so hard he
could no [154] longer
speak. He drew his knees to his chest and put his head down, hiding his face to
cry.
Kirk
glanced over at Terrell, who maintained the composure of oblivion.
“Captain,
where’s Dr. Marcus? What happened to Genesis?”
“Khan
couldn’t find them,” Terrell said with dreadful calm. “He found some of the
scientists.”
“We
know that,” Kirk said sharply.
“Everything
else was gone. He tortured them. They wouldn’t talk; so he killed them. The
station was too big for him to search it all before he took Reliant and
went to kill you too.”
“He
came damned close to doing that,” Kirk said.
“He
left us here,” Chekov said. He raised his head. His face was wet with tears.
“We were ... no longer any use.”
“Does
he control all of Reliant’s crew?” Saavik asked, wondering if humans
were that susceptible to mind control.
“He
stranded most of them on Alpha Ceti V.”
“He’s
mad, sir. He lives for nothing but revenge,” Chekov said. “He blames you for
the death of his wife ... Lieutenant McGiver.”
“I know
what he blames me for,” Kirk said. He sat with his eyes focused on nothing for
some moments. “Carol’s gone, but all the escape pods are still in their bays.
Where’s the transporter room in this thing?” He glanced at Saavik.
“Even
the Spacelab specifications were erased from the computer, sir,” she said.
“However, the Enterprise should have a copy in its library files.”
They
contacted the ship, reassuring Commander Uhura and Mr. Spock that they were all
right, and had a set of plans for the station transmitted down. Even the
decorative printed maps of Spacelab, which ordinarily would have been displayed
in its reception area, had been torn down and destroyed.
[155] In the transporter
room, Kirk inspected the console settings.
“Mr.
Chekov, did he get down here?”
“I
don’t think so, sir. He said searching such a big place was foolish. He thought
he would make the captives talk.”
“Somebody
left the transporter on,” Kirk said. “Turned it on, used it, and left it
on—and no one still alive remained to turn it off.”
Saavik
figured out the destination of the settings. “This makes no sense, Admiral. The
coordinates are within Regulus I. The planetoid is both lifeless and airless.”
“If
Carol finished stage two, if it was underground,” Kirk said thoughtfully, “—she
said it was underground. ...”
“Stage
two?” He must be referring to the mysterious Project Genesis, Saavik thought.
Kirk
suddenly pulled out his communicator. “Kirk to Enterprise.”
“Enterprise,
Spock here.”
“Damage
report, Mr. Spock?”
“Admiral,
Lieutenant Saavik would recommend that we go by the book. In that case, hours
could stretch into days.”
Saavik
tried to understand what the captain meant by that. It sounded vaguely
insulting, unlikely behavior from Captain Spock.
“I read
you, Captain,” Kirk said after a pause. “Let’s have the bad news.”
“The
situation is grave. Main power cannot be restored for six days at least. Auxiliary
power has failed, but Mr. Scott hopes to restore it in two days. By the book,
Admiral.”
“Spock,”
Kirk said, “I’ve got to try something. If you don’t hear from us within—” he
paused a moment, “—one hour, restore what power you can and get the Enterprise
the hell away from here. Alert Starfleet as [156] soon as you’re out of
jamming range. By the book, Spock.”
Uhura
broke in. “We can’t leave you behind, sir!”
“That’s
an order, Spock. Uhura, if you don’t hear from us, there won’t be anybody
behind. Kirk out.” He snapped his communicator closed and put it away.
“Gentlemen,” he said to Terrell and Chekov, “maybe you’d better stay here.
You’ve been through a lot—”
“We’d
prefer to share the risk,” Terrell said quickly.
“Very
well. Let’s go.”
“Go?”
McCoy exclaimed. “Go where?”
“Wherever
they went,” Kirk replied, and nodded at the transporter.
Saavik
realized what he planned. She went to the transporter and set it for delayed
energize, being careful not to alter the coordinates. Kirk stepped up onto the
transporter platform. Terrell and Chekov followed, but McCoy stayed safely on
the floor and folded his arms belligerently.
“What
if they went nowhere?”
Kirk
grinned. “Then it’s your big chance to get away from it all, Bones.”
Dr.
McCoy muttered something and stomped up onto the platform.
“Ready,”
Saavik said. She pressed the auto-delay and hurried up beside the others.
Spacelab
dissolved; around them, darkness appeared.
Jim
Kirk held his breath, waiting for his guess to be wrong, waiting for solid rock
to resolidify around him forever as soon as the transporter beam ended. Fear
tickled the back of his mind. The instant he finished transporting, lights
blazed on around him.
“Well,”
Jim said as the rest of his party solidified, “if anybody’s here, now they know
we’re here, too.”
He was
in a small cavern: several tunnels led from it. The caverns were definitely dug
out, not naturally formed. The chamber was haphazardly piled with [157] stacks
of notebooks, technical equipment, peripheral storage cells. It had all obviously
been transferred from Spacelab in terrible haste.
“Admiral—”
Saavik said. She gestured toward the next chamber. Jim could see within it a
massive curve of metal.
He
followed Saavik into the second cave. It, too, held piles of equipment, but a
great torpedo shape dominated everything.
“Genesis,
I presume?” Dr. McCoy said.
Without
answering, Kirk moved farther into the cavern complex.
Suddenly
someone lunged at him from behind a stack of crates, plowing into him and
knocking him to the ground. A knife glittered. Jim felt it press against his
throat, just below the corner of his jaw, at the pulse-point where the carotid
artery is most vulnerable. When he tried to fight, the knife pressed harder. He
could feel the sharpness of its edge. If Saavik or McCoy tried to draw a
phaser, he would be bleeding to death before they could finish firing.
“You
son of a bitch, you killed them—”
Jim
Kirk recognized David Marcus.
“I’m
Jim Kirk!” Jim yelled. “David, don’t you remember me?”
“We
were still there, you stupid bastard; I heard Zinaida scream—”
“David,
we found them. They were already dead!”
“David—”
Carol’s
voice.
“Go
back, mother!”
“Jim—”
Kirk
strained around until he could see her. The knife dimpled his skin, and a drop
of blood welled out. He felt its heat.
“Hold
still, you slimy—”
“Carol,”
Jim said, “for gods’ sake, you can’t believe we had anything to do with—”
[158] “Shut up!” David
cried. “Go back, mother, unless you want to watch me kill him the way he
killed—”
Carol
Marcus took a deep breath. “I don’t want to watch you kill anyone ... least of
all your father.”
David
looked up at her, stunned.
Feeling
stunned himself, Jim slid from beneath the knife and disarmed the boy. Surely
Carol had said that just to give him such a chance—
Out of
the corner of his eye, he saw Clark Terrell step forward and take the phaser
from the Deltan—Jedda Adzhin-Dall, it must be—who had been covering Saavik and
McCoy.
“I’ll
hold on to this,” Terrell said.
Jim
stood up and turned to Carol.
“Carol—”
He went
toward her, and she met him. She smiled, reached out, and gently stroked a
fingertip across the hair at his temple.
“You’ve
gone a little gray—” She stopped.
He put
his arms around her. They held each other for a long while, but finally he drew
back to look her in the eyes, to search her face with his gaze.
“Carol,
is it true?”
She
nodded.
“Why
didn’t you tell me?”
“It
isn’t true!” David shouted. “My father was—”
“You’re
making this a lot harder, David,” Carol said.
“I’m
afraid I must make it harder still, Dr. Marcus,” Clark Terrell said!
Jim
spun around.
Reliant’s
captain held his captured
phaser trained directly on Jim Kirk and Carol Marcus.
“Clark,
in heaven’s name—” McCoy said.
“Please,
don’t move.” He glanced toward Chekov, who nodded. He came toward McCoy, who
made as if to resist. “Even you, Len,” Terrell said. McCoy let his hands fall.
Chekov disarmed everyone, then joined Terrell in covering them.
[159] “Pavel—” Jim said.
“I’m
sorry, sir.”
Terrell
opened his communicator.
“Have
you heard, your excellency?”
“I have
indeed, Captain. You have done very well.”
Khan.
“I knew
it!” David whispered, low and angry. Jim turned, but not in time to stop him.
David launched himself at Terrell. Saavik instantly reacted, catching David and
flinging him out of the way with all the force of muscles adapted to higher
gravity. They collapsed in a heap as Jedda, too, sprang forward after David.
Terrell
fired.
Jedda
fell into the beam.
He
vanished without a sound.
“Jedda!”
Carol cried.
“Oh,
God. ...” David said softly.
“Don’t
move, any of you!” Terrell’s hand clenched hard around the phaser. “I don’t want
to hurt you. ...”
“Captain
Terrell, I am waiting.”
Chekov
started violently at Khan’s softly dangerous voice. He was deathly pale and
sweating. He began to tremble. The phaser shook in his hand. Jim Kirk weighed
his chances of taking it, but they were no better than David’s had been.
“Everything’s
as you ordered, my lord,” Terrell said. “You have the coordinates of Genesis.”
“I have
one other small duty for you, Captain,” Khan said. “Kill James Kirk.”
On the
ground beside David, Saavik shifted slightly, gathering herself.
No, Jim
thought, no, your instincts were right with David. Don’t pull the same stupid
stunt he did and get yourself killed for nothing, Lieutenant.
“Khan
Singh—” Terrell said. He wiped his forehead on his sleeve and pressed his free
hand against the side of his face. “I can’t—” Wincing, he gasped in pain.
[160] “Kill him!”
Terrell
flung down his communicator. It clattered across stone. Terrell groaned as if
he had been struck himself. He gripped the phaser with both hands, shaking so
hard he could not aim.
Pavel
Chekov raised his phaser slowly, staring at it with utter absorption. His whole
body trembled. He aimed the weapon ...
... at
Clark Terrell. He tried to fire.
He
failed.
Terrell
screamed in agony. He forced his phaser around until he had turned it on
himself.
“Clark,
my God,” McCoy whispered. He reached out toward him.
Terrell
raised his head. Jim felt the intensity of his plea to McCoy in his horrified
gaze.
The
only thing the doctor could do for Clark Terrell now was ... nothing. McCoy
groaned and turned away, his face in his hands.
“Kill
him, Terrell!” Khan said again. The damaged communicator distorted his voice,
but still it was all too recognizable. “Fire, now!”
Terrell
obeyed.
He
disappeared.
Chekov
shrieked. His phaser fell from his shaking hands, and he clutched at his
temples as his knees buckled. He quivered and convulsed on the hard rock floor.
McCoy
hurried to his side, pulled an injector from his medical pack, dialed it, and
stabbed it into Chekov’s arm. Chekov struggled a moment more, then went limp.
“Terrell!”
Khan said. “Chekov!”
“Oh, my
God, Jim—” McCoy said in horror.
Jim
hurried to him.
Blood
gushed down the side of Chekov’s face. Through unconsciousness, he moaned.
Something—a
creature, some thing—probed blindly [161]
from inside his ear. It crawled
out of him: a snake, a worm, smeared with blood down its long, slimy length.
Jim fought against nausea. He scooped up a phaser.
“Terrell!”
Khan’s voice was low and hoarse.
Jim
clenched his teeth and shuddered, but he forced himself to wait until the
creature flopped on the stone, leaving Chekov free.
He
fired, and the creature disintegrated.
“Chekov!”
Jim
snatched the communicator from the floor.
“Khan,
you miserable bloodsucker—they’re free of you! You’ll have to do your own dirty
work now. Do you hear me? Do you?”
After a
moment, a terrible sound came from the communicator.
Khan
laughed.
“Kirk,
James Kirk, my old friend, so you are still—still!—alive.”
“And
still your ‘old friend’? Well, listen, ‘old friend,’ you’ve murdered a lot of
innocent people. Kirk looked at Pavel Chekov lying at his feet, close to death.
“I intend to make you pay.”
Khan
laughed again. “I think not. If I was powerful before, I will be invincible
soon.”
“He’s
going to take Genesis!” David rushed toward the next cavern.
Saavik
and Kirk both sprinted after him. As they rounded the corner, a transporter
beam enveloped the Genesis torpedo. Jim raised his phaser. If he could at least
damage it before it dematerialized—
David
Marcus was directly in his line of fire.
“David,
get down!” Jim yelled.
Saavik
caught up to David. He struggled with her.
“Let
go—I’ve got to stop him!”
“Only
half of you would get there!”
“Get
down!”
Saavik
dragged David out of Kirk’s way.
Jim
fired. The phaser beam passed through the [162]
empty space where the torpedo had been, and sizzled against the stone.
Jim
Kirk wanted to scream. He barely restrained himself from smashing his fist
against the cave wall in pure frustration. He only had one chance left.
He
found Terrell’s communicator.
“Khan,
you have Genesis, but you don’t have me! You’ll never get me, Khan! You’re too
frightened to come down here to kill me!”
“I’ve
done far worse than kill you, Admiral. I’ve hurt you. I wish to let you savor
the hurt for a little time.”
“So
much for all your oaths and promises, so much for your vow—to your wife!”
