“YOU HAVE
A WAY OF
ASKING
DIFFICULT QUESTIONS,”
SPOCK SAID
...
T’Pris nodded, quietly acknowledging the fact. “So my
parents said, and so said my husband. But now I am T’Sai T’Pris, Aduna
Sepel kiran. For humans, a widow. For Vulcans, free to choose a new
mate.” She turned to look directly at him. “Or a lover. That is a
difficult question to consider.”
“I am betrothed,” he said softly.
“But not wed,” she said as softly. “Not yet.”
Spock studied her for a long moment, considering what
he knew of her, what he felt for her, the surprising emotions she called up in
him. And he remembered what he knew of T’Pring, what he felt for her. The
only emotions T’Pring brought forth in him were duty and obligation laid on him
by others.
Slowly, he reached out his hand to T’Pris.
Lightly, gently, almost fearfully, their fingers
touched and caressed.
POCKET
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For Herb Wright
and David Gerrold,
with love and thanks
for being there.
THE SUNSET AT Ka’a Beach was glorious. Pink streamers and
golden-bottomed cumulus clouds floated serenely above the orange glow that
still tinged the distant dark horizon line of the sea. Thick tropical foliage
in a range of vibrant green tones cloaked the flank of the steep mountain that
rose behind the secluded beach, and several birds soared lazily on the gentle
breeze off the ocean. The waves were soft, surprising for a late December day;
and they crept in ever-extending laps farther and farther up the sand as the
golden sunset slowly began to fade.
Spock
ignored it all, sitting on the beach staring at his naked toes half-buried
under the yellow-white sand. His boots, socks carefully folded inside, stood
primly beside him. He had come to Ka’a for its quiet and its privacy, both of
which had been zealously protected by Kauai’s local government. The
northernmost gem of Hawaii’s necklace of islands maintained [10] its right to preserve its natural beauty and
had managed to do so for three centuries. Spock had been drawn to the Garden
Island by its extreme contrast to his home planet.
He
pulled his Starfleet jacket more closely around his shoulders as the wind off
the sea rose slightly. He disliked cold weather of any kind; indeed, his
personal quarters were always kept well above levels most humans appreciated.
Vulcan would never experience such a cool wind as the one that now ruffled his
hair. No lush vegetation ran such a riot of natural growth as on this tropical
island, untended by nurturing hands. There were wide parklands around every
Vulcan city and town, carefully maintained by squads of volunteer gardeners who
felt a truly civilized society must spend some time among the tranquillity of
growing things. But every tree, plant, vine, grass, and flower that grew in the
parklands had been either botanically created by careful mutation and
hybridization or imported from off-world sources.
Much of
his planet was desert, relieved only by the ragged hulks of mountain ranges and
the great blood-red oceans. Hardy succulents, gnarled and tiny-leaved isuke bushes,
and karanji—similar to Earth’s barrel cactus—constituted much of the
wild flora of Vulcan. The flame-leaved induku trees clustered in the
oases that had originally dotted the deserts—except, of course, on Vulcan’s
Forge. Nothing grew on the Forge, that immense blistering range
of hellish sand and rock into which no one—not even the most toughened and experienced
Vulcan—ventured willingly, or for long.
Spock
reflected briefly on his own taste of the Forge, [11] images flickering in his mind of the ritual kahs-wan ordeal
every Vulcan child underwent on his or her tenth birthday. It was a rite of
passage, an endurance and survival test of the individual’s strength, courage,
and logic. (A tiny, ironic smile tugged at the corners of Spock’s mouth.
Intelligence was a foregone conclusion for a Vulcan child.)
There
had been so many peculiar incidents tied up in his own kahs-wan that he
sometimes thought of it as the single most important turning point in his life.
He clearly remembered every event leading to and involved in his test,
including the fact that he had set off for it unauthorized, alone, and ahead of
schedule in order to prove himself a true Vulcan and not—not—an Earther.
He
recalled his stubbornly determined march into the Forge, an impulsive act
brought on by his father’s stern admonition that he must learn to behave
like a Vulcan. Spock had known Sarek was correct. Spock was subject to anger
then, often fighting with Vulcan boys who taunted him about his half-human
blood, and even giving way to tears of disappointment and frustration. It was a
weakness that would not be tolerated in an heir by his noble clan. Spock had
known he must conquer it, and forcing the kahs-wan had been his
solution—even though doing so in such an impulsive way was another
demonstration of his human heritage.
Fat old
I-chaya, his pet sehlat, had lumbered after him into the Forge, refusing
to turn back even after Spock had firmly ordered him to go home. And it had
been a good thing the loyal old beast had followed him [12] so relentlessly, because I-chaya had saved
Spock from an attacking le-matya. The aging sehlat had charged and
parried the le-matya’s attempt to get at the boy, until Speck’s cousin
miraculously appeared to finally subdue the great tigerlike beast with a
skillfully applied neck pinch.
His
cousin Selek had had an explanation for how he had discovered Spock had gone
alone into the Forge and how he had followed the boy. It had seemed plausible
at the time, and Spock had been desperate to get help for I-chaya, who had been
wounded by the le-matya’s poisonous claws. There had been Spock’s
anxious hurry to reach and persuade a healer to come to I-chaya’s aid, his
grief over I-chaya’s terrible suffering, and, finally, the decision required of
him—to allow the healer to ease the sehlat’s agony by a painless and
merciful death with dignity. Somehow, thinking back on it, Spock had never been
quite certain of the logic of Selek’s explanations. His parents’ relief and
pleasure over Spock’s passing of the kahs-wan had diverted his attention
from it, and Selek had shown him exactly how to execute the Vulcan neck
pinch, a technique that had eluded Spock to that point. Still, he looked back
every now and then and pondered the unusual set of coincidences that had
provided him with such a perceptive cousin exactly when he needed him. Several
years later, Spock had idly investigated the many branches of his family tree,
but he could not seem to find exactly the right combination of “distant
relatives” with those names who had a son named Selek. Somehow the information
never seemed to be urgent enough for him to launch a thorough search, [13] and in time he was far too busy to think
about it. The most important thing the kahs-wan had accomplished was
that it left Spock with the firm resolution that he would follow the Vulcan
way, as his father and tradition demanded.
Spock
sighed and shook his head. Denying his human heritage was a denial of his
mother, and he could not dishonor her that way. Instead, he had gone on to
strengthen those human qualities most like a Vulcan’s and had learned to
sublimate the more embarrassing ones. Mostly learned to sublimate, he
reminded himself. He still remembered I-chaya proudly, but always with a swell
of grief that put a lump in his throat.
Spock
wiggled his toes. It had been an impulse to remove his boots and socks and sink
his feet into the warm, fine sand. His mother had told him she had always
enjoyed doing that. “Walking on a beach in your shoes is a joyless experience,
Spock,” she often said. “Put yourself in touch with the land ... feel its life.”
A soft
hiss and slap of water on the sand brought his head up. The tide had lifted a
gentle froth of white foam nearly to his feet, leaving a dark, moist mark as it
slid away again. Dusk was already pulling down the shadows, darkening the
tropical growth behind him. Above the last faintly glowing light of the sun on
the horizon, the stars had begun to appear, glittering with icy white and pale
blue points. Spock freed his toes and brushed his feet free of sand. Quickly
pulling on socks and boots, he managed to scramble out of the path of the next
wave before he got damp. The [14] temperature had
dropped farther as the wind rose again. He pulled his jacket edges together and
sealed them with a brush of his hand up the join. As he started to walk back
toward the path through the undergrowth to the road, he realized he had not
gotten all the sand off his feet. The grains shifted and bit into his flesh as
he strode along toward the parking area where he had left his ground car. He
ignored the discomfort but mildly cursed the impulse that had caused it.
The
short-hopper whisked Spock from the Lihue shuttle field to Honolulu’s
spaceport. He carried only a light trip valise containing the few items he
required for brief stays, plus two uniforms and a traditional Vulcan robe.
Captain Daniels had ordered him to take some R&R after he signed off the Artemis,
and he had gone with few possessions. Everything else would be forwarded
automatically to his new ship.
“Spock,
you work too hard,” Daniels had said. “You’re not always on duty. It’s a
commendable attitude for a young officer, but it’s not practical.” The captain
had softened the remark with a smile. “Take the time to get away before you
report to the Enterprise. Relax. Enjoy not having to tend to
duty.”
“I do
require some time to review the Enterprise’s expedition logs and
equipment specifications,” Spock had replied thoughtfully. “Especially the
library computer and science station. I have not made a complete study of the
ship’s systems. ...”
“That’s
not what I meant,” Daniels snapped.
Spock
had raised an eyebrow quizzically, the rest of his face perfectly composed. It
was his best way of [15] responding to
anything that amazed, amused, or puzzled him. “Sir?”
Daniels
stood up and leaned on his knuckles on the desktop. He put firmness in his
voice and bit off every word clearly and sharply. “This is an order, Mr. Spock.
You will go somewhere beautiful. You will take no research information with you
in any form, nor will you access said information from Starfleet sources. You
will relax. Swim. Walk. Ride. Lie on a beach if that’s what you fancy. But
do not work. Am I understood?”
“Yes,
sir. I am ordered to relax.”
“Excellent.”
“Sir?”
Daniels swiveled a wary look at him. “Captain Pike has a reputation as a
taskmaster—”
Daniels
interrupted sharply. “Chris Pike is hard but fair. Remember it.”
“Of
course, sir.” Spock remembered everything. Automatically. Without effort.
“However, I believe he will expect his new second officer to know something
more about his vessel than its basic specifications.”
“What
are you getting at?”
“How
many days am I ordered to relax, sir?”
“Ah.”
Daniels gave the question a few seconds’ thought and then gravely replied, “You
have two weeks. Ten days should be sufficient.”
“Yes,
sir. Ten days’ relaxation. Is that all, sir?”
“Not
quite.” The captain held out his hand. “You’ve been an excellent third for me.
I was happy to recommend your promotion, and I was even more happy to hear of
your posting to the Enterprise. She’s a fine ship commanded by an
excellent captain. Good luck, Spock.”
[16] “Thank you, sir.”
Spock shook Daniels’s hand quickly, exerting an acceptable amount of pressure.
Then he dropped it, promptly clasping his hands behind his back, his usual
stance when in the presence of senior officers. He had never been comfortable
with the human custom of shaking hands. He much preferred the ancient ritual
greeting used by Vulcans: “Live long and prosper.” It was both formal and
courteous and at the same time offered respect and good wishes. Spock
considered it a prime example of Vulcan efficiency to convey so much in such a
brief salutation.
The
landing of the short-hopper at the spaceport interrupted his musings about the
start of his leave. He collected his trip valise from the overhead storage bin
and hurried out into the bustling port. He hadn’t been scheduled to return here
for another four days. Events had conspired to interrupt the ordered relaxation
period the afternoon of his sixth day on Kauai. The subspace radio message had
been relayed to him at the hostel via the Artemis: “Return to Vulcan
immediately. Urgent matters require your attention.” It was succinctly signed
“Sarek.” Daniels had attached a brief message of his own: “Sorry. I believe his
orders supersede mine.” Spock had sighed and gone to arrange for his return to
the Honolulu spaceport, a connector shuttle to Armstrong Lunaport, and a
reservation on a fast passenger ship to Vulcan.
Now, as
he scanned a status board to confirm that his connector shuttle would leave on
time, Spock wondered again what possible matters could be so urgent that only
he personally could deal with them—[17]
and which also required his presence on Vulcan instead of being transacted by
subspace messages. It was remarkably convenient that the order from Sarek (and
Daniels was correct; it most definitely was an order from Spock’s
father) should have arrived at exactly the time Spock was free to respond.
Of
course, it would have taken very little effort on Sarek’s part to discover that
his son had received a promotion to full lieutenant and been transferred to the
Enterprise, with an accompanying amount of leave time before being
required to report. A Federation ambassador (even one not currently on
diplomatic assignment) had more than enough Starfleet contacts to know every
movement in his son’s career. Not that Sarek personally would have sought out
the information. He would have delegated the chore to an aide and would expect
to find the data reported on his library computer with continuous updates.
Sarek might never refer to it, but woe betide the unfortunate aide who failed
to ensure that the most recent facts were there if wanted.
Yes,
Spock decided, Sarek had known exactly where he was and that he could easily
return to Vulcan for whatever “urgent matters” required him. Sarek would never
interfere with Spock’s duty by demanding that Spock take a personal-time leave.
But he would not scruple for a second about interrupting Spock’s official
leave.
The
connector shuttle was on time, and Spock turned toward the ticket counter where
a reservations robot would confirm his place on board. Spock had hesitated
briefly and then obeyed the summons from [18]
his father. Not to do so was unthinkable. Still, he wondered with just a twitch
of uneasiness what it was all about. Sarek of Vulcan had not communicated with
his son by written or spoken word for eight years—and they could have been
light-years, so great was the philosophical distance between them.
The
afternoon was getting on, and the hard yellow light of Vulcan’s sun stretched
long shadows across the courtyard, running in wavy ripples over the carefully
raked ridges of the sand garden. As Amanda watched, the slim shadow finger cast
by the candlestick tree touched the base of the highest rock in the group of
three clustered together in the center of the garden. She could tell the hour
almost to the exact moment as the dark line slowly lifted toward the rock’s
center.
Sarek
would be home soon. And Spock—she sighed heavily—Spock would return to Vulcan
in two days. She knew Sarek had planned it out very carefully, calculating all
the parameters and possibilities. Two days was the maximum time it could
possibly take for their son to receive the message, debate it, resist it, give
in, and take transport to Vulcan. But come he would. Then there would be the
confrontation between Sarek and Spock—not face to face, of course. Sarek had
already arranged that, and Amanda had had to agree to his plan. Her title was T’Sai
Amanda, Aduna Sarek—rendered inadequately but closely enough in
English as the Lady Amanda, Life Partner of Sarek. She had accepted the role,
but the choosing had always been Sarek’s. She had wanted him more [19] than anything else in any world that could
be named, but it had to be his choice of her that made them life
partners. Amanda had given everything she could to fulfill that role, and what
Sarek had asked of her this time she would also do—but reluctantly.
She
heard the outer door slide open exactly when she expected it. The candlestick
tree shadow had touched the top of the highest rock in the sand garden. She
turned toward the spacious foyer of the house, a smile automatically lifting
her lips in spite of the sadness that rode her shoulders.
The
tall figure of her husband moved against the brightness of the skylit foyer, a
dark silhouette until he stepped into the large, cool main room. He wore plain,
somber clothes as always, a deep forest green suit today, the only highlight
the heavy gold ring on the index finger of his left hand—the clan ring worn by
the ranking male family member.
Sarek
saw her moving toward him, and his brown eyes lit with warmth. “Amanda.”
His
rich, vibrant voice stirred her as it always did, and her smile brightened her
face. “You’re on time.”
“I
would have notified you if I were to be delayed.”
“I
know. I’m teasing.”
The
light in his eyes grew warmer. “A human characteristic I have never been able
to fathom, my wife.”
“Perhaps
not, my husband,” Amanda said lightly. “But you do let me indulge in it.”
“Analyzing
it is a fascinating hobby.” Sarek lifted her hand in his, sobering quickly. “I
have received word that Spock is on his way. He has left the [20] Honolulu spaceport and will depart Armstrong
Lunaport for Vulcan at five o’clock Earth time.”
“Then
he’ll arrive in two days, just as you said.”
“Of
course.”
Amanda
turned away, pulling her hand from his. “Why are you forcing this now, Sarek?
You know it doesn’t have to be now.”
“We
have gone over the matter before, Amanda. Spock has obligations. It is his duty
to fulfill them. The family, the bonds that are in place, the traditions he has
sworn to uphold as a Vulcan—all demand he respond now in the accepted
manner.”
Sometimes
Amanda hated the traditions, hated the narrow line of action they forced
Vulcans to follow. But she had accepted them herself when she accepted Sarek’s
love and proposal of marriage, had accepted the Vulcan role of life partner,
had birthed and raised a child whom she knew must also abide by the same
traditions. She had made a promise to the man she loved and the house into
which she married that she would do so. She kept her promises—her own human
tradition—but that didn’t mean it was easy. This was another one of the times
when it wasn’t going to be easy.
She
turned back to her husband. “He has obligations to Starfleet, too, Sarek. Even
you acknowledge that.”
“What
he must do here is acceptable within Starfleet. It has no relation to his
duties.”
“I
think you are not seeing the two in relation to each other, Sarek,” Amanda said
firmly. “They are two different things,
and I do not believe Spock can [21] fulfill both duties
simultaneously. We used to have an old Earth saying, ‘Something has to give.’
It is very possible that Spock will have to consider not meeting one
obligation or the other.”
“Then
that will be his decision. I am certain he will choose the correct one.”
“The
correct one by whose lights?” Amanda asked. “Yours or his?”
Sarek
stared at her, not answering for a moment. Then he turned and walked toward the
corridor leading to the bedrooms. “I will be in meditation,” he said quietly.
“I assume supper will be at the usual hour?”
“Of
course, my husband,” she said formally. She watched him until he disappeared
down the hall, then she turned away toward the formal sand garden again. She
slid aside the door that led to the patio and stepped out.
Vulcan’s
twilight heat pushed at her, not uncomfortable now in the winter of its year.
There were times in the summer when she could not even look out at the glare
from the surface of the sand garden, but now it lay soft and pleasantly
shadowed in the last light. She sat down on the stone edge of the patio, pulled
off the light sandals she wore, and burrowed her bare toes into the warm sand.
There.
In her mind, she went back
through the years to the Carmel beach where they had honeymooned. Typically, he
had brought work with him, and after breakfast the first morning he settled
himself at a computer console to tend to it. She had kissed the tip of his ear,
laughing, and gone down to the beach. She [22]
was on her knees at a tide pool, examining the microcosm of life assembled there,
when she glanced up and saw him approaching along the beach. He was
determinedly trudging along—wearing boots, of all things—stopping now and then,
apparently to study the seaweed and kelp, the shells, and the stones tossed up
on the tawny beach sand by the waves.
She
realized suddenly that she was probably “a sight,” as her mother would have put
it—dirty feet, disheveled hair, no makeup. He had never seen her like that,
even in bed. Because of his innate formality, she had taken care always to look
as perfectly groomed as possible. Later, he told her he thought he had never
seen her look so lovely—slim as a gazelle, dark hair tossed by the wind, and
beautiful blue eyes that looked at him with open candor and honesty—and love.
She had
chided him lightly, teasingly, about the boots. A beach like this was half
wasted if one walked on it in boots. She never did persuade him to remove them
and wriggle his toes in the sand. Vulcan dignity simply did not descend that
far. She began to realize then that the traditions observed by Sarek—by all
Vulcans—were not subject to human influence, even in so light a thing as
informality in leisure time. Certainly the greater traditions that governed
their lives were untouched by contact with humans.
Her son
was bound, and tied, by those traditions. Sometimes, not often but sometimes,
she felt guilty about Spock’s half-human heritage. She knew it troubled him,
gave him pain, caused him grief, all of which he buried behind a stoic Vulcan
bearing. But would she have said no to Sarek’s wish for a child? She [23] shook her head and smiled ironically. Of
course not. She had desired Spock’s birth as much as Sarek had. She wiggled her
toes again in the warm sand of the garden’s edge and sighed. She had never
persuaded Sarek to go barefoot. That would have been too human.
THE CITY OF SHIKAHR glittered
in the heat of midday as Spock’s ground car approached. Behind it, the black,
forbidding range of the Llangon Hills thrust upward and formed a perfect and
dramatic backdrop for the sparkling city. The banding strip of parkland around
it softened the transition from harsh and arid desert to the attractive
geometric shapes of the city buildings. Architecture was very carefully
controlled so that no new structure was in disharmony with any of the
established buildings. The streets were designed wide, with grass or trees
running down a center strip and on the verges. There were no slidewalks—Vulcans
preferred to walk—and pavement frequently gave way to paths that wound under
the carefully planted nonnative trees that offered shade.
Spock
left the ground car near the eastern gate, closest to his parents’ home, and
entered the city. This area was entirely residential, and few of the buildings
were more than one story in height. Most of the [25] homes were enclosed within walls of one kind or another. As a child,
he had liked most the home of a neighbor whose garden “walls” were carefully
trimmed climbing rose brambles. In summer, the high hedge bloomed with luscious
blossoms in a pastel combination of pink and white and pale silvery lavender.
As he approached it, he noticed that the wall of his parents’ garden had
acquired a vinelike plant that grew over much of it. Here and there, a delicate
trumpet-shaped blue flower peeked out of the dark green foliage that clung to
the wall. He thought that would have been his mother’s doing. His father
favored the symmetry of the sand garden, beautiful but severe.
The
gate was unlatched, and Spock let himself in. Dutifully he had sent ahead a
message that he was coming as ordered and giving his arrival time. The gate
made no sound, and he knew he hadn’t, either, but the front door of the house
instantly slid open, and his mother stepped out, smiling.
“Spock.”
She held out her hands to him.
“Mother.”
He strode to her quickly, dropping the valise. He took her hands in his,
squeezing them tightly.
She
freed a hand to touch his cheek, knowing it was a human gesture, knowing he
would permit it only because it was she who did it. “Five years since I saw you
at your graduation from the Academy. I’ve missed you, son.”
“I
know. You say so when you write.”
She
laughed lightly. “Of course I do.” She studied him critically. “You look well.”
“And
you, Mother.” She did look healthy and not [26]
much changed from the way he remembered her. The softly clinging blue-gray gown
she wore revealed that her figure was still slight, not gathering weight now
that she was in her forties. He noticed a few more lines at the corners of her
eyes and even several wisps of gray that had never been in her dark hair
before. But the gentle beauty of her face was the same, as was the soft lilt of
her voice.
A smile
sparkled in her blue eyes. “And I see Starfleet has seen fit to promote you to
full lieutenant. Ahead of time, I would guess.”
Spock
looked back at her solemnly. “I had anticipated my promotion would occur at
this time. My service record and tours of duty have been sufficient to—”
“Spock,
do you plan everything in your life now? When you were a child, you had
spontaneity, you loved surprises—”
He
clasped his hands behind his back, unconsciously echoing his father’s move when
he didn’t wish to discuss a subject. “I am not a child.”
“No.”
Amanda sighed as she looked at him. “Long ago and far away now. Well.” She
found another smile for him. “You’re home for a few days, anyway.”
“I am
here because I was sent for, which you very well know. What is it he wants?”
“I
can’t discuss that with you here. After dinner, Sarek wants a family council. A
formal council.”
Spock’s
eyebrows arched in surprise—it was controlled, but surprise nonetheless. “Then
he will speak with me.”
Amanda
shook her head. This was the part that was [27]
going to be difficult to explain, and she didn’t want to do it now, not when
Spock had just arrived home. “Not exactly. Come inside now. You’ll understand
later.”
Spock
picked up the valise and allowed her to precede him into the cool reaches of
the house. His father would not exactly speak to him? What exactly did
Sarek intend to do?
Spock
and Amanda ate alone. It was understandable that Sarek had chosen not to join
them. The family council would probably not be a pleasant social affair. Trying
to lead up to it with a family meal at which two of the participants hadn’t
conversed for eight years would be expecting far too much.