“You
should not speak of my wife, James Kirk. She never wanted me to take my
revenge. So now I will grant her wish. I will not kill you.”
“You’re
a coward, Khan!”
“I will
leave you, as you left me. But no one will ever find you. You are buried alive,
marooned in the middle of a dead planet. Forever.”
“Khan—”
“As for
your ship* it is powerless. In a moment, I shall blow it out of the heavens.”
“Khan!”
“Good-bye,
‘Admiral.’ ”
On
board Reliant, Khan Singh shut off communications to Regulus I and
stretched back in his chair. Not quite what he had foreseen, but a most
satisfying climax, nonetheless.
Joachim
came onto the bridge.
“Well,
Joachim?”
“The
Genesis torpedo is safely stowed, my lord. The warp drive is still inoperative,
but all other systems will be restored within the hour.”
“Excellent.”
“Sir?”
“What?”
“May I
plot a course away from Regulus I?”
[163] “Not yet. Kirk is
finished, but I promised him that I would deal with his ship.”
“Khan,
my lord—”
Khan
frowned at his old friend and aide. Joachim had been with him from the
beginning, but he had been acting most strangely since their escape from Alpha
Ceti V.
“You
are with me, or you are against me. Which do you choose?”
Joachim
looked down. “I am with you, my lord.” He turned away, “I have not
changed.”
Carol
Marcus sat on the floor of the cavern, staring at the empty spot where Genesis
had been. She pressed the heels of her hands against her eyes. She could not
believe that Jedda, too, was gone. Vance, and Del, and Zinaida, and Yoshi and
Jan: all dead. All she had left was David.
She
could not help being grateful that it was David who survived. Yet at times she
had felt like mother to everyone on the station. She had always been the sort
of person to whom people told their troubles.
She
grieved for Vance particularly, missing his gentleness, his steadiness. She
covered her face.
Despite
the pressure of her hands, tears squeezed from beneath her eyelids. She dashed
the drops away angrily, forcing back her grief by willpower alone. She could
not collapse into the despair she felt: there had to be some way to stop
what was happening.
She
glanced across the cavern toward Jim. She had sworn to herself never to tell
him about David, or tell David about him, but telling them the truth had been
the only way to keep them both alive. She needed to talk to Jim—to David,
too—but since Genesis disappeared they had all three been revolving around each
other like satellites, pulled together by her revelation and pushed apart by
time and old pain and lack of trust.
“Saavik
to Enterprise,” the young Vulcan—Vulcan? [164] Carol
wondered; maybe not Vulcan—lieutenant said into her communicator for about the
twentieth time in as many minutes. “Come in, please.”
Carol
knew how efficient the other ship was at jamming communications. She doubted
Saavik would be able to get through.
She
heard a soft moan and glanced across to where Dr. McCoy worked over Chekov, who
he had feared might die.
“Jim—”
McCoy said.
Jim
went to his side.
“Pavel’s
alive,” McCoy said. “It’ll be rocky for a while, but I think he’s going to be
all right.”
“Pavel?”
Jim said gently.
Chekov
tried to get up.
“It’s
okay, Pavel,” McCoy said. “You’re going to be fine. Just try to rest now.”
“Admiral,”
Lieutenant Saavik said, “I am sorry, I cannot get through to the Enterprise.
Reliant is still jamming all channels.”
“I’m
sure you did your best, Lieutenant,” Jim said.
“It
wouldn’t make any difference,” McCoy said. “If Spock obeyed orders, the Enterprise
is long since gone. If Spock couldn’t obey, the ship’s finished.”
“So are
we, it looks like,” David said.
Carol
stood up. “Jim,” she said, “I don’t understand. Why did this happen? Who’s
responsible for it? Who is Khan?”
“It’s a
long story, Carol.”
“We’ve
got plenty of time,” David said angrily.
“You
and your daddy,” Dr. McCoy said, “can catch each other up on things.”
“Maybe
he is my biological father,” David said. “But he sure as hell is not my ‘daddy.’
Jedda’s dead because of him—”
“Because
of you, boy!” McCoy snapped. “Because you tried to rush a phaser set on kill.
And it isn’t one dead, it’s two, in case you’ve lost count.”
[165] “It’s more than
that, Doctor,” Carol said. “In case you’ve lost count. Most of them were
our friends. Jim, I think you owe us at least the courtesy of an explanation.”
He
looked up, and she could see that he felt as hurt and confused as she did.
“I’ll trade you,” he said.
Carol
closed her eyes, took a deep breath, and let it out very slowly.
“Yes,”
she said. “You’re right. Jim, Dr. McCoy ... we may be down here for a while—”
“We may
be down here forever,” McCoy said sourly.
“—so
can we please call a truce?” Carol asked.
“I just
watched an old friend commit suicide!” McCoy said. “I stood by and I let him do
it!” He turned away. “You’ll have to forgive—” anger and grief cut through the
sarcasm; his voice broke, “—my bad humor. ...”
“Believe
me, Doctor, please, I know how you feel.”
“Yes,”
he said slowly. “Of course. I’m sorry.”
When he
had composed himself, he returned to the group. They sat in a small circle, and
Jim tried to explain.
Carol
wished he could give her some reason to hope, but when Jim finished, the
implications of Genesis in the hands of Khan Singh left her only despair.
“Is
there anything to eat down here?” Jim said suddenly. “I don’t know about the
rest of you, but I’m starved.”
“How
can you think of food at a time like this?” McCoy said.
“What I
think is that our first order of business is survival.”
“There’s
plenty of food in the Genesis cave,” Carol said absently. She shook her head in
surprise at herself—she should have led them all there long ago, instead of
staying in these cold and ugly chambers. Everything that had happened had
affected her far more than she was willing to admit: the clarity of her
thought, and her [166] ability to trust. ... She got up. “There’s
enough to last a lifetime, if it comes to that.”
“We
thought this was Genesis!” McCoy said.
Carol
looked around her at the dark, rough caves piled messily with equipment and
records and personal gear. The series of caves had taken the Starfleet corps of
engineers ten months in spacesuits to tunnel out: the second stage of Genesis
had taken a single day. Carol laughed, but stopped abruptly when she heard her
own hysteria.
“This?
No, this isn’t Genesis. David—will you show Dr. McCoy and Lieutenant Saavik our
idea of food?”
“Mother—there’s
a lunatic out there with the torpedo, and you want me to give a guided
tour?”
“Yes.”
“But
we’ve got to—We can’t just do nothing!”
“Yes,
we can,” Jim said. He casually removed a bit of equipment from his belt pouch
and unfolded it. It was not until he fitted its lenses in front of his eyes
that Carol recognized a pair of reading glasses. One of her professors in
graduate school had worn the same things—apparently, as far as Carol had ever
been able to tell, to enhance his reputation as an eccentric. Jim Kirk wearing
glasses?
He
looked at his chronometer, took the glasses off again, and put them away.
“Is
there really some food down here?” he said.
David
scowled.
“David,
please,” Carol said.
He
glared at Kirk. “Keep the underlings busy, huh?” He shrugged. “What the hell.”
He gestured abruptly to Saavik and McCoy. “Come on.”
Saavik
hesitated. “Admiral—?”
“As
your teacher Mr. Spock is fond of saying: No event is devoid of possibilities.”
McCoy
followed David out of the cavern. Saavik stood gazing at the floor in thought,
then abruptly turned and left with them.
[167] Pavel Chekov lay
sleeping or unconscious on a pile of blankets.
Jim and
Carol were alone.
Carol
sat on her heels beside him.
“David’s
right, isn’t he? It’s just to keep us busy.”
He
raised his head. “Why didn’t you tell me?”
Carol
Marcus had had twenty years to think about how to answer that question, and she
had never decided what the answer should be.
“Jim
... why didn’t you ask?”
He
frowned. “What?”
“You’ve
known for a long time that I have a son. You know his age, or you could have
found out without any trouble. And,” she added with an attempt at humor, “I
don’t believe they take you into the Starfleet Academy unless you can count.”
The humor fell flat. She did not feel very much like laughing now, anyway. The
possibility that Jim Kirk might ask her about David had always existed in her
mind; it was one of those possibilities that in the strange and inexplicable
way of the human psyche Carol had both dreaded and, on a level she was aware of
but never would have admitted to anyone but herself, wished for.
But it
had never happened.
“Carol
... I don’t know if you can believe this. I guess there’s no reason why you
should. But it never even occurred to me that David might be ours. I didn’t
even know you’d had a child till I got back with the Enterprise. And
after that I had, I don’t know, some trouble putting any kind of life back
together. It was like coming to an alien world that was just similar enough to
the one I remembered that every time I ran into something that had changed, I
was surprised, and disoriented. ...”
Carol
took his hand, cradled his palm, and stroked the backs of his fingers.
“Stop
it, Jim. I’m sorry, dammit, I don’t know if I’d even have told you the truth if
you had asked. I swore I’d never tell either of you.”
[168] “I don’t
understand why.”
“How
can you say that? Isn’t it obvious? We weren’t together, and there was no way
we were ever going to be! I never had any illusions about it, and to give you
your due you never tried to give me any. You have your world, and I have mine.
I wanted David in my world.” She let go of Jim’s hand. She had always admired
his hands: they were square and strong. “If he’d decided to go chasing through
the universe on his own, I’d have accepted it. But I couldn’t have stood having
you come along when he was fourteen and say, ‘Well, now that you’ve got him to
the age of reason, it’s time for him to come along with his father.’ His
father—someone he’d never known except as a stranger staying overnight? Jim,
that was the only possibility, and that’s too late to start being a
father! Besides, fourteen-year-olds have no business on a starship, anyway.”
He
stood up, walked away from her, and pressed his hands and forehead against the
wall as if he were trying to soak up the coolness and calmness of the very
stone.
“You
don’t need to tell me that,” he said. His shoulders were slumped, and she
thought he was about to cry. She wanted to hold him; yet she did not want to
see him cry.
“David’s
a lot like you, you know,” she said, trying to lighten her own mood as much as
Jim’s. “There wasn’t much I could do about that. He’s stubborn, and
unpredictable—Of course, he’s smarter—that goes without saying. ...” She
stopped; this attempt at humor was falling even flatter than the other.
“Dammit,”
she said, “does it matter? We’re never going to get out of here.”
Jim did
not respond. He knelt down beside Pavel and felt his pulse. He avoided Carol’s
gaze.
“Tell
me what you’re feeling,” she said gently.
He
sounded remote and sad; Carol tried to feel angry at him, but could not.
“There’s
a man who hasn’t seen me for fifteen years [169]
who thinks he’s killed me,” Jim
said. “You show me a son who’d be glad to finish the job. Our son. My life that
could have been, but wasn’t. Carol, I feel old, and worn out, and confused.”
She
went to him and stretched out her hand. “Let me show you something. Something
that will make you feel young, as young as a new world.”
He
glanced at Chekov. Carol was not a medical doctor, but she knew enough about
human physiology to be able to see that the young commander was sleeping
peacefully.
“He’ll
be all right,” she said. “Come on. Come with me.”
He took
her hand.
She led
him toward Genesis.
Unwillingly
Jim followed Carol deeper into the caverns. The overhead light-plates ended,
and they proceeded into darkness. Carol slid her free hand along the cave wall
to guide them. Jim soon realized that it was not as completely dark as it
should have been, underground and without artificial illumination. He could see
Carol. The reflected light glinted off her hair.
The
light grew brighter. With the sensitivity of someone who spent most of his time
in artificial light and beneath alien stars, who valued what little he saw of
sunlight, Jim knew, without question, that the glow ahead of him was that of a
star very like the Sun.
He
glanced at Carol. She smiled, but gave no word of explanation.
Without
meaning to, Jim began to walk faster. As the light intensified, as its quality
grew clearer and purer, he found himself running.
He
plunged from the mouth of the cave and stopped. Carol joined him on the edge of
a promontory.
Jim
Kirk gasped.
His
eyes were still dark-adapted: the light dazzled him. The warm breeze ruffled
his hair, and he smelled fresh earth, flowers, a forest. A rivulet tumbled down
[170] the
cliff just next to him, casting a rainbow mist across his face.
A
forest stretched into the distance, filling the shell of the lifeless planetoid
that had been Regulus I. It was the most beautiful place he had ever seen, a
storybook forest from children’s tales. The gnarled trees showed immense age
and mystery. The grass in the meadow at the foot of the cliff was as smooth and
soft as green velvet, sprinkled with wildflowers of delicate blue and violent
orange. Where the shadow of the forest began, Jim half expected to glimpse a
flash of white, a unicorn fleeing his gaze.
He
looked at Carol, who leaned against the cliff next to the tunnel entrance, her
arms folded. She smiled.
“You
did this in a day?” Jim said.
“The
matrix forms in a day. The life forms take a little longer. Not much, though.”
She grinned. “Now do you believe I can cook?”
He
gazed out, fascinated at her world. “How far does it go?”
“All
the way around,” she said. “The rotation of the planet gives us some radial
acceleration to act in place of gravity, to probably forty-five degrees above
and below the equator. I expect things get a little strange out at the poles.”