Amanda
chatted quietly, asked questions, passing on any news that had occurred between
her last letter to him and the present. She had always been someone who could
tell a story, and Spock was amused by some of the incidents she described. Even
the family news, incidents to be treated with some seriousness, was made
interesting and diverting by her lively delivery of the facts. In return, he
told her of his promotion and assignment to the U.S.S. Enterprise and of
his brief relaxation trip.
“Ka’a?
A lovely beach,” she said, smiling at him. “Did you walk there?”
“In
fact, I sat there. Thinking.”
“A sea
beach does have a conducive atmosphere for it.”
Spock
sipped at a glass of water, slid a sideways look at her. “I did remove my
boots, however.”
[28] “Ah. Very good,
Spock.”
“It was
instructive, as you always said.”
Amanda
tilted her head, her eyes sparkling with humor. “I never said it was
‘instructive,’ dear. I said it was something you do to feel in touch with the
earth, with nature. You must feel it. It can’t be taught.”
“I ...”
Spock paused, cleared his throat, and started again. “I felt some of that.”
Amanda
reached over and lightly touched his hand. “I’m glad.” The soft, mellow chime
of the timepiece in the hall announced the hour. Amanda looked up, biting her
lip slightly. “Time.”
The
room chosen for the council was the library, adjacent to Sarek’s study.
Bookshelves dominated three walls; the fourth wall contained a large window
that looked out on the sand garden. The books on the shelves came from many
worlds and covered a myriad of subjects, including nonfiction, poetry, and
literature. Comfortable reading chairs were scattered around the room. Spock
had spent hours here as a child, happily lost in worlds of information or
imagination. This evening did not promise to be as happy or as satisfying.
Amanda
settled herself in one of the chairs and gestured for him to take another.
Spock shook his head and remained standing, waiting for Sarek. His mother
picked up a tiny bead from a side table and placed it in her ear. “Sarek won’t
be here, Spock.”
He
swung around toward her, a frown suddenly creasing his forehead. “Then why has
a family council been called? I do not understand.”
[29] “Your father will
monitor from his study.” Amanda indicated the small observer camera that would
carry the image to Sarek’s viewscreen. “And I will convey his words to you
verbatim.” She gestured apologetically toward the communication bead in her
ear. “It is his wish.”
So that
was it. Sarek would have his say on whatever this matter was, but he would not
speak directly to Spock. Their personal conflict from eight years before had
not been resolved, and Sarek still refused to communicate with his son.
Spock
had decided on a career in Starfleet and had applied to the Academy on his own,
despite the fact that he had been just sixteen years old. His superior
scholastic record had gotten him accepted instantly. He had been required to
list his family background as a matter of course, and the superintendent of
Starfleet Academy had routinely sent congratulations on his son’s acceptance to
Ambassador Sarek.
Unfortunately,
Sarek had wished Spock to follow a career in sciences and research and had
planned his son’s attendance at the Vulcan Science Academy. The fact that Spock
had not only decided on another course but had already engineered its beginning
infuriated Sarek. Not that it showed; the anger was obvious only in the cold
glitter in his eyes, the thin straight Une of
his mouth.
Amanda
had insisted that they discuss it. The “discussion” had consisted of each of
them taking a hard position and holding it, not giving an inch to the other. It
had ended in Sarek turning away from his son, saying, “Do as you wish. We will
not speak of this [30] again.” After a month of cold silence, Spock
finally realized Sarek meant he would never speak to Spock again.
Spock
nodded to Amanda and lifted his hands in an acquiescent gesture. “As my father
desires.”
“You
may be seated.”
“I
would prefer to stand,” Spock replied stiffly. “Please go ahead.”
“Sarek
wishes you to realize that you have been remiss in carrying out your
obligations to your hereditary estate.”
“I am
afraid I do not understand such a statement from my father,” Spock said
bluntly. “The estate of Keldeen is managed in my absence by Senak of Zayus. He
came to me well recommended by T’Lan of Lan, who
manages my father’s hereditary estate when he is off planet. Keldeen is
not only producing a higher crop average than anticipated and making a profit,
but new land has been cleared to include experimental crop planting.
Therefore—”
“Unfortunately,” Amanda broke in, “all this proves is that my
son has chosen well in his estate manager.” Her face was carefully controlled
as she repeated her husband’s words. “You point out this is the case with my—with
Sarek’s estate. True. But Sarek would point out to you that he periodically
returns from his ambassadorial assignments to attend the estate himself. In
eight years, you have not returned to Vulcan. You had to be summoned here at
this time. Vulcan tradition requires that you personally attend to the affairs
of your land as you are able. The fact that it has been managed well and made a
profit is not in question. It is the matter of your involvement.”
[31] “Starfleet does not
allow me that luxury. I have sworn an oath to carry out the duties I am
assigned as an officer. I cannot violate that oath, and I will not resign. I
can only swear to you that I will continue to retain an efficient estate
manager, with whom I will remain in as close communication as possible. The
benefits of our experimental crop research will naturally accrue to the
family.”
Amanda
listened, nodded slowly. “You are still required to return as often as you are
able to carry out this obligation yourself. That is, as often as your duty will
allow. Sarek agrees you cannot break your oath to Starfleet.”
Spock
felt some of the tension leave him. If this were all, this enforced visit home
might not be as uncomfortable as he had anticipated.
“However,”
Amanda went on, “the estate is not the only matter which requires your
attention. There is something else.” She paused, her eyes flickering
uncertainly over Spock’s face. “There is the matter of your betrothed.
T’Pring.”
Spock’s
expression did not change, but he felt a light jolt of apprehension at the
mention of T’Pring. The maintenance and passage of hereditary land was an
ancient tradition in many cultures. Spock could understand it and acknowledge
its value in the heritage of a clan. But the betrothal of children with the
obligation to marry upon maturity was something he found uncomfortable, even
though it had been a Vulcan practice for thousands of generations. Was it only
because he was obliged against his will? Or was it his human half, his
rebellious half, that refused to accept as willingly as he accepted other
traditions?
[32] “What of T’Pring?”
“It is
time to end your betrothal and plan your marriage.”
“We
barely know each other,” Spock said. “We have not seen each other for years.
She seldom even communicates with me.”
“That
does not negate your bonding. She is well chosen for you.”
“Yes,
by all standards she is. She is beautiful, she comes from a sufficiently
high-ranking house, and she is full Vulcan. But did it never occur to you that
I might have preferred to make my own choice, as you did when you married
Mother?”
Amanda
pushed to her feet, speaking for herself, not for Sarek. “Spock, that’s unfair.
Sarek was unbonded and free to choose.”
“His
parents broke tradition by not having him bonded to a Vulcan female in
childhood. Sarek broke tradition by choosing you, a human woman. Why am I not
allowed to break tradition as well?”
“You
are the first and only child of Sarek, heir to this house. You may not.”
Spock
stood stiffly, staring at his mother, knowing Sarek watched coldly at his
viewscreen. Something in him whispered that he did not want to obey, and
something else held that whisper in check. Finally, he glanced toward the
observer camera and nodded. “I understand. But it should also be understood
that it is impossible for me to marry immediately. I am due to report aboard
the Enterprise in a matter of days, and that order cannot be overridden.
I do not know how long my first mission aboard her will take—perhaps [33] years. The arrangements will have to be made
for ... the next time I return to Vulcan.”
Amanda
paused, listening, then smiled wistfully. “That will be acceptable. You will
have to see T’Pring as soon as possible to discuss the arrangements.”
“Tomorrow,
then. Good night, Mother.” Spock half bowed toward Amanda and left the room.
She
stood a moment, fumbling the communication bead from her ear. Sarek appeared
quietly beside her, waiting there silently until she turned to him.
“I
realize that was not pleasant for you, my wife,” he said quietly.
“I am
not the one whose life is being dealt with here. I was lucky, I know. The
traditions that bind Spock didn’t bind you, and we were possible. We
created him. Have you no feeling for the human side of him, Sarek? You chose
me, and therefore you are also responsible for that facet of your son.”
His
dark eyes shadowed. Possibly there were doubts there, but Sarek would never
admit them. “He has chosen the Vulcan way. For him, then, there is only the one
path. His companion is T’Pring, chosen in the honorable Vulcan manner to be his
wife and life partner.”
“Whether
he wants her or not?”
“How
can he not want her? Spock admitted T’Pring is a beautiful Vulcan woman of a
noble house.”
Amanda
shook her head, staring up at her tall husband. “If that’s all that mattered,
what am I doing here?”
For
once, Sarek of Vulcan had no answer.
* * *
[34] The U.S.S. Enterprise
floated in Bay 14 of the San Francisco fleet spacedock like a spider caught
in a web. Maintenance shuttles hovered around her, feeding the cluster of
dockers on her hull with tools and power for the work being done on the big
ship. She was only two years out of the launchways, but technology bounded
ahead so rapidly that she would have been carrying outdated equipment if she
weren’t undergoing upgrade now.
Number
One piloted the small one-person shuttle smoothly around and over the huge disk
of the saucer, her eyes expertly and critically flicking over the work in
progress. She mentally assessed and catalogued every operation, its status,
automatically logging projected completion time. As soon as she completed her
circuit of the entire ship, she rolled the little craft over and goosed it
toward the closed shuttle-bay doors on the upper saucer hull.
“Number
One to Shuttle Bay Chief,” she snapped into the ship’s communicator link.
The answer
came back instantly. “Shuttle bay.”
“Heads
up. I’m coming home.”
“Yes,
ma’am.”
The
doors ahead of her slowly began to part. She cut in her braking thrusters, the
gentlest touch, and the little shuttle slowed, allowing her enough time to slip
through the opening doors with two inches to spare on port and starboard. She
hovered the craft over the landing marker at center deck and eased it down.
Because she had chosen not to wear a pressure suit while in the shuttle, she
had to wait for the chief to close the outer doors and cycle the bay back to [35] normal. She spent the time composing her
report to the captain. The chief finally signaled the all clear. She clambered
out of the shuttle, the report clear in her mind and ready for dictation into
the computer.
She had
no sooner stepped into the main corridor when the intership went on with the
characteristic high warbling notes of the bosun’s whistle. “Number One,
please report to Captain Pike in the briefing room. “The executive officer
glanced at a chronometer and frowned. Her tour around the hull had taken longer
than she planned; she was late for her meeting with the captain. She stepped to
a nearby wall communicator and punched the button.
“This
is Number One. On my way.”
Captain
Christopher Pike waited in the briefing room, knowing exactly how Number One
would enter. He was not disappointed. The door slid aside for the exec, and the
tall woman strode in briskly, information comp chips in her hand. “Reporting as
ordered, sir. I’m sorry I’m late ...”
“No apologies
needed,” Pike said amiably. “I would like to have gone on that outside tour of
the ship myself. How’s she coming along?”
“All
the new equipment should be installed by eleven hundred tomorrow. We can set up
a series of test runs to cover the next two days. No problem on meeting our
departure date.” She held out the comp chips. “I have the new personnel records
ready for your examination.”
“Let’s
see them, Number One.”
Her
long black hair swung forward over her shoulders as she sat at the table across
from him, swiftly [36] dropping
a chip into the base of the viewscreen control console. Pike watched her,
admiring again the high, slanting cheekbones and the startlingly deep blue eyes
that made the woman’s face so striking. She had a natural attraction that drew
men’s interest. He hid a smile, remembering two fleet officers who had
blatantly followed her around Starbase 13, hoping to get a welcoming look from
those eyes. No joy for them. Number One did not encourage advances. As far as
Pike knew, she socialized with her fellow officers, but never on an intimate
basis. In the four years she had served him as first officer, first on the old Yorktown
and then on the new Enterprise, she had carried out her duties with
a precision and perfection he had never seen in anyone else. In fact, perfect
was exactly the adjective he applied to her at all times. He often felt he
would like to know Number One better, to be closer to her in friendship; but
her naturally correct, crisp attitude toward him threw up to him the same
barriers he had seen her raise against the two officers on Starbase 13. Pike
had resigned himself simply to having the best first officer in the fleet.
“Second
Officer Lieutenant Spock, serial number S179-276SP, Reporting from the U.S.S. Artemis.”
“I’m
not sure I’m going to like a Vulcan on the bridge, Number One.” Pike shifted a
little uncomfortably as the exec’s eyes fastened on him. “I’ve never worked
closely with one before.” She continued to stare at him, waiting for him to go
on.
When he
didn’t, she asked neutrally, “Do you foresee some difficulty, sir?”
“It’s—well,
they’re logical to a fault. And maybe [37]
that’s the problem. I believe there are times when command personnel have to
‘gut out’ decisions, go on their best instincts. Cold, calculating efficiency
isn’t always the best reaction in a tight situation.”
“Efficiency
on the bridge has never troubled you before,” she remarked dryly.
Pike
winced inwardly. She was as cool and efficient as a Vulcan herself, and he knew
he had never had a quarrel with any of her responses in any situation.
“Besides,” she went on, “Lieutenant Spock is only half-Vulcan.” She tabbed the
viewscreen control console, and the screen promptly displayed a personal
background file on the young officer. “Father: Ambassador Sarek of Vulcan.
Mother: the former Amanda Grayson of Colorado Springs, Colorado. Home base: the
city of ShiKahr on Vulcan. Standard Vulcan education. Entered Starfleet Academy
at the age of sixteen—interesting that he applied for entry himself. Qualified
with the most outstanding grades of any cadet candidate of that class as well
as the usual superlative Vulcan physical capabilities ...”
“No
‘weaknesses’ because of his human heritage?” Pike’s question was only half
serious. Number One took it at face value.
“None
revealed. His record at the Academy is brilliant, majoring in the sciences and
computer technology. Graduation at the age of nineteen.” Number One glanced at
Pike and tapped the viewscreen. “He did the two years in the accelerated Vulcan
course and one year in the required cadet working cruises aboard various ships.
Once commissioned, he served for three years as assistant science officer on a
space cutter [38] in Sol system. Two years ago, he was
promoted to lieutenant (j.g.) and has been serving as third officer and science
officer on the Artemis—long-range cruises. On several occasions he has
received commendations for heroic action in planetary exploration difficulties
and has distinguished himself twice in scientific research. Despite deep-space
service, he has continued to upgrade his computer specialist rating. He is
currently an A-5.”
Pike
looked up in surprise. “The best rating most officers ever make is an A-3.”
“Precisely,
sir.” Her dark blue eyes were amused as she stared at him. Pike dropped his own
gaze, a little uncomfortable. “Yes, I see,” he said quietly. He cleared his
throat. “Personal ratings, relationships with officers and crew?”
“Generally
good. His commanders’ remarks are attached to the end of the service jacket, if
you care to go over them. The lieutenant is reserved by nature but has no
trouble working with crew or superior officers. Captain Daniels notes that
Spock has also been known to play a Vulcan lute on occasion. Not a paragon,
probably not perfect, either. He is half-human, after all.” Number One
smiled at Pike slightly. “But pretty damned good on the face of this record.”
“My record
looks good on the face of it, Number One. But I have to tell you there are some
whopping mistakes recorded in it that I made when I was a young lieutenant.”
“You
survived them, sir.”
“And I
suppose we’ll survive having a very young [39]
Vulcan science officer as second on the Enterprise. Very well. Who’s
next?”
The
exec punched up another record on the viewscreen. “Lieutenant (j.g.) Montgomery
Scott, engineering officer, serial number SE-197-514 ...”
T’PRING LIVED ON her father’s estate of In-Yar, which lay
sixty kilometers outside the city perimeter. Spock’s ground car had been
speeding along a road that knifed through the estate grounds for ten
kilometers. The final approach was lined with trees; the metal gates to the
estate stood open. He was expected.
Spock
drove through and parked beside a graceful fountain that spilled sparkling blue
water into a free-form basin and then recycled it through the fountain system.
Butter-yellow water flowers floated serenely on the surface of the basin, and a
small darter fly flickered down to rest on one of the broad petals, ignoring
the soft whisper as Spock cut the ground car’s engine. Spock emerged slowly
from the vehicle and paused to stare thoughtfully into the fountain for a
moment, admiring the fragile beauty of the water flowers.
The
house that rose behind him was two-storied, [41]
constructed of dark stone quarried from the Llangon Hills. Its walls might have
seemed forbidding, were they not softened by a drapery of climbing vines that
sported bright red-orange blossoms. The second-story balconies were festooned
with the flowers, and the vines reached even farther up the high walls, almost
to the roof. Silvery curtains reflected the already intense morning sun back at
the sky, shining in Spock’s eyes as he looked at the house.
He
didn’t see the slight movement of one of the drapes in a second-story window as
he walked toward the entrance door.
T’Pring
turned away from the window as her father said, “It is he?”
“Yes,
of course. On time.”
Solen
grunted. “If you can call six years late ‘on time.’ You should have been
married at eighteen.”
T’Pring
shrugged as if this was of little importance. “He has been off-world since he
was sixteen. We all know how the Academy and Starfleet service have demanded
his attention since then.”
“It
seems to me, daughter, that you are remarkably patient in regard to your
marriage. Your betrothal has gone on far beyond what any respectable clan would
judge reasonable—”
“Because
of my betrothed’s commitments, which no respectable clan would, in honor,
expect him to break,” T’Pring interrupted coolly. It was a response Solen had
heard from her many times when he raised the subject of her marriage. The sweet
chime of the entry bell rang downstairs, and she gestured slightly to indicate
it. “Now Spock is here to discuss the matter, it will be settled.”
[42] “I will greet him
downstairs. Will you wish to see him in the garden?”
“It
will be more private that way, Father. You will agree our discussion should be
private?”
Solen
snorted again, but if he disagreed with T’Pring, he chose not to voice it.
T’Pring knew she was a special concern to her father, the only daughter in a
family of five children, her mother dead for ten years. Solen had chosen not to
remarry, and no tutor had been able to strongly influence the girl’s behavior
in her teenage years. She had proceeded through her adolescence solemnly,
steering her own course, keeping her own counsel. When Solen raised the subject
of her long overdue marriage, T’Pring either ignored it or overrode his
comments with strong remarks of her own about Spock’s obligations to Starfleet
and the honor with which he must remain responsible to them. Solen finally had
become resigned to the fact that T’Pring would deal with the problem of her
marriage in her own way and that any opinions he had in regard to it would not
be taken into account by his daughter.
A
murmur of voices from downstairs indicated the door had been opened and Spock
ushered in. “I will send him to you,” Solen muttered, and he hurried
downstairs.
He
found Senak, his youngest son, engaging Spock with questions about Starfleet
and the ships on which he had served. The boy admired Spock, and Solen knew he
was considering applying to the Academy himself. But, Solen told
himself, Senak is the youngest of my sons and has more freedom. The
three older [43] heirs were already married and had produced
sons of their own, choosing to follow traditional careers on Vulcan which
placed them in service to their house and to the planet. Senak could be spared
to a profession that would see him traveling light-years from his home. Spock’s
involvement with Starfleet was of more concern. This was the first time he had
returned to Vulcan since leaving for the Academy. Still, he was the only male
heir of Sarek, and their house was a noble one. Spock was rumored to conduct
himself in a manner “more Vulcan than most Vulcans” because of his human blood,
and Solen believed he would prove to be a worthy husband to T’Pring.
Eventually.
Spock
pulled his attention away from the boy’s eager questions and raised his right
hand in the Vulcan greeting gesture. “Live long and prosper, Solen of In-Yar.”
“Peace
and long life, Spock. It is Lieutenant Spock now?”
“It
is.”
“You
have done well in so short a time. You are a credit to your house.”
“As I
hope to be to yours,” Spock replied.
“My
daughter waits for you in the garden. If you will follow me, I will take you to
her and then send refreshments.” Solen held out his hand to indicate the rear
of the large foyer which cut through the center of the house. A shady expanse
could be seen outside the double doors there. Spock nodded, and Solen started
to walk ahead of him.
“Father,
may I not ask one more question?” Senak said quickly.
[44] “Later perhaps.
Lieutenant Spock has business with your sister now.”
The boy
subsided, carefully hiding any disappointment he felt. He half bowed to Spock
and disappeared into a side room, leaving the two older men alone. Solen moved
toward the rear foyer doors and pushed them open. “She will be by the pool. It
is one of her favorite places at this time of day.” Solen gestured across the
garden, where a path of flat black stones wandered under the trees. Then he
stepped back into the house and closed the doors, leaving Spock alone.
Spock
followed the path, moving slowly. Part of his dawdling was explained by the
fact that he truly admired the beautiful planning in the garden that allowed
native growth to combine with hybrids and off-world plants in the same manner
as in the city parklands. There was an abundance of flowers to add bright color
to the softer greens, blues, and yellows of the trees and decorative shrubs.
But the greater part of his hesitation was based on a reluctance to face the
young woman to whom he was expected to commit the rest of his personal life.
She was, and always had been, too much of a stranger to him.
He
reached the pool, a quiet spot overhung with tall trees and carpeted with thick
grasses that softened his step. T’Pring sat on an elegantly carved stone bench
beside the water, her head turned away as she watched the light wind stir a
patch of purple Earth irises. The last time he had seen her, she had been a
thin, big-eyed adolescent, showing the promise of the great beauty to come but
not yet realized. He paused to study her as she appeared now and had to admit
she [45] was exquisite. She was not much taller than
she had been eight years ago, but maturity had given her figure womanliness.
The dark, almond-shaped eyes still dominated her face, but they were supported
by high cheekbones and a genuinely sensual mouth. Her long black hair was
simply dressed in a braid through which a silver-blue ribbon was woven. The
ribbon matched the color of the softly clinging gown she wore. She sensed his
presence and turned toward him, rising as he moved around the side of the pool
to her.
“Spock.”
“Live
long and prosper, T’Pring,” Spock responded ritually.
“Yes. A
long time since we have met.” Not the ritual response.
Spock
studied her carefully as she gestured for him to join her on the bench. He
decided to remain standing. She arched an eyebrow as she looked back at him,
but she seated herself, choosing to ignore what might have been a rejection.
The man
she saw before her had changed almost as much as she had. He had grown taller;
his chest and shoulders had filled out and broadened. He was no longer the
stripling he had been, lanky as a reed, almost gawky. His thick black hair was
neatly cut, sideburns trimmed in the triangle shape unique to Starfleet
officers. She wondered briefly at the quiet solemnity in his eyes. She
remembered him as more lively, more rebellious.
“My
responsibilities to Starfleet have kept me away.”
She
nodded curtly. “As I have had to explain [46]
frequently to my family and friends. I have grown tired of that answer, Spock.
I was given to understand that home leave was possible, even in Starfleet.”
“Technically,
it is. However, we were not always fortunate to be close enough to Vulcan for
me to arrange transit in the leave time I had.”
“And
now?”
Spock
hesitated, decided honesty was best. “I was on Earth, taking leave there before
reporting to my new ship. I was ordered back to Vulcan.”
“So if
Sarek had not ordered you here, we would not be having this meeting. Do you
find me so ugly, so unattractive?”
“You
are very beautiful. I have always thought so.”
“Then
there is some other reason why you avoid our marriage?”
“I have
explained that my duties require me to be elsewhere.”
T’Pring
abruptly pushed herself to her feet to face Spock. “You also have a duty to me.
We have been promised since we were both seven.”
“T’Pring,
I wish to please you, as I am bound to do, but my Starfleet obligations have
precluded it time and again. And if I seem to hesitate personally, it is only
because I do not feel I know you. Even when we were children, we were not
close.”