She pointed past the sun. “A stress field keeps the star in place. It’s an
extreme variable; twelve hours out of twenty-four, it dims down to give some
night. Makes a very pretty moon.”
“Is it
all ... this beautiful?”
“I
don’t know, Jim. I haven’t exactly had a chance to explore it, and it’s a
prototype, after all. Things always happen that you don’t expect. Besides, the
whole team worked on the design.” Her tone grew very sad. “Vance drew the map;
his section had a note at the far border, way up north, that said ‘here be
dragons.’ Nobody ever knew if he was kidding or not. Or—[171] maybe Del did.” Carol’s voice caught; Jim
almost could not hear her. “Vance said, once, that it wasn’t worth making
something up that was so pretty and safe it was insipid.”
She
started to cry. Jim took her in his arms and just held her.
In the storage bay of Reliant, Khan Singh completed
his inspection of the massive Genesis torpedo. He had tapped its instruction
program; though the mechanism itself was complex, both the underlying
theoretical basis and the device’s operation were absurdly simple.
He
patted the sleek flank of the great machine. When he tired of ruling over
worlds that existed, he would create new worlds to his own design.
Joachim
came into the storage bay and stopped some distance from him.
“Impulse
power is restored, my lord,” he said.
“Thank
you, Joachim. Now we are more than a match for the poor Enterprise.”
“Yes,
my lord.” His tone revealed nothing: no enthusiasm, no glory, not even any
fear. Simply nothing.
Khan
frowned.
“Joachim,
have you slept?”
Joachim
flinched, as if Khan had struck him.
“I
cannot sleep, my lord.”
“What
do you mean?”
Joachim
suddenly shivered and turned away.
“I cannot
sleep, my lord.”
Khan
watched his aide for a moment, shrugged, and strode out of the storage bay.
Joachim followed more slowly.
On the
bridge, Khan ordered the ship out of orbit. He had calculated carefully to put
Regulus I between [173] Reliant and the relative position the
Enterprise must keep until it regained power. Foolish of Mr. Spock to
transmit the ship’s vulnerability to any who could hear.
Regulus
I’s terminator slid past beneath them, and they probed into the actinic light
of Regulus.
“Short-range
sensors.”
Joachim
obeyed. Khan brought the display to the forward viewscreen and frowned. There
was Spacelab, broached and empty. Enterprise should have been drifting
dead nearby in a matching orbit.
It was
nowhere to be found.
“Long-range
sensors.”
And
still nothing. Khan stood up, his fists clenched.
“Where
are they?”
In the
Genesis cave, Saavik accompanied Dr. McCoy back into the rock caverns. Pavel
Chekov had to be moved to where he could be made more comfortable. David Marcus
came along to help. They improvised a litter and carried Chekov out of the
caverns.
They
made the climb down the cliff with some difficulty, but arrived safely in the
meadow below. Dr. McCoy made a bed for his patient, who slept so soundly he
barely seemed to breathe.
David
Marcus lay down in the grass.
“I knew
it would work,” he said. “If only ...” He flung his arm across his eyes.
Saavik
watched him curiously, if somewhat surreptitiously. David Marcus, it seemed,
dealt with grief a good deal better than she did. In addition, despite his
original denial, David had assimilated being introduced to his father with
considerable grace.
Saavik
doubted she would be able to say the same of herself. It would be an
unimaginably dreadful event if anyone ever identified the Vulcan family to
which one of her parents had belonged. If that ever happened, if they were
somehow forced to acknowledge her, the only way either she or they could
survive a meeting [174] with honor and mind intact would be for her
to kneel before them and beg their forgiveness for her very existence.
And if
she ever encountered the Romulan who had caused her to be born ... Saavik knew
well the depths of violence of which she was capable. If she ever met that
creature, she would give herself to the madness willingly.
David
kept going over and over what had happened on Spacelab. Somehow he should have
been able to do something; he should have known, despite Del’s
reassurance, that his friends were in a lot more trouble than they could
handle.
He was
afraid he was about to go crazy.
He
decided to pick some fruit from the cornucopia tree in the center of the
meadow. He was not the least bit hungry, but at least that would give him
something to do.
When he
stood up, he felt Saavik’s gaze. He turned around and looked at her; she was
staring so hard, or so lost in thought, that she hardly realized he had noticed
what she was doing.
“What
are you looking at?” he said belligerently.
She
started and blinked. “The admiral’s son,” she said with matter-of-fact
directness.
“Don’t
you believe it!”
“I do
believe it,” she said.
Unfortunately
so do I, David thought. If his mother had only been trying to keep Jim Kirk
alive, she would hardly have kept up the deception after the fight. It was far
too easy to prove parentage beyond any doubt with a simple antigen-scan. If
McCoy couldn’t do it with the equipment in his medical pouch, then David could
probably jury-rig an analyzer himself from the stuff they’d brought down from
Spacelab. It was just because the proof was so easy that he did not see any
point to doing the test. It would merely assure him of what he would rather not
have known.
[175] He shrugged it
off. What difference did it make who his biological father was? Neither the man
he had thought it was, who had died before he was born, nor the man his mother
said it was, had ever had any part in his life. David could see no reason why
that should change.
“What
are you looking at?” Lieutenant Saavik said.
David,
in his turn, had been staring without realizing it. He had always been
fascinated by Vulcans. In fact, the one time he had met Jim Kirk, when he was a
kid, he had been much more interested in talking to Kirk’s friend Mr. Spock.
David assumed it was the same Mr. Spock whom Saavik had earlier been trying to
contact. If David had to be civil to a member of Starfleet, he would a whole
lot rather it be a science officer than a starship captain.
Funny
he had not noticed before how beautiful Saavik was. Beautiful and exotic. She
did not seem as cold as most Vulcans, either.
“I—” He
stopped. He felt confused. “I don’t know,” he said finally.
Saavik
turned away.
Damn,
David thought, I insulted her or hurt her feelings or something. He tried to
reopen the conversation.
“I bet
I know who I’m looking at,” he said. “Mr. Spock’s daughter, right?”
She
spun toward him, her fists clenched at her sides. He flinched back. He thought
she was going to belt him. But she straightened up and gradually relaxed her
hands.
“If I
thought you knew what you were saying,” Saavik told him, “I would kill you.”
“What?”
he said. “Hell—trust a
member of Starfleet to react like that. Try to give somebody a compliment, and
look what you get.”
“A
compliment!”
“Sure.
Hey, look, there aren’t that many Vulcans in [176] Starfleet; I figured you were following in your father’s footsteps or
something.”
“Hardly,”
she said, her voice and her expression chill. “You could not offer a worse
insult to Captain Spock than to imply he is, or even could be, my father.”
“Why?”
he said.
“I do
not care to discuss it.”
“Why
not? What’s so awful about you?”
“One of
my parents was Romulan!” She spoke angrily.
“Yeah?
Hey, that’s really interesting. I thought you were a Vulcan.”
“No.”
“You
look like a Vulcan to me.”
“I
neither look like a Vulcan nor behave like a Vulcan, as far as other Vulcans
are concerned. I do not even have a proper Vulcan name.”
“I
still don’t see why Mr. Spock would be insulted because I thought you were his
daughter.”
“Do you
know anything about Vulcan sexual physiology?”
“Sure.
What difference does that make? They still have to reproduce, even if they only
try it every seven years.” David grinned. “Sounds pretty boring to me.”
“Many
Romulans find Vulcans sexually attractive. Under normal conditions, a Vulcan
would not respond. But the Romulans practice both piracy and abduction, and
they have chemical means of forcing prisoners to obey.”
She
paused. David could tell this was difficult for her, but he was fascinated.
“To
lose the control of one’s own mind and body—this is the ultimate humiliation,”
Saavik said. “Most Vulcans prefer death to capture by Romulans and seldom
survive if they are driven to act in a way so alien to their natures. The
chance that my Vulcan parent even lives is vanishingly small.”
[177] “Oh,” David said.
“Romulans
make a game of their cruelty. A few take the game so far as to father or
conceive a child from their coercion, then compel the Vulcan woman to live long
enough to bear it, or the Vulcan man to live long enough to witness its birth.
That completes the humiliation and confers great social status on the Romulan.”
“Hey, look,
I’m sorry,” David said. “I honestly didn’t mean to hurt your feelings or insult
Mr. Spock.”
“You
cannot hurt me, Dr. Marcus,” Saavik said. “But as I am not entirely a Vulcan,
it would be possible for me to hurt you. I would advise you to take care.”
She
stood up and strode away.
Saavik
paced through the meadow, wondering what had possessed her to tell David Marcus
so much about her background. She had never volunteered the information to
anyone else before, and she seldom spoke about it even to Mr. Spock, who of
course knew everything. The obvious explanation—that she had wanted to be
certain Marcus would never speak in a manner completely offensive to
Spock—failed to satisfy her. But she could think of no other.
She
climbed down the bank to the edge of the stream, picked up a smooth rounded
pebble, and turned it over and over in her hand. She marveled at the complexity
of the Genesis wave. In a natural environment, a water-worn pebble would take
years to form.
She
skipped the stone across the surface of the stream. It spun across the current
and landed on the other side.
This
was without doubt the most beautiful place Saavik had ever seen. It was all the
more affecting because its beauty was neither perfect nor safe. She had heard,
far in the distance, the howl of a wild animal, and she had seen the sleek
shape of a winged hunter skim the surface of the forest. It was too far away
for [178] even
Saavik to discern whether it was reptile or bird or mammal, or some type of
animal unique to this new place.
The
only thing wrong with it was that she was here against her will.
She
took out her communicator and tried once again to reach the Enterprise. But
either the signals were still being jammed or no one could answer. And Dr.
McCoy was right, too: Mr. Spock should by now have taken the ship and departed
for a Starbase. If he could.
She
climbed the bank to return to the meadow.
Dr.
Marcus, junior, lay on a hillock at the edge of the forest, staring
meditatively at the sky and chewing on a blade of grass. The admiral, Dr.
McCoy, and Dr. Marcus, senior, sat nearby under a fruit tree, picnicking on
fruits and sweet flowers.
Saavik
hesitated to invade their privacy, then recognized that if Dr. Marcus and
Admiral Kirk wished to be alone, Dr. McCoy and David would have gone elsewhere.
She started across the field toward them. She had several ideas she wanted to
propose to the admiral. Anything would be better than standing idly by, in
paradise or not, while the world they had come from dissolved into hell.
Admiral
Kirk seemed so very calm and relaxed. As she neared the group, Saavik
unfavorably compared her own reaction to the Kobayashi Maru simulation
to Kirk’s composure in the face of real death or permanent exile.
Saavik
wondered again how Lieutenant James Kirk had reacted to the simulation that had
shaken her own assurance. Captain Spock had said Kirk’s solution was unique,
and that she must ask the admiral herself if she wished to know what it was.
“That’s
what I call a meal,” Kirk said.
“This
is like the Garden of Eden,” Dr. McCoy said with wonder.
“Only
here, every apple comes from the tree of [179]
knowledge,” Dr. Marcus said;
then added, “with all the risk that implies.”
She
leaned forward and put a bright red flower behind Admiral Kirk’s ear. He tried
to stop her, but not very hard, and finally submitted.
Jim
Kirk felt a bit silly with a flower stuck behind his ear. But he left it where
it was, picked a handful of bright purple blossoms from a thick patch nearby,
and began to braid them together into a coronet. Noticing Saavik’s approach—and
her pensive expression—he motioned for her to join them.
“What’s
on your mind, Lieutenant?”
“The Kobayashi
Maru, sir,” she said.
“What’s
that?” David asked.
Dr.
McCoy explained. “It’s a training simulation. A no-win scenario that tests the
philosophy of a commander facing death.”
“Are
you asking me if we’re playing out the same story now, Lieutenant?” Jim picked
another handful of flowers.
“What
did you do on the test, Admiral?” Saavik asked. “I would very much like to
know.”
Dr.
McCoy chuckled. “Why, Lieutenant, you’re lookin’ at the only Starfleet cadet
ever to beat that simulation.”
“I
almost got myself tossed out of the Academy, too,” Jim said. He thought about
the time, took out his glasses, and looked at his chronometer again. Not quite
yet.
“How
did you beat it?”
“I
reprogrammed the simulation so I could save the ship.”
“What?”
Jim
felt rather amused to have startled Saavik so thoroughly.
“I
changed the conditions of the test.” He smiled. He was not a wizard computer
programmer himself; fortunately one of his Academy classmates not only was, but
[180] could
never resist a challenge. It was Jim, though, who had staged the commando
raid—or cat burglary, since no one figured out what he had done till quite a
while later—on the supposedly secure storage facility where the simulation
programs were kept, in order to substitute his version for Starfleet’s.
“The
instructor couldn’t decide whether to die laughing or blow her stack. I think
she finally flipped a coin. I received a commendation for original thinking.”
With a smile, he shrugged. “I don’t like to lose.”
“Then
you evaded the purpose of the simulation: you never faced death.”
“Well,
I took the test twice before I decided to do something about it, so I suppose
you could say I faced death. I just never had to accept it.”
“Until
now.”
“Saavik,
we each face death every day we’re alive.”
Now it was
time. He picked up his communicator and opened it.
“Kirk
to Enterprise. Come in, Mr. Spock.”
“Enterprise
to Kirk, Spock here.”
Saavik
started violently and leaped to her feet.
“It’s
two hours, Spock. Are you about ready?”
“On
schedule, Admiral. I will compute your coordinates and beam you aboard. Spock
out.”
Everyone
was staring at him in shock. Kirk shrugged contritely.
“I told
you,” he said. “I don’t like to lose.”
He
joined the flower garland into a circle and placed it gently on Carol’s hair.
“Energize,”
Spock said to Transporter Chief Janice Rand. She focused the beam on the party
in the middle of Regulus I, increased the power to compensate for several
kilometers of solid rock, and energized.
Spock
had deduced Kirk’s assumptions and intentions. The science officer was curious
to know the results of the second stage of Genesis. He suspected that parts of
what had been created within the [181]
planetoid would be most interesting, considering the odd sense of humor of the
team of Madison and March.
He
hoped to be able to see it himself and, seeing it, honor the memory of their
lives and their work.
The
admiral materialized on the transporter platform, and behind him Dr. McCoy and
Dr. Marcus, senior, then Lieutenant Saavik and Dr. Marcus, junior, supporting
Pavel Chekov between them.
Spock
raised one eyebrow. The admiral wore a flower over his ear, while Dr. Carol
Marcus wore a floral wreath.
The
planetoid must be most interesting, indeed.
Saavik
finished saying something interrupted by the beaming process. “—the damage
report. The Enterprise was immobilized.”
“Come,
now, Lieutenant,” the admiral said kindly. “You’re the one who keeps telling me
to go by the book.”
Kirk
suddenly noticed what Spock was looking at, began to blush, and removed the
flower. He gallantly offered it to Lieutenant Saavik—who had no idea what to do
with it, as no one had ever given her a flower before—and stepped down from the
platform.
“Hello,
Mr. Spock,” Kirk said. “You remember Dr. Marcus—” he presented Carol Marcus,
“—and I believe you met David before he also became Dr. Marcus.”
David
Marcus nodded to Spock and helped Saavik carry Chekov down.
“Certainly,”
Spock said. “Welcome to the Enterprise. I was most impressed by your
presentation.”
“Thank
you, Mr. Spock,” Carol Marcus said. “I wish it were turning out better.”
Even
Spock could see the effects of strain and exhaustion in her face; the deaths on
Spacelab must of course have affected her far more than they did him, not only
because she was human and he Vulcan, but because she had been far better
acquainted with the people who had died. Words of condolence were such a [182] trivial response to a loss of this magnitude
that Spock refused to attempt any.
Dr.
McCoy went immediately to the intercom and ordered a medical team and stretcher
from sick bay.
“By the
book—?” Saavik said.
“Regulation
forty-six-A: ‘During battle ...’ ”
“ ‘...
no uncoded messages on an open channel,’ ” Saavik said; and then, to Spock, “It
seems very near a lie. ...”
“It was
a code, Lieutenant,” he said. “Unfortunately the code required some
exaggeration of the truth.”
She did
not answer; he knew she was troubled by the difference between a lie and a
figurative interpretation of reality. He knew precisely how she felt. It had
taken him a long time to understand that in some cases no objective difference
existed, and that any explanation lay completely within circumstances.
“We
only needed hours, Saavik, not days,” Kirk said. “But now we have minutes
instead of hours. We’d better make use of them.”
“Yes,
sir,” she said, unconvinced.
The
medical team arrived, and Saavik eased Commander Chekov to the stretcher. She
looked at the flower in her hand for a moment, then placed it carefully beside
him.
“Jim,
I’m taking Chekov to sick bay,” McCoy said.
“Take
good care of him, Bones.”
“What
can we do?” Carol Marcus asked.
“Carol,
it’s going to be chaos on the bridge in a few minutes,” Kirk said apologetically.
“I’ve got to get up there.”
“Drs.
Marcus,” McCoy said, “I can put you both to work. Come with me.”
Kirk,
Spock, and Saavik hurried toward the bridge. Kirk stopped at the first
turbo-lift, but Spock kept going.
“The
lifts are inoperative below C-deck,” Spock said, and opened the door to the
emergency stairs. He climbed them three at a time.
[183] “What is working
around here?”
“Very
little, Admiral. Main power is partially restored. ...”
“Is
that all?”
“We
could do no more in two hours. Mr. Scott’s crew is trying to complete repairs.”
They
reached C-deck. Spock and Saavik entered the lift. Kirk was breathing hard. He
paused a moment in the corridor, wiped his face on his sleeve, and got into the
cage.
“Damned
desk job,” he said softly. “Bridge.”
The lift
accelerated upward.
Jim
Kirk stepped out onto the bridge of his ship. It still showed the effects of
the earlier skirmish, but he could see immediately that most functions had been
restored.
Mr.
Sulu, at his old place at the helm, glanced over his shoulder when the lift
doors opened.
“Admiral
on the bridge!” he said immediately.
“Battle
stations,” Kirk said.
The
Klaxon sounded; the lights dimmed down to deep red.
“Tactical,
Mr. Sulu, if you please.”
“Aye,
sir.”
The
viewscreen flipped over into a polar view of Regulus I, showing the orbits of
Spacelab, Reliant, and the Enterprise. The two starships were in
opposition, one on either side of the planetoid. Reliant’s delta-vee
coordinates changed as they watched, revealing that Khan’s ship had begun a
search.
“Our
scanners are undependable at best,” Spock said. “Spacelab’s scanners, however,
are fully operational; they are transmitting the position of Reliant.”
“Very
good, Mr. Spock.”
Reliant
suddenly accelerated at full
impulse power.
“Uh-oh,”
Kirk said.
It would
slingshot itself around Regulus I; unless the Enterprise accelerated,
too, and continued to chase and flee the other ship, around and around the
planetoid, [184] his
ship would soon be a target again. And with the engines in the shape they were
in, they could not stay hidden for long.
“Reliant
can both outrun and outgun us,” Spock said calmly. “There is, however, the
Mutara Nebula. ...”
Kirk
took out his glasses and put them on to study the displays. He opened a channel
to the engine room.
“Mr.
Scott—the Mutara Nebula. Can you get us inside?”
“Sir,
the overload warnings are lit up like a Christmas tree; the main energizer
bypasses willna take much strain. Dinna gi’ us too many bumps.”
“No
promises, Mr.-Scott. Give me all you’ve got.”
“Admiral,”
Saavik said, “within the nebula, the gas clouds will interfere with our
tacticals. Visuals will not function. In addition, ionization will disrupt our
shields.”
Kirk
glanced over the rim of his spectacles at Saavik, then at Spock. Spock raised
one eyebrow.
“Precisely,
Lieutenant: the odds will then be even,” the Vulcan said.
The
crew had taken their battle stations, pushing the bridge into controlled
pandemonium. The dimmed lights cast strange shadows; computer screens glowed in
eerie colors. Kirk watched the tactical display. Reliant was moving so
fast it would round the planet’s horizon in a few minutes and have the Enterprise
in line-of-sight. Kirk wanted to be out of phaser and torpedo range yet
remain a tempting target.
“Admiral,”
Saavik asked, “what happens if Reliant fails to follow us into the
nebula?”
Kirk
laughed, though with very little humor. “That’s the least of our worries. Khan
will follow us.”
“Remind
me, Lieutenant,” Spock said, “to discuss with you the human ego.”
“Mr.
Scott,” Kirk said into the intercom, “are you ready?”
“As
ready as I can be, Admiral.”
“Mr.
Sulu.”
[185] “Course plotted,
sir: Mutara Nebula.”
“Accelerate
at full impulse power—” he hesitated until only a few degrees of arc remained
before Reliant’s orbit would carry it within sight of the Enterprise,
“—now!”
On the
viewscreen, the coordinates defining his ship’s linear acceleration increased
instantaneously by orders of magnitude. The Enterprise sped out of
orbit.
A
moment later, Reliant rounded the limb of Regulus, and its course and speed
altered radically.
“They’ve
spotted us,” Mr. Sulu said.
Dr.
McCoy had nearly finished the workup on Pavel Chekov when the battle stations
alarm sounded. He experienced an all too familiar tightening in his stomach.
For a long time, he had believed his reaction was as simple as fear, but
eventually, the better he knew himself, he realized that it was at least as
much the loathing he felt for having to patch up—sometimes to lose—young people
who should never have been injured in the first place. Usually they were not as
young as Peter Preston ... but they were seldom very much older.
At
least—to McCoy’s astonishment and relief—Pavel Chekov had a good chance of
recovering. The horrible creature had insinuated its long and narrow length
into his skull, to be sure; but although it had penetrated the dura mater, the
arachnoid membrane, and the pia mater, all the way to the cerebrum itself, it
had not, at the time of its departure, actually destroyed any brain tissue.
Instead it had nestled itself in the sulci between the brain’s convolutions. No
doubt it would have done more damage had it remained much longer, but as it was
Chekov should convalesce as if from a severe concussion. McCoy found no
evidence of infection. Pavel Chekov was a very fortunate man.
The ship
shuddered around him.
“What
was that?” David Marcus had been pacing back and forth through sick bay,
nervous as a cat, [186] haunted.
Just now there was very little to do. If they were lucky, things would continue
that way.
“Impulse
engines,” McCoy said.
“What
does that mean?”
“Well,
son, I expect it means the chase is on.”
“I’m
going up there.”
“To the
bridge? No, you’re not. You’d just be in the way. Best stay here, David.”
“Dammit—there
must be something I can do.”
“There
isn’t,” McCoy said. “Nor anything I can do. All we can do is wait for them to
start shooting at each other, and wish we could keep them from doing it. That’s
the trouble with this job.”
Khan
Singh chuckled at the pitiful attempt of the Enterprise to evade him. Reliant,
accelerating under full impulse power, streaked out of orbit after James
Kirk’s crippled ship.
“So,”
he said to Joachim. “They are not so wounded as they wished us to believe. The
hunt will be better than I thought, my friend.”
Joachim
displayed a long-range scan of their course, showing the Enterprise and
the great opaque cloud of the nebula ahead.
“My
lord, we will lose our advantage if we follow them into the dust. I beg you—”
Khan
cut him off. Joachim was beginning to sound like a traitor. Khan decided to
give him one last chance.
“Rake
the Enterprise,” he ordered.
The
phaser rippled outward, a long finger of dense light. It streaked along the
side of the Enterprise’s starboard engine nacelle. The starship heeled
over and began to tumble, spiraling on its headlong course.
The Enterprise
lurched; its artificial gravity flexed, trembled, and finally steadied.
McCoy closed his eyes a moment, till he regained his balance.
Action
commenced, he thought bitterly.
[187] Chekov gave an
inarticulate cry and sat up abruptly, his eyes wild.
“Take
it easy,” McCoy said.
“I must
help Captain—”
“No.
Listen to me, Pavel. You’ve been through a hell of a lot. You haven’t any
strength, and you haven’t any equilibrium.”
“But—”
“You
can lie down willingly, or you can lie down sedated. Which will it be?”
Pavel
tried again to get up. He nearly passed out. McCoy caught him and eased him
back on the bed. The young Russian turned deathly pale.
“Now
will you stay put?”
Chekov
nodded slightly without opening his eyes.
The
ship shuddered again. Coming out of the instrument room where she had been
helping Chris Chapel, Carol Marcus staggered, then recovered her balance. The
flower garland slipped from her hair. She caught it, stared at it as if she had
never seen it before, and carefully laid it aside.
“Dr.
McCoy, I can’t just sit here. I keep thinking about—Please, give me something
to do.”
“Like I
was tellin’ David,” McCoy said grimly, “there isn’t much to do. ...” He
realized how desperate she was to stay occupied. “But you can help me get the
surgery ready. I’m expecting customers.”
Marcus
paled, but she did not back off.
If what
she and the kid have been through in the last couple of days didn’t break them,
I guess nothing will, McCoy thought.
Marcus
glanced around sick bay.
“Where is
David?” she said.
“I
don’t know—he was here a minute ago.”
“Ion
concentration increasing,” Mr. Spock said. “Approximately two minutes to sensor
overload and shield shutdown.”
[188] The ship plowed
on. Encountering great quantities of ionized dust and gases, the shields began
to re-radiate energy in the visual spectrum. The viewscreen picked it up,
sparkling and shimmering. The crisp rustle of static rose over the low hum of
conversation and information on the bridge. A tang of ozone filled the air.
Reliant
fired again. The Enterprise
shuddered. If the shields were not quite steady, at least they held.
“Reliant
is closing fast,” Saavik said.
Directly
ahead, the nebula’s core raged.
“They
just don’t want us going in there,” Kirk said, nodding toward the viewscreen.
“One
minute,” Spock said.
The
turbo-lift doors slipped open, and David Marcus came onto the bridge.