“The
way to change that is to become close.” She reached out to touch her
fingers to his. “With time, we will know each other well.”
He
didn’t move away from her, but he felt nothing as her hand lay against his.
There was something cool in her eyes, something calculating that disturbed him.
“Time is precisely the problem. I am due back on [47] Earth in just five days. I must report to my ship, and I have no doubt
we will be assigned a mission almost immediately. I cannot say with any
certainty when I will be able to return to Vulcan.”
Her
eyes seemed to turn darker, colder. “You have been committed to our marriage.
Before you leave Vulcan, you will announce it. I have done with
humiliation and with making excuses for you.”
“I
cannot name a date—”
“Then
you will pay the bride price, and you will continue to pay it until we are
married.”
Dowries
were not paid by a bride’s family on Vulcan. It was the husband who was deemed
to be fortunate to gain such a life partner. From the formal announcement of
marriage, the husband-to-be paid a monthly sum to the bride’s family until the
wedding took place. The money was used to provide for the woman’s needs until
her husband officially took on his marital responsibilities, even if the woman
herself was wealthy, or involved in a career of her own, or both. The bride
price varied according to the husband’s wealth. By every standard on Vulcan,
Spock was personally wealthy, and the price extracted for T’Pring would be very
high.
“You
ask a great deal of me.”
She
stood away from him, anger carefully controlled but evident in her dark eyes.
“I ask a great deal of you? I have responsibilities to my house—and to
yours by right of betrothal. We should have been married years ago. Your own
heir should be alive today. You have refused to return to Vulcan of your own
volition. What am I to assume but that I and my clan are being insulted?”
[48] “That was never
meant—”
“Then
what is meant?”
Spock
turned away, hands clasped behind his back. “I tell you, I cannot give you a
marriage date. My missions will interfere.” He looked back at her. “I know I
have an obligation to you—to be a good husband, to behave in the correct Vulcan
tradition. But I also have obligations to Starfleet, and those obligations
require me to be away for years at a time. It is unfair, I grant you. But I chose
to accept the responsibilities Starfleet puts upon me.”
“Do you
reject me as life partner because I was chosen for you?”
“No. I
only say to you that perhaps you would wish another. I cannot be what you seem
to want.”
“I do
not wish another. We are betrothed, and we will be married.” Her voice
dropped away to a whisper. “When it is possible. I will defer to you regarding
the day.”
“Until pon
farr?” he asked suddenly.
She
looked up at him, gauging him, and finally nodded. “Until pon farr, then.
But you will announce our marriage now, and you will pay the bride price.”
“As you
say.”
A quiet
voice spoke deferentially behind them. “Refreshments.”
They
turned to see Senak carrying a tray as he approached them. It was laden with a
large platter of dainty sweetmeats and tartlets, a pitcher of cool fruit-water,
and a pot of the hot Vulcan drink saya, similar to Earth’s herbal tea.
The delicate crystalline glasses and cups tinkled almost like bells as they
clinked lightly together on the tray.
[49] Spock glanced at
T’Pring. He didn’t want to stay any longer, but it would be an insult not to
accept the offering. She seemed to view it in the same way, waving at her
brother to come closer.
“Put
the tray on the bench, Senak.”
The boy
hurried forward and carefully lowered the tray to the bench. He looked up at
Spock, about to say something, but T’Pring curtly cut it off. “You may leave.”
He nodded to her stiffly and moved away. T’Pring gracefully settled her body
into a sitting position on the grass beside the bench, motioning Spock to join
her. “What will you have, saya or the fruit-water?”
“Anything.
The saya will do.”
Unperturbed
now, she poured the hot drink into a cup and passed it to him. He chose one of
the tartlets and bit into it, consuming it in two bites. T’Pring took her time,
nibbling daintily at the sweetmeats. The silence between them extended as he
sipped at the saya, trying to dispose of it as quickly as decently
possible. T’Pring seemed not to notice, drinking her fruit-water and staring
out over the quiet pond toward the stand of trees beyond. Her profile was lovely,
and Spock reflected that if that were all he wanted, he would have had no
complaint about arranging their wedding; but he had always had reservations
about T’Pring.
Even
when they were children, she had had a shrewd aloofness, a calculating coldness
about her, especially when he and she had been together. He hadn’t known
exactly how to read it then. Now it lay at the back of his mind, troubling him,
although he didn’t know why. Vulcans were cool by nature, [50] reserved, holding back, but this was different. Even his father at his
most shrewd did not have this kind of manipulative coldness. Spock admitted to
himself that he had not truly dealt with the problem of their marriage; he had
simply put it off until he would have to consummate it. Pon farr would
force the decision upon him, but at least he knew that was some indeterminate
time in the future. Because of his half-human heritage, he had biologically
escaped pon farr, the maddening lust urge that turned Vulcans back into
the undisciplined savages they had been before logic and reason came to rule
their lives. Most Vulcan males experienced it for the first time when they had
achieved the age of twenty and in seven-year cycles after that. He had dreaded
its onset, but so far it had not happened to him. Doctors at the Academy and on
his mission ships had run him through routine physicals many times. Several had
expressed the opinion that his human blood might spare him from pon farr completely.
If it occurred, however, he would have no choice in the matter but to succumb
to the biological demon that hid in every Vulcan male; he would have to
consummate the marriage with T’Pring immediately.
He had
drunk the saya, and now he carefully placed the cup back on the tray and
rose to his feet. “I must go. There are details about the estate I must discuss
with my manager. I leave for Earth tomorrow to report to my ship.”
T’Pring
looked up at him, her face set. “And you will announce the marriage.”
“Yes.
Of course. Tonight.”
“Goodbye,
then. When you choose to return—or [51]
when you have to—I will be here.” She turned her attention away from him, her
fingers hovering over another sweetmeat on the tray.
“Live
long and prosper, T’Pring.”
She
merely nodded and picked up the tiny sweet she had chosen. She waited until she
heard the door of the house close behind him before she got to her feet.
Listening closely, she finally detected the soft purr of the ground car as it
started and went out the gates. Then she moved quickly around the pool and into
the stand of trees opposite the bench.
“Stonn.”
The man
who stepped toward her was all Vulcan, not as tall as Spock but brawny and
darkly handsome. He held out his hand to her, and her fingers caressed his.
“Will he announce the marriage?”
“Yes,
it is done. He agreed to pay the bride price. He did not even ask how much it
might be. And, Stonn, he agreed to let the marriage wait until his pon farr.”
“But
that might be—”
“Never.
I know. But I will still be his life-partner-to-be. The announcement will be
recognized by all Vulcan, and he will pay and continue to pay because he
is honorable.” She playfully ran an index finger up the line of Stonn’s jaw and
then followed the shape of his outer ear up to the point, tickling him. “In the
meantime, we have each other.”
Stonn
frowned at another thought. “If he does undergo pon farr, you will have
to marry him.”
T’Pring
laughed softly, although her mouth barely smiled. “Even so, he has his precious
Starfleet, and he will never stay here very long. When he is gone, we will
still have each other.” He started to say [52]
something, and she placed two
fingers over his lips, following it with a light kiss. “And if he ever does
decide to retire here, we will still have each other.”
Stonn
pulled her more closely to him. Her body was warm; her lips were soft as they
roamed his neck.
Stonn
wondered why he sometimes felt a chill quiver through him when he was with her.
THE ENTERPRISE LOOKED MAGNIFICENT.
Spock
studied the ship closely as he was ferried toward it on a transfer shuttle from
the San Francisco spaceport. He could have beamed up via transporter with a
good deal less trouble and time taken, but he had wanted to see his new ship
from outside. While looks could be, and frequently were, deceiving, the Enterprise
he saw in the huge spacedock was a taut, well-run ship—lean, powerful,
eager for space. She had just been worked on, upgraded; everything about her
was shining and in its place. She was lined up in the bay, ready to cast off
the tethers that kept her leashed to the spacedock and nose out to where she
could engage her impulse engines and go.
Several
other officers and crew personnel had elected to take this shuttle with Spock,
and most of them also had their eyes turned out the ports to study the ship
that would be their home for a number of years to come. One young lieutenant
moved around [54] the
transport craft as it began to angle up toward the giant saucer and the shuttle
docking bay. The dark-haired officer seemed more interested in the engine
nacelles than in the whole of the ship. A brilliant smile played around the
man’s face as he studied the exterior of the great pods. As he turned back to
find his seat again, Spock caught a glimpse of the insignia on his uniform. Of
course, Spock thought. What else but an engineer?
Pike
was alerted to the arrival of the transfer shuttle carrying the last of the new
crew members. As soon as they disembarked, they were met outside the shuttle
bay by Number One, crisply greeting each by name and rank. She swiftly assigned
them to their individual quarters and concluded with the information that the
captain would speak to them all in the briefing room at thirteen hundred sharp.
Then she left them to sort themselves out and find their way to their new
homes.
Spock
found his quarters easily; he had scanned the Enterprise’s blueprints on
the voyage from Vulcan, committing them permanently to memory. He was not
surprised at the size of the two-room accommodations, but the obvious comfort
caused him to raise an appreciative eyebrow. The fleet’s ship architects had
apparently given much thought to the many possible Federation aliens who might
occupy the space. There was a temperature control which could be set to suit a
Vulcan’s high requirement for heat; but it could also drop down far enough to accommodate
a Tellarite, one of the bearish creatures who normally had to wear cold suits
to tolerate the human temperatures that [55] governed most ships. Spock was pleased to
note the thermostat was already set high enough for his comfort. He had felt
perpetually cold on the previous vessels on which he had served.
The
lighting could also be adjusted to varying shades of brightness, according to
the needs of the cabin’s occupant. The furniture was Starfleet standard, but
there were interesting little nooks and shelves and bare wall spaces where
personal treasures could be hung or displayed. Spock’s trunk had arrived and
been left in the sleeping area. Glancing at a chronometer built into the
spacious desk, he decided he had time to unpack and get his things stowed
before he had to report to the briefing room. He bent himself to the chore.
Lieutenant
(j.g.) Montgomery Scott had no trouble finding his quarters, either. He not
only knew the blueprints of the ship intimately, but he had built an exact
cutaway scale replica of the Enterprise as soon as he learned of his
assignment to her. Her corridors and decks and service tunnels were already as
familiar to him as his mother’s house in Linlithgow, West Lothian, Scotland.
As an
assistant engineering officer, and a junior one at that, he had been assigned a
large two-room suite with another assistant engineer. Because of a carefully
planned schedule of duty rotation, neither man would be on shift at the same
time; and at the moment, his new roommate was on duty. He had left a message
for Scott blinking on the viewscreen on the desk.
“Hello,
Scott. I’m on engine-room duty, but make [56] yourself at home. If you have time, come by
engineering and introduce yourself. Otherwise, I’ll see you at 1600. Bob
Brien.”
Scott
immediately started to unpack his baggage. The uniforms and off-duty clothes
protected two of his most precious possessions. He lifted the top layer of
uniform shirts and trousers from the chest and hung them in the small closet
assigned to him. Then he pushed aside the long length of red Scott tartan that
covered it and brought out the ancient fighting targe and its accompanying
sheathed two-handed broadsword. They had been passed down in his family for
centuries, eldest son to eldest son, and he would no more dream of going into
space without them than he would dream of relying on engines he hadn’t checked
out personally. He looked around and found a suitable bulkhead wall between his
bed and a stack of built-in shelves that would nicely accommodate the targe and
sword. He dug out several metal-adhering hooks that would bear the weight of
his two prizes and swiftly attached them to the wall. Then he lifted the old
bronze-studded leather targe and the great sword into place and stood back to
study their placement. Yes, bethought. They belong there. I’m home. Satisfied
with his work, he turned back to the chest and started to bring out his
engineering manuals.