“Admiral,
Reliant is decelerating.”
“Uhura,
patch me in.”
“Aye,
sir.”
Khan
felt the power of the impulse engines slacken, then whisper into reverse
thrust. The gap between Reliant and the Enterprise immediately
widened.
“Joachim,
why are we decelerating?”
“My
lord, we daren’t follow them into the nebula. Our shields will fail—”
“Khan,
this is James Kirk.”
Khan
Singh leaped to his feet with a scream of surprise and anger. James Kirk—still
alive!
“We
tried it your way, Khan. Are you game for a rematch?”
Khan
struggled to gain control over his rage.
James
Kirk began to laugh. “Superior intellect!” he said with contempt. “You’re a
fool, Khan. A brutal, murderous, ridiculous fool.”
“Full
impulse power!” Khan’s voice was a growl.
Joachim
stood up and faced him. “My lord, no! You have everything! You have Genesis!”
He looked Khan in the eye, and this time he did not flinch. Khan strode toward
the helm, but Joachim blocked his way.
[189] “My lord—” he
said, pleading.
“Full
power!” Khan cried.
He
struck his friend with the violent strength of fury. The blow lifted Joachim
completely off the deck and flung him over the control console. He fell hard
against the forward bulkhead, lay still for a moment, then dragged himself to
his feet.
“Full
power, damn you!” Khan grabbed the controls and slammed full power to the
engines.
Spock
watched the tactical display. Reliant stopped decelerating and plunged
forward at full impulse power.
“Khan
Singh does have at least one admirable quality,” the Vulcan said.
“Oh?”
said Kirk. “And what’s that?”
“He is
extremely consistent.” Spock glanced at the ionization readings. The ship had
technically been within the nebula for some time. Now it approached a thick
band of dust where pressure waves from the original exploding star met and
interfered. The energy flux and mass concentration must disrupt the Enterprise’s
operation.
“They’re
following us,” said Mr. Sulu.
“Sensor
overload ... mark.” Almost immediately, the image on the viewscreen broke up
and shattered.
Sulu
piloted the ship blind through the cloud of gas and dust and energy.
Joachim
returned to his place at the helm, bewildered into obedience. In all the years
that he had served his lord, all the times of witnessing the violence to which
Khan was prone, Joachim had never himself been subject to that wrath. Khan had
never assaulted him. Until now.
Joachim
had been in fights aplenty; he had even, in his younger days, lost a few. None
had ever affected him like the single blow from Khan Singh. His hands shook on
the controls, partly from humiliation and [190]
partly from rage. He had sworn to follow Khan even to death. There was no room
for compromise: he had put no conditions on his vow. No conditions for madness,
no conditions for betrayal.
Freedom
was in Khan’s grasp; yet he was throwing it away. Joachim indeed felt betrayed.
The Enterprise
vanished into a thick projection of dust, a tendril of exploded matter from
the pulsar at the nova’s center.
“Follow
it!” Khan said.
Joachim
held his tongue and obeyed.
The
viewscreen’s image dissolved into random colors, punctuated by the periodic
flash of the pulsar’s electromagnetic field.
“Tactical!”
Khan cried.
“Inoperative,”
Joachim said without expression.
“Raise
the shields!”
“Inoperative.”
Joachim saw that the ship’s hull could not long withstand the stress of the
high concentration of dust, not at the speed it was going. “Reducing speed,” he
said coldly.
He
could feel Khan’s gaze burning into him, but this time Khan made no protest.
The Enterprise
broke through the worst of the dust; visuals and tacticals returned, but
the shields were out completely. Sulu changed course, creeping through the
nebula’s diffuse mass just outside the irregular boundary which would both hide
the Enterprise and blind it.
The Enterprise
hovered outside the cloud and waited.
“Here
it comes,” Saavik said.
Reliant
plowed slowly through the
dust. It would be blind for another few moments.
“Phaser
lock just blew, Admiral,” Mr. Sulu said.
“Do
your best, Mr. Sulu. Fire when ready.”
Sulu
believed he could hit the opposing ship, even at this range. Precisely,
carefully, he aimed. A moment’s pause:
[191] Fire—
The
magnetic bearings of a stabilizing gyro exploded, and the Enterprise lurched.
The phasers beam went wide.
Sulu
muttered a curse and plunged the Enterprise back into the nebula as Reliant
spotted them and fired. The photon torpedo just missed, but it expended its
energy in the cloud, and a mass of charged particles and radiation slammed into
them. He struggled to steady the ship.
“Hold
your course,” Kirk said. “Look sharp. ...”
“At what?”
Lieutenant Saavik murmured. She drew more power to the sensors, tightened
the angle, and ran the input through enhancement.
For an
instant, the viewscreen cleared. Sulu started involuntarily—Reliant loomed
on the screen: collision course!
“Evasive
starboard!” Kirk yelled.
Too late.
Reliant’s
phaser blast hit the
unshielded Enterprise dead-on. The power-surge baffles on the primary
helm console failed completely. It carried a jolt of electricity straight
through the controls. Half the instruments blew out. Sulu felt the voltage arc
across his hands. It flung him back, arching his spine and shaking him like a
great ferocious animal, and slammed him to the deck.
Every
muscle in Sulu’s body cramped into knots. He lurched over onto his face and
tried to rise. He could not breathe. The pain from his seared hands shot
through him, cold and hot and overwhelming.
He lost
consciousness.
When
Mr. Sulu fell, Saavik leaped to the helm, seeking out which operations still
functioned and which had crashed.
“Phaser
bank one!” Kirk said. “Fire!”
Saavik’s
hands were an extension of the controls, her body was part of the ship itself.
She
fired.
* * *
[192] The Enterprise’s
phaser beam sizzled across Reliant’s main hull, full force. The
blast reverberated across the bridge. Power failed for a moment, and with it
artificial gravity and all illumination. Khan gripped the armrests of the
captain’s chair, holding himself steady, but through the darkness and the
shrieks of tortured metal he heard his people cry out and fall.
Joachim
pitched forward over the helm controls.
“Joachim!”
The
gravity flowed back, returning slowly to normal, and the lights glowed to a
bare dimness.
As Reliant
plunged ahead, unpiloted and blind, Khan sprang to his old friend’s side.
He lifted him as gently as he could. Joachim cried out in pain. Khan lowered
him to the deck, supporting his shoulders. The jagged ends of broken bones
ground together, and Joachim’s face was bloody and lacerated. He reached out,
his fingers spread and searching.
He
could not see.
Khan
permitted the touch. He laid his hand over Joachim’s.
“My
lord. ...” Joachim whispered. “You proved ... yourself ... superior. ...”
Khan
could feel the life ebbing from his friend. For a moment, he experienced
despair. His sight blurred: he tried to force away the tears, but they spilled
unchecked down his face. This was what his hatred had bought—
James
Kirk would repay the price.
“I shall
avenge you,” Khan said to Joachim, his voice a growl.
“I
wished ... no ... revenge. ...”
Khan
laid his friend down carefully. He stood up, his fists clenched at his side.
“I
shall avenge you.”
After
taking the Enterprise’s phaser burst, Reliant shot away dead
straight, without a maneuver. David Marcus thought the Enterprise had
won. Yet there was [193] no elation from the bridge crew, only
concentration on the scattery viewscreen, murmured interchanges of essential
information, and tension over all, like a sound pitched just above the range of
hearing.
Kirk
spoke into the intercom. “Get a medic up here! Stat!”
David
pulled himself out of his observer’s detachment and hurried to the side of the
injured helm officer.
Sulu
was not breathing. His hands were badly burned, and his skin was clammy. David
felt his throat for a pulse and got absolutely nothing.
David
Marcus was not a medical doctor. He knew some first aid, which he had never had
to use. He took a deep breath. The air was heavy with the smell of burned
plastic and vaporized metal.
He
tilted Sulu’s head back, opened his mouth, breathed four breaths into him,
pressed the heels of his hands over the helm officer’s sternum, and compressed
his chest rapidly fifteen times in a row. A breath, fifteen compressions. Sulu
did not react, but David kept going. A breath, fifteen compressions.
“What’s
the damage, Scotty?” he heard Kirk say.
For
David, everything was peripheral except the life in his hands. The first rule
of manual cardiopulmonary resuscitation was and always had been: Don’t stop. No
matter what, don’t stop.
A
breath, fifteen compressions.
“Admiral,”
the engineer said, “I canna put the mains back on-line! The energizer’s burst;
if I try to gi’ it to ye, ’twill go critical!”
“Scotty,
we’ve got to have main power! Get in there and fix it!”
A
breath, fifteen compressions. David’s shoulders and arms were beginning to
ache.
“It
isna possible, sir!” Mr. Scott cried. “The radiation level is far too high; i’
ha’ already burned out the electronics o’ the repair robot, and if ye went in
in a suit ’twould freeze for the same reason! A person unprotected wouldna last
a minute!”
[194] A breath, fifteen
compressions. The ache in David’s shoulders crept slowly into pain. Sweat
rolled down his forehead and stung in his eyes. He could not stop to wipe it
away.
“How
long, Scotty?”
“I
canna say, sir. Decontamination is begun, but ’twill be a while—”
A
breath, fifteen compressions. David was breathing heavily himself now. He had
not realized what lousy condition he was in. He had worked long hours on
Spacelab, but it was essentially a sedentary job; the only exercise he had ever
got was playing zero-gee handball with Zinaida, whom he had sometimes accused
of using him as a moving wall to bounce the ball off of.
Come
on, Sulu, he thought, give me a little help, man, please.
A
breath, fifteen compressions.
The
turbo-lift doors slid open, and a medical team hurried onto the bridge.
“Hurry—up—you—guys—”
David said.
A medic
vaulted down the stairs and knelt beside him.
“Any
reaction?”
David
shook his head. His sweat-damp hair plastered itself against his forehead.
“Keep
going,” the medic said. She drew a pressure-injector out of her bag, dialed it,
and fitted a long, heavy needle to it. “I’m going to try epinephrine straight
to the heart. When I tell you, get out of my way but keep breathing for him.
Okay?”
David
could hardly see because of the sweat sparkling in his eyes. He nodded. The
medic ripped Sulu’s shirt open, baring his chest. The fabric parted beneath
David’s hands.
“Okay.
Now!”
He
moved quickly, sliding aside but continuing to breathe for the helm officer.
What was the count for [195] artificial respiration? Fifteen per minute?
He held Sulu’s head just beneath his jaw but still could feel no pulse.
The
medic plunged the needle down.
The
reaction was almost instantaneous. Sulu shuddered, and his clammy skin flushed.
David felt a pulse, thready and fast. Sulu gasped. David did not know what to
do, whether to stop or keep going.
The
medic took his shoulder. “It’s okay,” she said. “You can stop now.”
David
stopped. He could barely raise his head. He was dripping with sweat and
panting. But Sulu was breathing on his own.
“Good
work,” the medic said.
“How is
he?” Kirk said without taking his gaze off the viewscreen.
“Can’t
tell yet,” the medic said. “He’s alive, thanks to his friend here.”
She
flung out a stretcher. It rippled, straightened, solidified. David staggered to
his feet and tried to help her get Sulu onto it. He was not a great deal of use
in lifting, because his arms were so tired they had gone numb. But once Sulu
was on the stretcher, David at least could guide it. While the medic started
working on Sulu’s burns, David pushed the stretcher to the turbo-lift and down
to sick bay.
Pavel
Chekov felt and heard the battle begin; he watched the flow of casualties start
and increase. He considered himself responsible for everything that had
happened. He tried to sit up, but Dr. McCoy had strapped him down—it was a
safety precaution, not restraint, and as the ship rocked and shuddered around
him he freed his arms and fumbled for the fastenings. Sick bay spun around him;
he had to close his eyes again to get his balance.
For a
moment, he lay back. What possible use could he be on the bridge, half-crippled
and sick?
[196] Then they brought
Mr. Sulu in. Dr. Chapel read his life signs grimly, looked at his hands, and
cursed under her breath.
Chekov
ripped off the restraining straps and forced himself to stand. In the
confusion, no one noticed him get up; or if they did, they did not try to make
him lie down again.
His
hearing was still one-sided. At the entrance to sick bay, he lost his balance
and kept from falling only by grabbing the doorjamb.
Someone
took him by the shoulder.
“You’d
better lie down again,” David Marcus said. Chekov remembered him vaguely and
dimly from the painful haze of Regulus I.
“I
can’t,” Chekov said. “I must get to bridge—Mr. Sulu—”
“Hey,
look—”
“Pozhalusta,”
Chekov said, “help me. Bozhe
moi! The ship has nothing but children on its crew!”
David
hesitated. Chekov wondered if he would have to try to fight him to get out of
sick bay. David slung Chekov’s arm across his shoulder and helped him toward
the lift.
Chekov
would never have made it to the bridge without Marcus’s help. Even
half-supported, he felt like he was struggling through a whirlpool.
As the
lift doors opened, Chekov drew away from David Marcus: Admiral Kirk would send
him back if he could not even make it to the bridge on his own feet. David
seemed to understand, and let him go without argument.
Chekov
walked carefully across the upper level, took a deep breath, and managed to
navigate the stairs without falling. At Kirk’s elbow, he stopped.
“Sir,
could you use another hand?”
Kirk
glanced at him, startled. Then he smiled.
“Take
your place at the weapons console, Mr. Chekov.”
[197] “Thank you, sir.”
At the
science officer’s station, Mr. Spock tried to make something of the distorted
readings his sensors were receiving.
“Spock,
can you find him?”
“The
energy readings are sporadic and indeterminate, but they could indicate extreme
radial acceleration under full impulse power. Port side, aft.”
“He
won’t stop now,” Kirk said. “He’s followed me this far; he’ll be back. But
where the hell from?”
Spock
considered.
“Admiral,”
he said. “Khan’s intelligence cannot make up for his lack of experience. All
the maneuvering Reliant has done, bold though it may be, has occurred in
a single plane. He takes advantage neither of the full abilities of his ship
nor of the possibilities inherent in three degrees of freedom.”
Kirk
glanced back at him and grinned. “A masterful analysis, Mr. Spock. Lieutenant
Saavik, all stop.”
Saavik
decelerated the ship to zero relative motion.
“All
stop, sir.”
“Full
thrust ninety degrees from our previous course: straight down.”
“Aye,
sir.”
“Mr.
Chekov, stand by photon torpedoes.”
“Aye,
sir.”
The Enterprise
plunged downward into the shadows of the nebula.
Khan
sought any sign of Kirk in the mangled image on his viewscreen. All around him
lay the wreckage of the bridge and the bodies of his people. A few moaned,
still alive, but he no longer cared. This was a battle to the death. He would
be glad to die if he took James Kirk with him.
He
scanned the space surrounding Reliant, but found nothing. Nothing at
all—only the impenetrable energy fields of the nebula.
[198] “Where is Kirk?”
he cried. “Where in the land of Hades is he?”
Nothing,
no one, replied.
The Enterprise
hovered within the Mutara Nebula’s great dustcloud. The ship was blind and
deaf. Jim Kirk forced himself to sit quiet and relaxed as if nothing worried
him. It was the biggest act of his life. The ship was badly hurt; every score
of Reliant’s weapons had touched him as painfully as any physical blow.
And in truth, he had no idea what Khan would try next. He could only estimate,
and guess, and hope.
At the
helm, Saavik glanced at him with a questioning expression.
“Hold
steady, Lieutenant,” he said.
She
nodded once and turned back to her position. Chekov never moved. He hunched
over Sulu’s weapons console. He had looked terrible when he came in, pale and
sick and dizzy. But the truth was Kirk needed him; the ship needed him. With
Sum gone—Kirk glanced around the bridge and saw that David had returned. He
gestured to him. The young man came down the stairs and stopped beside the captain’s
seat.
“How’s
Sulu?”
“They
don’t know yet,” David said. “His hands are a mess—he’ll be in therapy for a
while. If he lives. They wouldn’t say. He might have brain damage.”
“You
got to him fast,” Jim said. “He’d be dead if you hadn’t. You gave him the one
chance he had. Whatever happens—David, I’m proud of you.”
To
Jim’s surprise and shock, David reacted with a curse.
“What
the hell right have you got to be proud of me?” he said angrily.
He
stormed back to the upper level of the bridge and stood scowling with his arms
folded across his chest. He ignored Jim Kirk’s gaze.
Jim
turned back to the viewscreen, angry and hurt.
[199] “Stand by photon
torpedoes,” he snapped at Chekov.
“Photon
torpedoes ready, sir.”
The
interchange with David had broken Jim’s concentration. He felt irritated and
foolish to have tried to make peace and friends with the boy and to have been
so thoroughly rebuffed. It served him right for thinking about personal matters
when the ship was in danger. He forced himself back to the problem at hand.
“Lieutenant
Saavik.”
“Aye,
sir.”
He had
been tempted to say, “Dive! dive! dive!” earlier, but refrained; now he kept
himself from ordering the young Vulcan officer to let the ship surface. This
was not, after all, a submarine, and they were not hunting an enemy U-boat.
Too
many old novels, Jim, he thought.
If he
failed, his crew would have not a comforting sea to receive them, but
unforgiving vacuum filled with nothing but radiation.
“Accelerate.
Full impulse power at course zero and plus ninety. Just until the sensors
clear.” That would get them out of the worst of the dust. “Then all stop.”
“Aye,
sir,” she said, and executed the command.
The
artificial gravity was holding, but at a level tentative enough that Kirk could
feel the acceleration: straight up. The viewscreen was still dead, but as they
rose out of the gas cloud it slowly cleared.
The
roiling mass of dust and gases draped away from Jim Kirk’s ship like the sea
around the flanks of a huge ocean mammal. They rose: and Reliant lay
full ahead.
Bull’s-eye!
Jim Kirk thought.
“Mr.
Chekov—!”
“Torpedoes
ready, sir!”
“Fire!”
Chekov
fired.
The
torpedoes streaked away.
In the
pure silence of hard vacuum, the torpedoes [200]
touched the enemy ship and exploded. Reliant’s starboard engine nacelle
collapsed, spun, tumbled, and gracefully, quietly, exploded.
Reliant
responded not at all. The
ship drifted steady on its course.
“Cease
fire,” Kirk said. “Look sharp.”
The
bridge crew reacted with silence, watching, waiting. Too soon to be certain.
...
“Match
course, Lieutenant,” Kirk said to Saavik.
She
obeyed: the Enterprise followed Reliant, maneuvering slightly
till their relative speeds were zero, and Reliant appeared dead in
space.
“Our
power levels are extremely low, sir,” Lieutenant Saavik said.
Kirk switched
the intercom to the engine room. “Mr. Scott, how long before you can get the
mains back on-line?”
“At
least ten minutes, sir, I canna send anyone in till after decontamination.”
Kirk
glowered and snapped the channel off. “Commander Uhura, send to Commander, Reliant:
Prepare to be boarded.”
“Aye,
sir.”
Her
long, fine hands moved on her instruments.
“Commander,
Reliant, this is U.S.S. Enterprise. Surrender and stand by for
boarding. I repeat: Stand by for boarding.”
Lying
on the deck of the bridge of Reliant, Khan Singh heard the triumph of
the Enterprise communications officer. He groaned and forced himself to
sit up. He would not accept defeat. Blood ran down the side of his face, and
his right arm was shattered. He could see the bone protruding from his forearm.
He felt the pain and accepted it, then put it aside. Shock intoxicated him and
put a fine edge on his anger.
He
crawled to his feet. His crushed arm flopped against his side. He picked up his
useless right hand and thrust it beneath his belt, holding it steady and out of
his way.
[201] “No, Kirk,” he
whispered. He smiled. “Our game is not over yet. I am not quite prepared to
concede.”
“Reliant,
stand by and prepare for boarding.” The viewscreen was dead, but Khan did not
need it to know that the Enterprise was approaching him, secure and
arrogant in the certainty of its conquest.
Khan
staggered from the bridge, toward the storage bay. ...
Laughing.
Back on
the Enterprise, Mr. Spock kept a close eye on his instruments and waited
for a reply from Reliant. Perhaps Khan had been killed in the final
barrage. Perhaps.
Spock
did not believe it. The engines, both impulse and warp, were destroyed, and the
bridge had been damaged, but he saw no evidence of a break in the hull in that
area.
“Enterprise
to Reliant,” Commander
Uhura said again. “You are to surrender your vessel and prepare for boarding by
order of Admiral James T. Kirk, Starfleet General Command.”
Nothing.
“I’m
sorry, sir,” Uhura said. “No response.”
Kirk
stood up. “We’ll beam aboard. Alert the transporter room.”
Spock’s
attention was drawn to an odd energy pattern on one of his sensors. He focused
and traced it: Reliant.
“Admiral,
Reliant is emitting the wave form of an energy source I have never
before encountered.”
David
Marcus, from his place near the turbo-lift, frowned and hurried to the science
officer’s station. He leaned over to look at Spock’s sensor.
“My God
in heaven,” he said.
Spock
raised one eyebrow.
“It’s
the Genesis wave!” Marcus said.
“What?”
Marcus
turned toward Admiral Kirk. His face paled.
[202] “Khan has
Genesis!” David Marcus said. “He’s armed it! It’s building up to detonation!”
“How
long—?”
“If he
kept our programming ... four minutes.”
“Shit,”
Kirk said. He leaped up the stairs and slammed his hand against the turbo-lift
controls. “We can beam aboard and stop it! Mr. Spock—”
“You
can’t stop it!” David cried. “Once it’s started there’s no turning back!”
Kirk
rushed back to his place and stabbed the intercom buttons.
“Scotty!”
Kirk
received no answer but static. He spoke anyway.
“Scotty,
I need warp speed in three minutes or we’ve had it!”
The
intercom crackled. No reply.
Spock
watched all that occurred. He knew what Mr. Scott would say if he could even be
reached: Decontamination would take at least another six minutes, and no human
being would, last long enough in the radiation flux even to begin the
jury-rigging necessary to bring main engines on-line. He knew, from studying
the Marcuses’ data, the incredible velocity of the Genesis wave, and he knew
the speed his ship could go under damaged impulse engines. It was no match.
“Scotty!”
Spock
made a decision.
“Saavik!”
Kirk said. “Get us out of here, full impulse power!”
“Aye,
sir.” She was prepared: at the order, the Enterprise spun one hundred
eighty degrees in place and crawled away from Reliant.
Spock
permitted himself a moment of pride. Saavik would make a fine officer: she
would fulfill the potential he had detected in the filthy, barbarous,
half-breed Hellguard child. He wished he would be able to guide her a little further.
[203] But this way, she
would be freer to find her own path.
When
the doors to the turbo-lift opened, responding to Jim Kirk’s abandoned order,
Spock stepped inside.
Khan
Singh felt hot blood flowing from his temple, from his arm, inside his body. He
coughed blood and spat it out. His cold hand caressed the Genesis torpedo. It
was armed and ready.
He
staggered and fell to his knees.
“No,”
he said. “No, I will not die here. ...”
He
stumbled into the turbo-lift. It pressed upward beneath him. When it reached
the bridge, he had to crawl to leave it. He collapsed finally at the top of the
stairs, but he could see the viewscreen.
The Enterprise
crept away at a painfully slow speed. Khan began to laugh. The pain caught
up to him, and he coughed. He was bleeding into his lungs, into his belly. He
did not have much time. But it would be enough.
“You
cannot escape me, James Kirk,” he murmured. “Hades has taken me, but from his
heart I stab thee. ...”
He
watched the Enterprise, turned tail and fleeing, terrified. He laughed.
Agony
took him, and he cried.
“For
hate’s sake ... I spit my last breath at thee. ...”
Joachim’s
body lay only an arm’s length from him. His wife’s body, dust, lay half a
light-year distant. Soon neither space nor time would have any meaning, and he
would join his love and his friend.
He
crawled to Joachim, reached out, and touched his rigid hand.
Darkness
enclosed his spirit.
Spock
entered the engine room. Scarlet warning lights flashed through it, bloodying
the forms of its [204] crew.
Dr. McCoy knelt in the middle of the main chamber, trying to save the life of
an injured crew member.
The
rest of the crew struggled to put more power to the impulse engines,
knowing—they must know—that their efforts were useless. When the Genesis
wave began, it would spread until it reached hard vacuum, engulfing and
degrading every atom of matter within the Mutara Nebula, gas or solid, living
or dead.
Without
speaking or acknowledging his presence, Spock strode past Dr. McCoy to the main
reactor room. He touched the override control.
“Are
you out of your Vulcan mind?”
McCoy
grabbed his shoulder and dragged him around by sheer force of will, for
certainly the doctor’s strength could not match Spock’s.
Without
replying, Spock looked at the doctor. He felt detached from everything: from
the ship, from their peril, from the universe itself.
“No
human can tolerate the radiation in there!” McCoy cried.
“But
Doctor,” Spock said, feeling a certain terribly un-Vulcan affection for the man
who opposed him, “you yourself are fond of pointing out that I am not human.”
“You
can’t go in there, Spock!”
Spock
smiled at Dr. McCoy. He was so completely and comfortingly predictable. Spock
could go through their conversation in his mind and know everything the doctor
would say, everything he himself would reply. The result was the same.
“I
regret there is no time for logical argument, Doctor,” he said. “I have enjoyed
our conversations in the past.”
With
that peculiarly human atavistic instinct for danger, McCoy drew back, knowing
what he planned. But Spock was too quick for him. His fingers found the nerve
in the junction of McCoy’s neck and shoulder. He exerted pressure. McCoy’s eyes
rolled back, and he [205] collapsed. Spock caught him and lowered him
gently to the deck.
“You have
been a worthy opponent and friend,” he said.
He
finished the coding for the manual override of the reactor room and stepped
into the screaming radiation flux.
At
first it was quite pleasant, like sunlight. Spock moved toward the reactor. The
radiation increased, and his body interpreted it as heat.