The
briefing room was moderately crowded with new personnel, both officers and
crew, when the door slid open and Pike stepped through. Young Engineer Scott
had chosen a place toward the front of the room, among a group of other
engineering technicians. [57] Spock stood at the
back of the group and studied the captain. With his superior height, he could
see the man clearly, and he had to admit he was impressive. Captain Christopher
Pike was approximately an inch shorter than Spock himself. He was an
inordinately attractive man, graced with black hair, intensely blue eyes that
seemed to notice everything, and a slim, well-muscled body. His voice was
confident and friendly when he spoke.
“Welcome
to the U.S.S. Enterprise. I am Captain Pike. I don’t know you all
individually yet, but I guarantee you I will before very long. That’s not a
threat.” There was an appreciative chuckle from the people assembled. Pike
flashed a brilliant smile at them, seeming to favor everyone. “The Enterprise
is a small community, a family, if you will. I make it my business to know
who everyone is. There may be times when my life and that of others will depend
on what you do. I know there will be times when all of your lives will depend
on what I do. I want to have complete confidence in you, as I hope you
will have confidence in me. I believe Starfleet has always attracted the best
and the brightest. I trust that you will prove my belief is sound. Our first
mission together will be one that might be considered tame by most of you,
something fairly routine. However ...” And here Pike paused dramatically. “I
can assure you that no mission is ever just routine. Every time we go
out, we learn something. We blaze new trails into the unknown. But remember,
space is not our ally. The Enterprise is. This is a fine ship, and I
insist on a superior crew. I know you’ll live up to my [58] expectations.” Pike glanced around and
flashed his attractive smile again. “I look forward to meeting you all
personally. Dismissed.”
As the
group began to break up, Pike’s eyes moved over them critically and landed on
Spock. “Mr. Spock.”
Spock
promptly stiffened to attention. “Yes, sir.”
“Join
me in my cabin, please. We have a few things to discuss.”
“Very
well, sir.”
Spock
followed the captain out of the briefing room, down a corridor, and into a
turbolift. Pike didn’t speak, and Spock felt he should not, either, under the
circumstances. As the doors slid closed on them, Pike snapped, “Deck 5.” The
lift promptly began to glide downward.
“Have
you met Number One, Mr. Spock?”
“Only
in passing, sir. The executive officer greeted us upon arrival this afternoon.”
“I’ll expect
you to work closely with her.”
“Yes,
sir.”
“You
have no problems with that?”
“No,
sir. My record will show I have had good relations with all the first officers
under whom I have served.”
“Some
officers have had a difficult time dealing with the fact that she is a
genetically perfect being. On her planet, Ilyria, excellence is the only
criterion that is accepted. She is technically designated as being the best of
her breed for the year she was born.”
“I see.
She therefore would receive the appellation ‘Number One’ even if she were not
the executive officer.”
[59] “You have it.”
Spock
thought it over briefly and flashed a sidelong glance at Pike as the turbolift
slowed. “Vulcans do not indulge in genetic manipulation as such, sir. However,
we have been known to do a great deal of selective mating to achieve the
highest form of individual of which our society is capable. I believe I can
understand Number One’s background, and I have no difficulty in accepting it. I
appreciate excellence in all its forms.”
Pike
glanced at him, wondering if Spock were making a joke. He decided he was not.
The
turbolift had reached the uppermost quarters deck, and the doors snapped open.
Spock’s own quarters lay down the corridor to the left. Pike turned right, and
Spock followed him along the curving corridor to the farthest door. Pike keyed
his admission code into the pad on the wall, and the door obediently slid open.
The suite inside was exactly the same size as Spock’s, a fact he noted and
approved. He was well aware the official captain’s quarters on the Enterprise
consisted of a three-room suite. Pike obviously had rejected it in favor of
this smaller area, placing himself no better than his other senior officers.
The
main room was plainly but comfortably furnished, all softly muted pastels.
Spock noted approvingly the large cache of books on the shelves. From where he
stood, he could read a number of the titles. Fiction and poetry mingled with
nonfiction, technical manuals, and fleet regulations. Pike settled himself in
an armchair and gestured Spock to a seat opposite him. “We push off in
twenty-four hours, Mr. Spock. You’ll be relieving Lieutenant Commander Davies
at [60] the science station and as second officer.
When do you think you’ll report ready?”
“If the
commander would like to leave, sir, I could relieve him now.”
Pike
leaned forward, his blue eyes glittering with interest. “You haven’t even
toured the ship yet, Spock. Do you really think you’re ready to take over?”
“Sir, I
have studied every piece of information on the Enterprise that exists in
Starfleet’s open records. En route from Vulcan to Earth, I also accessed and
reviewed the logs of all her missions to date. And, of course, I am well
acquainted with the science station since that has been my area of expertise
since Academy graduation.”
“With
honors,” Pike said dryly.
“Yes,
sir.”
“And
you undoubtedly studied the personnel list of the science officers who will be
serving under you.”
“Not
the service jackets, of course. They are not files open for inspection from
outside. However, I planned to do that as soon as this interview is over. I
have looked over the ship’s reports of current personnel performance which are
a matter of log reports in the science section.”
Pike
leaned back in his chair. “So there is something you don’t know, after
all, Mr. Spock.”
“Sir?”
“You’ll
have another new science officer on board, reporting in from service on the
U.S.S. Musashi. An astrobiologist—and a Vulcan. Lieutenant T’Pris.”
Spock’s
eyebrows lifted, then he quickly pulled his expression back to its usual
solemnity. “I will examine her records with interest, sir. I am sure I will
find [61] the
lieutenant has served with distinction to date and that she plans to continue
to do so.”
“Do I
detect just a little prejudice toward Vulcans here?” Pike’s eyes were smiling
as he asked the question.
Spock’s
dark eyes met the captain’s, and a hint of humor hovered there as he replied.
“No more so than toward humans, sir. There are qualities in both races which I
admire.”
Lieutenant
Bob Brien was a tall, lean man, almost six feet four, with a head of dark curly
hair. Mischievous blue eyes twinkled beneath dark brows, and a cheerful smile
frequently turned up the corners of his mouth. He returned to quarters promptly
at sixteen hundred and found Scott unpacking the last of his possessions and
neatly stowing them away.
“Montgomery
Scott? Bob Brien.” He held out his hand to the other engineer, and the two men
shook. “Welcome aboard.”
“Thanks.
Sorry I dinna get down to engineering. There was the captain’s welcoming, and
then I found I have the graveyard shift tonight. I thought I’d best spend the
time getting unpacked and set up here before I report on duty. I did do a
review of the ship’s engine maintenance schedule and current status ...”
“You’ll
be fine. Chief Engineer Barry is a top hand, and she’ll be there to brief you.
Say, what do they call you? Monty?”
“Scotty.”
He shrugged and laid on his accent just a little more than usual. “It’s a
natural, I suppose.”
Brien
laughed in acknowledgment. “Scotty, then. I have a little welcoming for you
myself.” He turned to [62] his side of the suite, rummaged in a drawer,
and came out with an odd-shaped bottle of clear liquid.
“Well,
I do appreciate a wee drop now and then,” Scott said. He studied the bottle
curiously. “No label.”
“Nope.”
Brien set out two glasses and took the bottle from Scott.
“Is it
what I think it is, then?”
“The
best engine-room hooch you’ve ever tasted.”
“Ah.”
Scott grinned at his new roommate. “Now, there’s a subject on which I am an
expert.” Heavy drinking of any kind was frowned upon by Starfleet, of course.
But long tradition had established the existence of engine-room hooch, and no
one minded very much if bottles of the stuff were made and consumed for special
occasions. Scott himself had headed up an undergraduate band of engineers at
the Academy which had built and operated a busy little still in the generator
room of the Administration Building that the superintendent had never
discovered. Or, at least, the superintendent never admitted he had discovered
it. It had been rumored the super liked a drop of the product himself now and
then. Scott’s primary concern was always his duty and his engines, but he never
refused an opportunity to turn his hand to a little spirit making if time
allowed and it didn’t interfere with his responsibilities.
Scott
took the proffered glass with its splash of clear liquid and upended it,
downing the shot in one swallow. As the taste hit home, he nearly choked. “What
the devil have you done to it?” he spluttered, gasping for air.
“What
d’you mean? This is good stuff.”
[63] “If you like
drinkin’ bog water. Good grief, man, have you never had any fine liquor?”
Brien
seemed offended. “Well, I admit it’s the first bottle, but this is supposed to
be the best in the fleet. We got the recipe from the Lionheart, and
everybody knows their reputation for it is top of the line.”
Scott
snorted and set the glass down as if it were contaminated. “Everybody knows you
don’t give away your formula. And it’s clear to me Lionheart didn’t.” He
sighed. “Well, I can see there’s work to be done on this. But just to get us
off on the right foot, let me offer you something better.”
He went
to his closet and lifted down a precious bottle of Glenlivet. “Now, this will
give you a taste of the better.” He poured a splash into two fresh glasses and
held one out to Brien.
The
other man sipped and smiled appreciatively. “Of course, that’s real whiskey.”
“Laddie,
when I turn my hand to engine-room hooch, you won’t be able to tell the
difference.”
Brien’s
grin widened. He reached out and touched his glass to Scott’s. “Welcome aboard
the Enterprise, Scotty.”
Spock’s
inspection of the science section was brisk and efficient. Lieutenant Commander
Davies was happy to be relieved almost a full day ahead of time and only mildly
surprised to discover that Spock required the most minimum of briefings to be
brought up to date on the section. Davies left the Vulcan to the examination of
personnel service jackets and hurried to his quarters to prepare to leave ship.
The
service records of the crew members and [64]
officers under him generally pleased Spock, though he expected no less than
quality from anyone assigned to the Enterprise. He had just scanned
Lieutenant T’Pris’s records when the door of the science office swished open
behind him. There was a soft-voiced “Pardon me, sir” behind him, and he turned
to see the Vulcan woman standing serenely at the entrance.
“Lieutenant
T’Pris. I am Lieutenant Spock.”
She
nodded slightly. “Yes, sir. I have the duty watch this shift.”
Spock
gestured her forward. “Please come in. There is very little for you to do
except routine monitoring while we are in spacedock. I assume you will have
some research projects in work once we are embarked.”
She
moved toward him gracefully, with the gentle glide of the classically trained
Vulcan woman. She must have received instruction in the ancient ways when she
was a child. Some families still believed in such traditions. Spock wondered
whether or not she had felt the clash between the old arts and the far more
technological and scientific teachings of the Academy. Her records indicated
little of her personal background, but Spock recognized her house name as an
ancient one, quite as old as his. Her family had an honorable heritage, first
as military leaders when Vulcans embraced a more savage civilization, and then
as advocates and counselors when Vulcan philosophy turned to logic and peace.
T’Pris
had excellent academic achievement marks, as expected, and a commendable
four-year service record. Spock also noted she was a widow of just over a year.
Her husband, Lieutenant Sepel, had been [65]
killed in a violent alien encounter on Lindoria while both were serving on the Musashi.
There were no specifics in regard to her husband’s death in T’Pris’s
records. He recalled a few vague references to the incident, but none of the
details. The few facts about it that had reached the Artemis had only
mentioned the ambush of the landing party from the Musashi. In any
event, it would have been discourteous of Spock to mention her bereavement.
Such mention would have to come from her.
Spock
could not help noticing that the woman herself was striking—taller than most
Vulcan women, less well endowed in figure than T’Pring but slender and upright
as a young willow. She had a classic Vulcan beauty, pitch-black hair wound in
braids like a crown about her head and eyes of deep brown. Spock glanced away
from her, suddenly aware of the subtle and clean scent of a Vulcan herbal soap
she must favor in her bath.
“I
completed all my research projects of the moment on the Musashi. I am
sure new ones will present themselves on this ship.” She held out her hand to
him. “I am pleased to be serving with you, Spock of the house of Surak and the
noble clan Talek-sen-deen.”