He
reached toward the damping rods. An aura of radiation haloed his hands; the
rays spread forward, outward, even back, penetrating his body. He could see his
own blood vessels, his bones. It was most fascinating.
As he
worked, he recalled the events in his life that had given him intellectual, and
even—he could admit it now, and who was to despise him?—emotional pleasure.
Fragments of music—Respighi, Q’orn, Chalmers—and particular insights in physics
and mathematics. Bits of friendship, and even love, which he never could
acknowledge.
He drew
the rods from their clamps; the radiation caressed him like a betraying lover.
He
accepted the regrets of his life, the expectations he had never been able to
fulfill: neither Vulcan nor human, he was unable to satisfy either part of his
heritage. Perhaps his uniqueness compensated in some small way. He had tried to
convey that possibility to Saavik, who must face and overcome the same trials.
Radiation
sang in his ears, almost blocking the cries of Mr. Scott and Dr. McCoy, on the
other side of the radiation-proof glass, shrieking at him to come out, come
out.
“Captain,
please—!” Scott screamed.
The
only real captain of the Enterprise was and ever had been James Kirk.
Spock had kept the ship in trust; but now it was time to return it to its true
master.
Spock
could feel the very cells of his body [206]
succumbing to the radiation. He wiped the perspiration from his face and left a
smear of dark blood on his sleeve. Mottled hematomata spread across his hands.
Pain
crept from his nerve endings to his backbone, toward his mind, and he could no
longer hold it distant.
He
flexed his fingers around the manual control that would bring the main engines
back into use. He strained against it, and the wheel began to turn. His
tortured bones and flesh opposed the control under which he held himself. He
could feel his skin disintegrating against the smooth metal, which grew slick
with his blood.
“Dear
God, Spock, get out of there, man!” McCoy pounded on the window.
Spock
smiled to himself. It was far too late.
The
main engines groaned and protested, and burst back into use.
The
bridge main viewscreen showed Reliant receding, but slowly, so slowly.
“Time!”
Jim Kirk said again. It could be no more than a minute since last he had asked:
they had a few seconds left and no more.
“Three
minutes, thirty seconds,” Saavik said.
“Distance
from Reliant.”
“Four
hundred kilometers,” Chekov said.
Jim
glanced at David. Meeting his gaze, his son shook his head.
“Main
engines on-line!” Chekov shouted.
“Bless
you, Scotty,” Kirk said. “Saavik—go!”
She
pushed the ship into warp speed without any proper preparation.
Reliant
dwindled to a speck in the
viewscreen.
The
speck became light.
The
Genesis wave hurtled toward them through the nebular dust, dissolving
everything in its path. Jim watched, his hands clenched. Saavik forced one more
warp factor out of the straining ship, and it plunged from the nebula into deep
space.
[207] The huge collapsed
cloud began to spiral around the nexus that had been Reliant. It quickly
coalesced, shrinking behind them. Kirk watched, awed.
“Reduce
speed,” he said softly.
Saavik
complied. The new planet stabilized in their sight.
The
turbo-lift doors opened, and Carol Marcus came onto the bridge. She did not
speak.
Jim
heard her, turned, reached toward her.
“Carol,
my God, look at it. ...” It was so beautiful it made him want to cry.
Carol
took his hand.
Kirk
opened a channel to the engine room.
“Well
done, Scotty,” he said.
He
glanced over his shoulder at the science officer’s station.
“Spock—”
He
stopped, looked around the bridge, and frowned.
“Where’s
Spock?”
In
front of him, Saavik shuddered. Her shoulders slumped. She did not face him.
“He
left,” she whispered. “He went ... to the engine room.” She covered her face
with her hands.
Kirk
stared at her, horrified.
“Jim!”
McCoy’s voice was harsh and intense over the intercom. “I’m in the engine room.
Get down here. Jim—hurry!”
For the
first time since he began his pursuit of Khan Singh, James Kirk felt cold fear.
“Saavik,
take the conn!”
He
sprinted for the lift.
Jim Kirk pounded down the corridors of his ship. They had
never seemed so long, so cold.
He
caught himself against the entryway of the engine room. It was a shambles: every
emergency light flashing, sirens wailing, injured crew members moaning as the
medical team tended to them.
He
finally managed to catch his breath.
“Spock—?”
Scott
and McCoy, near the impenetrable glass panels of the reactor room, turned
toward him with horror in their faces. He understood instantly what had
happened, what Spock had done. Jim forced his way past them to the hatch
control. Scott dragged him away.
“Ye
canna do it, sir, the radiation level—”
“He’ll
die!”
McCoy
grabbed his shoulders. “He’s dead, Jim. He’s already dead.”
“Oh,
God. ...”
Jim
pressed against the heavy glass window, shielding away reflections and light
with his arms and hands.
On his
hands and knees, trying to stand up, Mr. Spock hunched beside the door.
“Spock!”
Spock
barely raised his head, hearing Jim’s voice through the thick panel. He reached
for the intercom, his hand bloody and shaking.
“Spock.
...” Jim said softly.
“The
ship ... ?” His face was horribly burned, and [209] the pain in his voice
made Jim want to scream with grief.
“Out of
danger, out of the Genesis wave. Thanks to you, Spock.”
Spock
fought for breath.
“Spock,
damn, oh, damn—”
“Don’t
grieve. The good of the many ...”
“...
outweighs the good of the few,” Kirk whispered. But found he no longer believed
it; or even if he did, he did not care. Not this time.
“Or the
one.” Spock dragged himself to his feet, and pressed his bleeding hand against
the glass.
Jim
matched it with his own, as if somehow he could touch Spock’s mind through the
glass, take some of his pain upon himself, give his friend some of his own
strength. But he could not even touch him.
“Don’t
... grieve. ...” Spock said again. “It had to be done. I alone could do it.
Therefore it was logical. ...”
Damn
your logic, Spock, Jim thought. Tears spilled down his face. He could barely
see.
“I
never faced Kobayashi Maru,” Spock said. His voice was failing;
he had to stop and draw in a long shuddering breath before he could continue.
“I wondered what my response would be. Not ... I fear ... an original solution.
...”
“Spock!”
Saavik’s
voice broke in over the intercom.
“Captain,
the Genesis world is forming. Mr. Spock, it’s so beautiful—”
Infuriated,
Kirk slammed the channel closed, cutting off Saavik’s voice. But Spock nodded,
his eyes closed, and perhaps, just a little, he smiled.
“Jim,”
he said, “I have been, and will be, your friend. I am grateful for that. Live
long, and prosper. ...”
His
long fingers clenched into seared claws; the agony of the assault of radiation
overcame him. He fell.
[210] “Spock!” Jim cried.
He pounded the glass with his fists. “Oh, God, no ... !”
McCoy
tried to make him leave. Jim snarled and thrust him violently away. He hunched
against the window, his mind crying denial and disbelief.
Much
later that night, Lieutenant Saavik moved silently through the dim corridors of
the Enterprise. She saw no one: only a few crew members remained on
duty, forced to grapple with their exhaustion.
When
she reached the stasis room, she paused, reluctant to enter. She drew a deep
breath and went into the darkness.
Far too
many of the stasis boxes radiated the faint blue glow that showed they were in
operation. Protected by the stasis fields, the body of Peter Preston and the
bodies of the other people who had died on this mission waited to be returned to
their families.
But
Captain Spock’s will stated that he was not to be taken to Vulcan; his wishes
would be respected.
His
sealed coffin stood in the middle of the chamber. Saavik laid one hand against
its sleek side. Her grief was so intense that she could react with neither rage
nor tears.
In the
morning, James Kirk had decreed, Spock’s body would be consigned to space and
to a fast-decaying orbit around the Genesis world, where it would burn in the
atmosphere to ashes, to nothing.
Saavik
sat cross-legged in the corner, rested her hands on her knees, and closed her
eyes. She could not have explained to anyone why she was here, for her reason
was irrational.
On
Hellguard, if someone died at night and was not watched, their body would be
gone by morning, stripped by scavengers and torn to bits by animals. Seldom was
anyone buried. Saavik had never cared enough about anyone on Hellguard to
remain with them through the night.
Captain
Spock and Peter Preston did not need a [211]
guard, not here on the Enterprise.
But this gesture was the only one she could make to them, the only two
people she had ever cared about in the universe.
She
stayed.
She
hoped Spock had heard her before he died. She had wanted him to know that
Genesis worked, partly because he had respected the people who built it, so
many of whom had died to protect it, but primarily because its formation meant
his sacrifice had been meaningful. The creation was the result of destruction,
and the Enterprise and all its crew would have been caught up in that
instant’s cataclysm had Spock failed to act as he did. Saavik had wanted Spock
to know the destruction had ended, and that creation had begun.
She
knew Admiral Kirk misunderstood what she had done, and why. But Saavik’s
essential inner core had dictated her actions then, as it did now. Admiral
Kirk’s opinion was of no significance.
Tears
slid down Saavik’s face.
Yet she
remained free of the madness. Rage was absent from her sorrow. She hoped,
someday, that she might understand why. Someday.
The
hours passed, and Saavik let her thoughts wander. She remembered hiding,
shivering and hungry, hoping to steal a piece of bread or a discarded shred of
warming-fabric, outside the Vulcan exploration party’s Hellguard camp. Saavik
had spied on the Vulcans as they argued till dawn, with unvarying courtesy and
considerable venom, about the Romulans’ castoffs, particularly the half-breed
children.
That
was the first time Saavik had had any idea who and what she was. Only Spock had
given her the potential for something more.
When,
during the final battle with Khan Singh, Saavik realized Spock had left the
bridge, she knew what he planned and what the result would be. She had
been a moment away from trying to stop him.
Only
the control he had taught her had kept her at her post, because it was her
duty. She had regretted her [212] action—her failure
to act—ever since. In death Spock affected all those around him, just as he had
in life. Someone should have taken his place whose passing no one would lament.
She
might have been able to stop him: though his experience was enormously greater,
Saavik was younger than he, and faster.
If she had
been able to stop him, would she have had the courage to take his place?
She wanted to believe she would have; for had she not, everyone on the ship
would be dead, dissolved into sub-elementary particles and reformed into the
substance of the Genesis world.
Saavik
had no belief in soul or afterlife. She had read various philosophies; she
accepted none. A person died; scavengers destroyed the body. That was all.
Yet as
the hours passed and her concentration deepened, her feeling that somehow,
somewhere, Spock’s consciousness retained some of its integrity grew stronger.
“Spock,”
she said aloud, “can you see what has happened? Are you there? Are you
anywhere? A world has formed; the Genesis wave is still resonating within the
nebula, forming a new sun to give the world light and sustain its life. Soon
the wave will die away, and the universe will have another star system. But it
will be one among millions, one among billions, and you taught me to value
uniqueness. Your uniqueness is gone.”
Suddenly
she opened her eyes. She thought, for a moment, she had heard something, some
reply—
Saavik
shook her head. The strange hours before morning could give one any mad
thought.
Mr.
Sulu woke slowly, coming to consciousness in the dim night illumination of sick
bay. He had a raging headache, he felt as if someone were sitting on his chest,
and his hands hurt. He tried to get up.
A
moment later, Dr. Chapel was at his side. She made him lie down again.
[213] “What happened?”
His voice came out a hoarse croak. He tried to clear his throat. “Why—”
“The
oxygen dries your throat,” Dr. Chapel said. “It will go away.” She held a glass
so he could take a sip of water.
“We’ve
been pretty worried about you,” she said. “You’re all right, though;
everything’s going to be all right.”
He
tried to touch the sore spot in the middle of his chest, but the palms of his
hands were covered with pseudoskin, and he could not feel anything. He realized
what the soreness must be. He frowned.
“Did I
have to be resuscitated?” he asked.
Chapel
nodded. “David Marcus saved your life.”
“I
don’t remember. ...”
“You
shouldn’t expect to. You were nearly electrocuted. A little memory loss is normal.
Your brain scan is fine.”
“What
about Khan?”
“Dead.”
She stood up. “Go back to sleep, Hikaru.”
He
reached out: his hands were too stiff to stop her, but she paused.
“Chris,”
he said, “something more is wrong. What is it? Please.”
“Mr.
Spock,” she said very softly.
“Spock—!
What—?”
“He’s
dead.”
“Oh,
gods. ...”
Chris
Chapel started to cry. She hurried away.
Sulu
stayed where he was, stunned with disbelief.
Jim
Kirk sat alone in the dark of his cabin. He had not moved in hours; his mind
kept turning in circles, smaller and smaller, tighter and tighter.
Someone
knocked on his door.
He did
not answer.
A
pause. The knock again, a little louder.
“What
do you want?” he cried. “Leave me alone!”
The
door opened, and Carol stood silhouetted in the [214] light from the corridor outside. She came in and closed the door.
“No,
Jim,” she said. “I won’t leave you alone. Not this time.” She knelt before him
and took his hands in hers.
He
slumped down; his forehead rested on their clasped hands.