He
touched her hand, gently pressing his right index finger against her slim one
to acknowledge the ritual greeting. He was startled by the sudden electric
feeling that shot through him, and he had to make an effort to steady his voice
as he replied, “And I am pleased to be serving with you, T’Pris of the house of
Sidak and the noble clan Ansa-sen-tar.”
She did
not seem to have been affected by the [66]
touching of their hands as he had. “I hope I am not indiscreet in acknowledging
family, Mr. Spock,” she said gravely.
“Acknowledging
family is our tradition,” Spock responded quietly. He realized he was still
touching her hand and pulled his away. “There are so few Vulcans in the fleet
that the traditions are welcome.”
The
gentle smile that touched her face was beautiful. “If there are so few of us,
then we must view each one as precious. Is that not so, Mr. Spock?”
Spock
paused, thinking it over, mulling the consequences of what he would reply.
Finally, he nodded. “Yes, Lieutenant. I would say that is so.”
THE BRIDGE WAS a busy place at any time, but especially so
when the Enterprise was maneuvering for space. In addition to the usual
duty complement, the chief medical officer, Dr. Philip Boyce, had also secured
a place to watch the main viewscreen as Pike crisply gave the orders that nosed
the great ship out of the spacedock. The curve of the Earth below glittered
bright blue under scattered cloud cover, and the doctor sighed softly as it
slipped out of sight.
Boyce
had enjoyed his stay at home during the time the Enterprise had been in
spacedock undergoing equipment upgrades and taking on new personnel. Odd how he
always regarded his ramshackle bungalow on Cape Cod as home, despite the fact
that he only got to occupy it for a month or so out of every several years.
Alicia had passed away so early in their marriage that it seemed he had always
been a bachelor. He had never cared to marry again after her death, [68] but
he had escorted his share of attractive ladies in his many tours of duty. He
never brought any of them home to the Cape. He spent endless hours fishing when
he was there, sometimes surf casting and sometimes from a small dinghy he liked
to putt around in. He had felt there was little sense in planting a garden
which was impossible for him to maintain and which would suffer from the
blasting sea winds that roared across the Cape, especially in winter, but he
enjoyed growing things. As a result, his personal quarters on ships always
sported in place of pride several shallow tubs of earth, arrangements of small
stones and carefully cultured and clipped grass, and graceful bonsai trees.
He favored oak, birch, and maple.
Idly,
he wondered if Chris Pike had had a satisfactory shore leave. The captain had
been anxious to return home himself when they had docked, but Boyce had noticed
a reluctance to discuss his trip when he came aboard to resume command of the Enterprise.
Well, Chris’ll bring it up if he wants to talk about it, Boyce thought. He
had served with Pike for four years now and felt he knew him about as well as
most senior officers knew each other. Often, Pike would use him as a sounding
board on personal matters, things that were eating at him. And things did get
to the captain, despite the cool, in-control persona he normally projected for
the benefit of the crew. Doubt seldom seemed to intrude on Pike; but personal
relationships, an awareness that sometimes he had to ignore his humanity in
order to command, these bothered him.
Nothing
seemed to be troubling him at this moment, however. Pike sat straight-backed in
the [69] command chair, alert to the tone and rhythms of the bridge instruments as
the Enterprise finally cleared the dock. The sensors were busy, scanning
far ahead, searching for clear space. Pike’s voice quietly gave the maneuvering
orders to Number One operating the helm console.
“Impulse
power, Number One.”
“Impulse
power, aye.”
Her
long, slim fingers played swiftly over the panel, and the Enterprise began
to pick up speed.
“Plot
course to transit Sol system to jumpoff point.”
“Course
plotted, sir,” Lieutenant Andela replied promptly from the navigation console
beside Number One.
The
ship leaped ahead, swiftly beginning the traverse of the system. Pike sat back
in his chair and glanced over at the tall, lean, hawk-faced doctor. “Well,
Phil, on our way again.”
“Areta.”
Boyce shrugged. “We’ve made the trip before.”
Pike
grinned and shook his head. “You old space hound. You never even set foot on
the planet.”
“And
whose fault is that? You were the one who got to go down and have a look
’round planetside. That doesn’t obviate the fact that most of us went along
with you on the trip to and from Areta.”
Pike
turned in his chair to look at Spock, busy at his science station. “Mr. Spock,
for those on board who did not make the earlier trip to Areta, would you care
to brief them on our destination?”
“Yes,
sir.” Spock moved his fingers over several control areas on his
library-computer console, and the [70]
image of Areta flashed up on the main viewscreen and all other screens keyed to
it. Spock’s quiet, clipped voice was enhanced by the ship’s intercom system as
he concisely outlined the salient facts about the planet.
“Beta
Circinus III, called Areta by its natives, is a Class M planet. One thousand four hundred fifty-seven
years ago, warring factions unleashed a nuclear holocaust that devastated large
areas of its surface. The planet has begun to regenerate itself but still has a
vast expanse of what are called hotlands, radioactive wastes that are
completely uninhabitable. The native populace itself is divided into three
types, descendants of the original inhabitants, all of whom have survived on
their own terms: townspeople, wandering tribes of nomads, and mutants. The
mutants are the outcasts of the planet and are reported to be dangerous in the
extreme. At this time, all three native classes are isolated from and highly
hostile to each other. However, a few trade contacts between townspeople and
nomads were established four years ago, largely through the efforts of Captain
Pike. It is Starfleet’s feeling that this civilization can again become viable
and achieve harmony and growth if interaction between the functioning societies
on the planet can be achieved, especially through trade.”
“Thank
you, Mr. Spock,” Pike said. “That is our mission to the planet—to extend and
enhance acceptance of mutual cooperation and trade between at least the nomads
and the townspeople. My previous efforts were accompanied by a good deal of
luck, which I’m hoping will hold through my next visit.”
[71] “That’s what I
said,” Boyce snorted. “You’re the only one who gets to go planetside.”
The
chief of security was not happy about the prospect of the captain beaming down
alone to a planet surface. Lieutenant Commander Orloff had his four section commanders
in his office, trying to come up with other alternatives they could present to
the captain. Orloff was a short man, just squeaking past Starfleet height
requirements, but taut and physically fit as a man a decade younger than his
own thirty-eight years. The three lieutenants and one lieutenant (j.g.) who
watched him stalking back and forth privately thought Orloff was taking this a
little too seriously.
“Sir,”
Lieutenant Myoki Takahara pointed out, “the captain has beamed down to
Areta alone once before.”
“And he
admits it was sheer luck that he linked up with a nomad tribe that were
inclined to be friendly,” Orloff shot back.
The
dark-eyed officer glanced across at Daniel Reed and arched her eyebrow, the
equivalent of a shrug for her. Reed frowned slightly, acknowledging the still
pacing Orloff with a brief jerk of his head. “He did take precautions, sir.”
“Certainly.
He had survey team studies of native costume, charts of nomad movements, a
recording of language analyzed and translated. Do you know how sketchy that
information is when you’re on the ground, mister? When you’re on your own and
flipping out a communicator just might get you killed, let [72] alone what seeing that piece of technology
could do to mess up the native civilization?”
Lieutenant
(j.g.) Endel was a Kelyan, a reptilian humanoid with grayish scaly skin, a
long, sinuous body, and a face incapable of a smile. Still, something about his
bright, beady eyes suggested humor as he studied his superior officer.
“Commander, none of our suggestions has been useful to you. Perhaps you have
some plan of your own in mind to persuade the captain that he should not make
this second appearance on Areta alone.”
“He
must be made to understand that captains do not make lone excursions to hostile
planet surfaces,” Orloff said obstinately.
“Perhaps
other captains don’t—and that’s what you’re used to,” Lieutenant Pete Bryce
said quietly. He glanced around at the others, his look reminding them that
Orloff was new to the ship and new to Pike. Maybe Orloff didn’t understand the
nature of their captain, although Pike was certainly well enough known by
reputation in the fleet. Pike led his people from the front, waving them on to
keep up with him. Pike’s view, often communicated to his officers, was that no
commander was any good “leading” from the rear. “The view’s bad, and the
firsthand information isn’t reliable” was his personal observation.
Takahara
smiled pleasantly at her superior officer. “No matter what you have been used
to, Captain Pike does not follow a common path.”
“I’ve
noticed,” Orloff said snappishly.
“However,
the captain does take suggestions,” Endel pointed out.
“Meaning?”
[73] “If you approached
him with an alternative suggestion—not a demand, mind you, but a suggestion—he
might be disposed to give it every consideration.”
“The
security chief has an obligation to protect the captain’s person from any
possible harm—”
Reed
interrupted mildly but tellingly. “That is absolutely true, sir, but the
captain is also the commander of this ship and has higher orders to follow. You
can suggest ways that those orders might be more—safely—carried out.
He’ll listen. Whether he’ll do it your way in the end or not ...” Reed
shrugged.
Orloff
studied his junior officers thoughtfully. All of them had more time in service
with Pike than he had. In that regard, they were far more experienced than he.
“I think this might be a matter the captain and I should explore together.”
Heads
nodded around the table. Orloff felt he finally had a consensus of opinion on
the best way to deal with the problem of the captain. It never occurred to him
that the captain might consider him a problem.
Pike
started out mildly amused at Orloff’s concern, but his amusement degenerated
rapidly into irritation when the security officer pursued the subject. The
captain patiently listened to the man’s presentation of his case, then waved
his hand to cut the flow of talk when Orloff began to repeat himself. “Thank
you, Commander. Your concern for my safety is appreciated, but I don’t believe
you’ve fully examined all the facts. The nomad tribes of Areta are extremely [74] suspicious of strangers. A group of unknowns attempting to make contact with
them would make the situation far more dangerous than one lone traveler, which
is how I successfully presented myself.”
“But,
sir, to go down alone a second time—”
The
piping call of the intercom sounded from Pike’s desk, and Lieutenant Zacharia’s
soft, melodious voice spoke into the room. “Communications to Captain Pike.”
Pike
crossed to the comm and tabbed it. “Pike here.”
“Sir,
a message is coming in for you from Starfleet. Classified and priority.”
“Route
it to my screen, Lieutenant.” He barely heard Zacharia’s murmured assent as he
turned to Orloff.
“I’ll
leave, sir,” the security officer said immediately.
He rose
to go, but Pike’s voice arrested him in midmotion. “Mr. Orloff, I do know that
you’re only considering my safety, but I believe you should also consider the
fact that I’ve served my time in the fleet, commanding three other vessels
before this one. I’ve had a good many solo missions planetside.” He held out
his hands slightly, offering evidence. “Not a scratch, although I admit to some
close calls.”
“Close
doesn’t count. Death or serious injury does, sir,” Orloff said brusquely.
Pike’s
eyes hardened into blue ice chips. “The point is taken, Mr. Orloff. I expect
you to do your duty, but don’t try to prevent me from doing mine.”
Orloff
opened his mouth to reply, thought better of it, and opted to sketch a
half-salute and a murmured [75] “Yes, sir” to Pike. The captain glanced
toward the door, and Orloff took the hint, almost leaping across the cabin to
it. The door slid open just as he arrived before it, and Orloff quickly stepped
through. It swished back into closed position behind him, and Pike was alone.
The
intercom on the desk had begun to chime softly, a repeating signal of four
notes that told Pike the confidential message had arrived and was waiting for
him to receive it. When he leaned over to key it, the scrambled version first
flashed up on the screen. Then the lettering wobbled and cleared into readable
text. Pike read it through and keyed his intercom.
“Pike
to Bridge. Mr. Spock.”
“Spock
here, sir.”
“Please
report to the briefing room immediately.”
“Aye,
sir.”