“Carol,
I just don’t ... I keep thinking, there must be something I could have done,
that I should have done—” He shuddered and caught his breath, righting the
tears.
“I
know,” Carol said. “Oh, Jim, I know.” She put her arms around him. As Jim had
held her when she grieved for her friends, she held him.
When he
slipped into an exhausted, troubled sleep, she eased him down on the couch,
took off his boots, and covered him with a blanket from his bed. She kissed him
lightly. Then, since there was nothing else she could do for him, she did leave
him alone.
When
morning came, Saavik rose smoothly from her place in the corner of the stasis
room. She had found a measure of serenity in her vigil, a counterweight to her
grief. She bid a final farewell to her teacher and to her student, then left
the stasis room. She had many duties to take care of, duties to the ship and to
Mr. Spock.
The
ship’s company assembled, in full dress, at 0800 hours. Saavik took her place
at the torpedo guidance console and programmed in the course she had selected.
Accompanied
by Carol and David Marcus and Dr. McCoy, Admiral Kirk came in last.
The
ship’s veterans, the people who had known Mr. Spock best, stood together in a
small group: Mr. Sulu, Commander Uhura, Dr. Chapel, Mr. Chekov, Mr. Scott. They
all watched the admiral, who looked tired and drawn. He stood before the crew
of the Enterprise, staring at the deck, not speaking.
[215] He took a deep
breath, squared his shoulders, and faced them.
“We
have assembled here,” he said, “in accordance with Starfleet traditions, to pay
final respects to one of our own. To honor our dead ...” He paused a long time.
“... and to grieve for a beloved comrade who gave his life in place of ours. He
did not think his sacrifice a vain or empty one, and we cannot question his choice,
in these proceedings.
“He
died in the shadow of a new world, a world he had hoped to see. He lived just
long enough to know it had come into being.”
Beside
Admiral Kirk, Dr. McCoy tried to keep from breaking down, but failed. He stared
straight ahead, with tears spilling down his cheeks.
“Of my
friend,” Admiral Kirk said, “I can only say that of all the souls I have
encountered his was—” he looked from face to face around the company of old
friends, new ones, strangers; he saw Dr. McCoy crying, “—the most human.”
Admiral
Kirk’s voice faltered. He paused a moment, tried to continue, but could not go
on. “Lieutenant Saavik,” he said softly.
Saavik
armed the torpedo guidance control with the course she had so carefully worked
out, and moved forward.
“We embrace
the memory of our brother, our teacher.” Her words were inadequate, and she
knew it. “With love, we commit his body to the depths of space.”
Captain
Sulu moved from the line. “Honors: hut.”
The
ship’s company saluted. Mr. Scott began to play his strange musical instrument.
It filled the chamber with a plaintive wail, a dirge that was all too
appropriate.
The
pallbearers lifted Spock’s black coffin into the launching chamber. It hummed
closed, and the arming lock snapped into place.
[216] Saavik nodded an
order to the torpedo officer. He fired the missile.
With a
great roar of igniting propellant, the chamber reverberated. The bagpipes
stopped. Silence, eerie and complete, settled over the room. The company
watched the dark torpedo streak away against the silver-blue shimmer of the new
world, until the coffin shrank and vanished.
Sulu
waited; then said, “Return: hut.”
Saavik
and the rest returned to attention.
“Lieutenant,”
the admiral said.
“Yes,
sir.”
“The
watch is yours,” he said quietly. “Set a course for Alpha Ceti V to pick up Reliant’s
survivors.”
“Aye,
sir.”
“I’ll
be in my quarters. But unless it’s an emergency ...”
“Understood,
sir.”
“Dismiss
the company.”
He
started out of the room. He saw Carol, but he could not say to her what he
wanted to—not here, not now; he saw David, watching him intently. The young man
took a step toward him.
Jim
Kirk turned on his heel and left.
Saavik
dismissed the company. She gazed one last time at the new planet.
“Lieutenant—”
She
turned. David Marcus had hung back from the others, waiting for her.
“Yes,
Dr. Marcus?”
“Can we
stop the formality? My name’s David. Can I call you Saavik?”
“If you
wish.”
“I
wanted to tell you that I’m sorry about Mr. Spock.”
“I,
too,” she said.
“When
we talked the other day—I could tell how [217]
much you cared about him. I’m sorry it sounded like I was insulting him. I
didn’t mean it that way. To him or to you.”
“I
know,” she said. “I was very harsh to you, and I regret it. Starfleet has
brought you only grief and tragedy. ...”
David,
too, glanced at the new planet, which his friends on Spacelab had helped to
design.
“Yeah,”
he said softly. “I’ll miss those folks—a lot. It was such a damned
waste. ...”
“They
sacrificed themselves for your life, as Spock gave himself for us. When I took
the Kobayashi Maru test—” she paused to see if David remembered their
conversation back on Regulus I; he nodded, “—Admiral Kirk told me that the way
one faces death is at least as important as how one faces life.”
David
looked thoughtful and glanced the way James Kirk had gone, but of course his
father had long since departed.
“Do you
believe, now, that he is your father?” Saavik asked.
He
started. “No. Maybe. I don’t know.”
Saavik
smiled. “We perhaps have something in common, David. Do you remember what you
said to him?”
“When?”
“When
you tried to kill him. You called him, if my memory serves me properly, a ‘dumb
bastard.’ ”
“I
guess I did. So?”
“He is
not—to my knowledge—a bastard. But I am. And if Admiral Kirk is your
father, then I believe the terminology, in its traditional sense, fits you as
well.”
He
stared at her for a moment, then laughed. “I’m beginning to think the ‘dumb’
part fits me even better.”
He
reached out quickly and touched her hand.
“I
really want to talk to you some more,” he said suddenly. “But there’s something
I have to do first.”
“I must
return to the bridge,” Saavik said. “It is my watch.”
[218] “Later on—can I
buy you a cup of coffee?”
“That
would be difficult: one cannot buy anything on board the Enterprise.”
“Sorry.
That was kind of a joke.”
“Oh,”
Saavik said, not understanding.
“I just
meant, can we get together in a while? When you’re free?”
“I
would like that,” Saavik said, rather surprised at her own reply and
remembering what Mr. Spock had said about making her own choices.
“Great.
See you soon.”
He
hurried down the corridor, and Saavik returned to the bridge.
The
admiral closed the door of his cabin behind him and leaned against it,
desperately grateful that the ceremony was over. He wondered what Spock would
have thought of it all: the ritual, the speeches. ... He would have said it was
illogical, no doubt.
Jim
Kirk unfastened his dress jacket, pulled it off, and pitched it angrily across
the room. He dragged a bottle of brandy off the shelf and poured himself a
shot. He glared at the amber liquor for a while, then shoved it away.
Too
many ghosts hovered around him, and he did not want to draw them any closer by
lowering his defenses with alcohol. He flung himself down on the couch. The
blanket Carol had tucked around him the night before lay crumpled on the floor.
He
smelled the pleasant, musty odor of old paper. He tried to ignore it, failed,
and reached for the book Spock had given him. It was heavy and solid in his
hands, the leather binding a little scuffed, the cut edges of the pages softly
rough in his hands. Jim let it fall open. The print blurred.
He dug
into his pockets for his glasses. When he finally found them, one of the lenses
was shattered. Jim stared at the cracked, spidery pattern.
[219] “Damn!” he said.
“Damn—” He laid the book very carefully on the table; he laid the glasses,
half-folded, on top of it.
He
covered his eyes.
The
door chimed. At first he did not move; then he sat up, rubbed his face with
both hands, and cleared his throat.
“Yes,”
he said. “Come.”
The
door opened. David Marcus came in, and the door slid closed behind him. Jim
stood up, but then he had nowhere to go.
“Look,
I don’t mean to intrude—” David said.
“Uh,
no, that’s all right, it’s just that I ought to be on the bridge.”
David
let him pass, but before Jim got to the door his son said, “Are you running
away from me?”
Jim
stopped and faced David again.
“Yes,”
he said. “I guess I am.” He gestured for him to sit. David sat on the couch,
and Jim sat in the chair angled toward it. They looked at each other
uncomfortably for a while.
“Would
you like a drink?” Jim asked.
David
glanced at the abandoned snifter of brandy on the table; Jim realized how odd
it must look.
“No,”
David said. “But thanks, anyway.”
Jim
tried to think of something to say to the stranger in his sitting room.
“I’m
not exactly what you expected, am I?” David said.
“I
didn’t expect anything,” Jim told him ruefully.
David’s
grin was crooked, a little embarrassed. “That makes two of us.” His grin faded.
“Are you okay?”
“What
do you mean?”
“Lieutenant
Saavik was right. ... You’ve never faced death.”
“Not
like this,” Jim admitted reluctantly. “I never faced it—I cheated it; I played
a trick and felt proud of [220] myself for it and
got rewarded for my ingenuity.” He rubbed his eyes with one hand. “I know nothing,”
he said.
“You
told Saavik that how we face death is at least as important as how we face
life.”
Jim
frowned. “How do you know that?”
“She
told me.”
“It was
just words.”
“Maybe
you ought to listen to them.”
“I’m
trying, David.”
“So am
I. The people who died on Spacelab were friends of mine.”
“I
know,” Jim said. “David, I’m truly sorry.”
The
uncomfortable silence crept over them again. David stood up.
“I want
to apologize,” he said. “I misjudged you. And yesterday, when you tried to
thank me—” He shrugged, embarrassed. “I’m sorry.”
“No,”
Jim said. “You were perfectly correct. Being proud of someone is like taking
some of the credit for what they do or how they act. I have no right to take
any of the credit for you.”
He,
too, stood up, as David appeared to be leaving.
“Then
maybe I shouldn’t—” David stopped. Then he said, very fast, “What I really came
here ‘to say is that I’m proud—proud to be your son.”
Jim was
too startled to reply. David shrugged and strode toward the door.
“David—”
The
young man swung abruptly back. “What?” he said with a harsh note in his voice.
Jim
grabbed him and hugged him hard. After a moment, David returned the embrace.
On the bridge of the Enterprise, Lieutenant Saavik
checked their course and prepared for warp speed. The viewscreen showed the
Genesis world slowly shrinking behind them. Dr. McCoy and Dr. Marcus, senior,
watched it and spoke together in low tones. Saavik worked at concentrating hard
enough not to notice what they were saying. They were discussing the admiral,
and it was quite clearly intended to be a private conversation.
The
bridge doors opened. Saavik, in the captain’s chair, glanced around. She stood
up.
“Admiral
on the bridge!”
“At
ease,” Jim Kirk said quickly. David Marcus followed him out of the turbo-lift.
Dr.
McCoy and Carol Marcus glanced at each other. McCoy raised one eyebrow, and
Carol gave him a quick smile.
“Hello,
Bones,” Kirk said. “Hi, Carol. ...” He took her hand and squeezed it gently.
“On
course to Alpha Ceti, Admiral,” Saavik said. “All is well.”
“Good.”
He sat down. “Lieutenant, I believe you’re acquainted with my ... my son.”
“Yes,
sir.” She caught David’s gaze. He blushed a little; to Saavik’s surprise, she
did too.
“Would
you show him around, please?”
“Certainly,
sir.” She ushered David to the upper level of the bridge. When they reached the
science [222] officer’s station, she said to him, softly,
straight-faced, “I see that you did, after all, turn out to be a bastard.”
James
Kirk heard her and stared at her, shocked.
“That
is a ... ‘little joke,’ ” she said.
“A
private one,” David added. “And the operative word is ‘dumb.’ ”
Saavik
smiled; David laughed.
Jim
Kirk smiled, too, if a bit quizzically.
McCoy
leaned on the back of the captain’s chair, gazing at the viewscreen.
“Will
you look at that,” he said. “It’s incredible. Think they’ll name it after you,
Dr. Marcus?”
“Not if
I can help it,” she said. “We’ll name it. For our friends.”
Jim
thought about the book Spock had given him. He was remembering a line at the
end: “It is a far, far better thing that I do, than I have ever done; it is a
far, far better rest that I go to, than I have ever known.” He could not quite
imagine Spock’s questing spirit finally at rest.
Carol
put her hand on his. “Jim—?”
“I was
just thinking of something. ... Something Spock tried to tell me on my
birthday.”
“Jim,
are you okay?” McCoy asked. “How do you feel?”
“I feel
...” He thought for a moment. The grief would be with him a long time, but
there were a lot of good memories, too. “I feel young, Doctor, believe it or
not. Reborn. As young as Carol’s new world.”
He
glanced back at Lieutenant Saavik and at David.
“Set
our course for the second star to the right, Lieutenant. ‘The second star to
the right, and straight on till morning.’ ”
He was
ready to explain that that, too, was a little joke, but she surprised him.
[223] “Aye, sir.” Saavik
sounded not the least bit perplexed. She changed the viewscreen; it sparkled
into an image of the dense starfield ahead. “Warp factor three, Helm Officer.”
“Warp
three, aye.”
The Enterprise
leaped toward the distant stars.
(NOV, 2003)—Scanned, proofed, and formatted by Bibliophile.