The
intercom went silent, and Pike smiled briefly. Spock continued to make a good
impression. No questions or hesitations on the order, just a simple
acknowledgment that he would obey instantly. Perhaps Number One had been
correct. Pike had always appreciated having officers with intelligence and
efficiency on his bridge.
Number
One had glanced up from the command chair when Spock was paged by Pike. She,
too, had been satisfied with Spock’s response, and she noted that Spock
promptly keyed the intercom to call in Lieutenant T’Pris to take over the
science station in his absence. She counted off the seconds to herself and was
pleased that it only took two minutes for the young Vulcan woman to appear on
the bridge to [76] relieve
Spock. Everything correct, everything precise between the two. Number One
personally preferred to run the bridge that way, though Pike liked a warmer,
teamlike atmosphere when he was in the chair. It was all a matter of
preference. When they arrived at Areta and Pike went down to the surface on a
solo mission, she would be in temporary command, and the Enterprise crew
would perform to her standards. Because the crew and the ship’s readiness were
her prime business as first officer, it pleased her to realize that no matter
who she called on to perform, the ship and the crew would respond swiftly and
precisely.
Spock
reached the briefing room only minutes after Pike. The captain had had the time
to insert a chip recording of the confidential message into the control console
of the viewer at the end of the table. As Spock came into the room, Pike waved
him to a seat. The Vulcan had barely begun to fold himself into a chair before
Pike snapped, “What do you know about the Vulcan’s Glory?”
“The
same as every other Vulcan knows, Captain.”
“Recap
for me, please.” Pike smiled suddenly. “I’m sure your knowledge of its history
is far more complete than mine.”
“I
would say that is most likely, sir,” Spock said equably. He paused a moment
before he spoke, swiftly marshaling the facts as he knew them. “The Glory is an
emerald of immense size—twenty-two thousand eight hundred ninety point four
carats—clear deep green in color, uncut but reputedly almost flawless.”
“That
much is recorded.” Pike nodded.
Spock
looked inward and summoned the history as he spoke. “The stone was won as a
prize of war in the [77] year 1433 Vulcan
calendar, extremely ancient by Terran reckoning. You may appreciate its age by
the fact that Vulcans have not embraced a warlike philosophy for more than
three thousand years. However, at the time it was won from the house of
Kawarda, in the battle of Deen T’zal, it was so great a trophy of war that it
was given the name by which we now know it, Vulcan’s Glory.”
“Why
was the gem never cut?”
“It was
the heart of the house of Kawarda. They felt the spirit of their clan dwelt in
the stone. To own it was to own the soul—the very being—of the Kawarda. To cut
it would have been unthinkable. It became a symbol of Vulcan and was placed in
the stewardship of the clan Archenida, whose war leader Sorrd had actually captured
the stone in battle.”
“For
centuries, the Archenida protected the Glory. Periodically, it was taken from
Vulcan, always in the guardianship of the clan, and paraded in high ceremony
among the exploration and merchant ships Vulcan sent out from the planet. In
human terms, it might be called showing the flag. It was on such a ceremonial
voyage that the ship He-shii carrying the Glory apparently suffered a
fatal accident and vanished forever. Of course, the Glory vanished with it.”
“According
to the records, no debris was ever found at He-shii’s last known
coordinates.”
Surprisingly,
Spock felt a twinge of sympathy pulling at him, a heaviness in his chest for
the lost ship, its crew, and its treasure. He controlled it ruthlessly, pushing
it down and away from his consciousness. “That is correct, Captain. It was
concluded that the ship plunged out of control into unknown space, [78] dead, or dying. For centuries, Vulcan
engineers and astronomers have plotted every possible variation of the course
she might have taken as unknown space became more and more explored and mapped.
To date, no trace has ever been found of the He-shii.” He paused and
then added quietly, “It was a great loss for Vulcan.”
“The
ship and its crew.”
“And
the Glory.”
Pike
studied Spock carefully, trying to gauge something he did not understand. “If
the Glory was a prize of war, and Vulcan rejected the philosophy—the emotion—of
war, why is the stone such a great loss?”
“In the
time that it was captured, Vulcan warriors felt the spirit of the Glory had
passed into them, that it had become the heart of all Vulcan, as it had been
the heart of the Kawarda. When Vulcan’s philosophy changed, the spirit of the
Glory also changed, from war to peace, from passion to logic.”
Spock
wondered how he could explain to Pike the depth of meaning the Glory had for
Vulcans. It was a symbol of the changes in the Vulcan soul and thought that
made them the creatures they were now, the change that created the
sophisticated civilization with its high moral, philosophical, and logical
standards that governed Vulcans today.
Pike
sighed and nodded. “As the highest-ranking Vulcan command officer aboard, Mr.
Spock, you are entitled to know that the priority message I received contains
some possible new information on the Glory.”
Spock’s
dark eyes leveled on Pike’s. “New information?”
[79] Pike tabbed the
control console, and a flood of figures flashed up on the screen. “A new
extrapolation for the course of the He-shii has been put forth by Vulcan
Science Academy theorists.”
“T’Clar
and Spens, no doubt.”
Pike
quirked an eyebrow in sardonic amusement. “Is it true Vulcans know everything?”
“No,
sir. However, we do retain in memory everything we have ever learned.”
“Thank
you for that information, Mr. Spock. You’re correct. Doctors Spens and T’Clar
sent a robot probe along one of the projected courses the ship—if damaged and
out of control—might have taken. After a long voyage, the probe revealed a
small planet in its path. The planet’s been tagged temporarily as GS391. The
probe was not equipped to detect life forms.”
“After
so long, life would not be expected to sustain.”
“No.
But the probe did scan the planet’s surface. There were indications of metallic
debris. We have been ordered by Starfleet to divert to GS391 to investigate. I
want you to head up the landing party.”
Spock
was silent a long moment, then he stirred. “I believe an all-Vulcan team would
be appropriate, Captain.”
“Very
appropriate, Mr. Spock. Very appropriate indeed.”
Number
One twisted in midair and angled her body so she caromed off the side wall of
the null-G ball court using her right leg to push her back toward the center.
Chief Engineer Caitlin Barry had anticipated the move and shot in front of the
exec, body-blocking [80] her away from the
ball. The collision of bodies sent them careening off in opposite directions,
but Caitlin had managed to backhand the ball, slapping it toward the catch-trap
goal in Number One’s end of the court. As Number One somersaulted in the air to
land with her feet against the end wall under Caitlin’s goal, she saw the ball
hurtle straight through the catch trap and in. The Scoreboard honked and racked
up the three points for the chief engineer.
“Lucky!”
Number One shouted, but she was grinning.
“They
all count!” Caitlin laughed back.
The two
women pushed off the walls and shot back to their respective goals. Number One
grabbed one of the soft holding straps on the wall and waited for the catch
trap to drop the ball down to the launcher and snap it into play again.
Off-duty
time during a routine mission often bored Number One. She grew, restless when
her shifts on the bridge were monotonously the same, and these one-on-one
null-G ball games with the chief engineer helped work off the nagging
frustration of her uneventful duty hours. Physically, she had no need of
tension release; her musculature and stamina required only a minimum of rest to
remain at peak performance level for long periods of time. It was her curious,
probing mind that needed the action. Number One liked to lose herself in the
strategy and physicality that null-G ball demanded so she could relieve the
boredom of too many hours of simple routine. It was an odd “failing” her
perfectionist genetic creators had overlooked.
She and
Lieutenant Commander Barry were of an [81]
age and had been in the same class at the Academy, though they had not been
friends then. The demands of their separate courses of study—command and
engineering—had drawn them into relationships with people with the same primary
interests. Since being assigned to the Enterprise, however, the two
women had found common grounds for a friendship. Caitlin was almost as tall as
Number One, an auburn-haired, hazel-eyed woman whose beauty was not one whit
diminished by the enchanting splash of freckles on her nose. She was not what
many officers thought of as a typical engineer. She had high standards and
demanded that meticulous care be taken with the equipment in her charge, but
she was not in love with her engines. She was on top of all new engineering advances,
but she did not spend all her spare time with technical manuals. She enjoyed
her duty on the Enterprise, but she was not enthralled with the starship
except as a masterfully designed craft. Many engineers lived and breathed their
arcane craft; Caitlin had other interests that occupied her attention off duty.
One of them was trying to beat the socks off Number One in one-on-one null-G
ball. She was on her way to accomplishing that at the moment. She was ahead
twenty-four to eighteen, with less than a minute left in the game.
“Let’s
see you make that shot again,” Number One taunted.
“Let’s
see you make it at all,” Caitlin heckled in return.
The
ball dropped into the launcher. There was a moment’s pause—the launcher was
programmed to release on an irregular time sequence—and then the [82] ball was rocketed into the court. Both women
waited for its bounce off the far wall to judge its spin and direction, then
they pushed off after it. It was headed almost directly at Caitlin, but Number
One kicked straight up and intercepted it as it went overhead. She twisted to
angle off the ceiling and slammed the ball sidearm toward Caitlin’s goal.
It hit
the outside edge of the catch trap and bounded away to the left. Caitlin
snagged it as it passed her and gave a kick that pushed her toward Number One.
The
executive officer arrowed at her, aiming a little low, and grabbed Caitlin’s
foot as they passed. The yank put Caitlin into a spin. She still had the ball
but couldn’t control her body at center court to take a shot.
Before
she could get straightened out enough to get in a shot, Number One had bounced
off the far wall and was on her way back. She reached out to slap the ball
away, and it spun free of Caitlin’s hands, hitting the floor and then heading
up at an angle. Number One realized it was pure luck that her trajectory and
the ball’s coincided, but she willingly took the break it gave her. She grabbed
the ball, managed to aim, and two-handed a shot at the goal. It sailed straight
in, and the Scoreboard obediently flashed up her three points—twenty-four to
twenty-one. Then the game-ending horn hooted raucously. The gravity controller
eased on, allowing the two women to lower themselves gently to the floor.
“Next
time,” Number One said mock-threateningly.
“I was
just toying with you,” Caitlin said cheerfully, [83] reaching for the towel she had left outside the court. “Next time,
I’ll really mop the deck with you.”
The
exec grinned at her. “Buy you a drink in the rec room.”
“Good
loser.”
“No.
You just don’t win that often.” She ducked the towel snap Caitlin aimed at her
and trotted ahead of the engineer into the dressing room.
They
climbed out of their shorts and workout shirts, showered, pulled on clean
uniforms, and headed for the recreation room without much conversation. The
place was only moderately full before dinner, but a few card players heckled
one another over poker hands, and several vid fans had gathered around a viewer
to watch one of the vidramas the ship had stocked for the voyage. Number One
gestured to a food slot on the wall, and Caitlin said, “Herb tea is fine.”
“Sounds
good. I’ll join you.”
Number
One tapped in the order, waited, and the two cups of aromatic brew were
delivered piping hot in mugs a moment later.
Caitlin
had settled at one of the smaller tables, and Number One joined her. They
clinked mugs and sat back companionably, sipping at the tea.
“How’s
the department?” Number One asked.
Caitlin
glanced at her, raising an eyebrow. “I give you a written report every day.”
“And I
read them. I wasn’t asking for the formal language, Cait. How do you feel it’s
running?”
Caitlin
considered, then nodded. “Good. Not great yet, but good.” She caught Number
One’s questioning look and raised a hand to cut off the idea. “Oh, I don’t [84] mean there’s anything wrong. The warp
engines are tuned so fine there isn’t a fraction of variance between them and
the control specs. Starboard impulse engine’s running a shade off, but nothing
serious. I’ll call for a recalibration when we get to Areta, just to be on the
safe side, though.”
“Personnel?”
“Veteran
team is top notch. The new ones are settling in. The best of the group is that
Scottish j.g.”
“Scott.”
Caitlin
nodded. “Appropriately. Montgomery Scott. Engineering’s in his blood and his
brains. He does the right things on instinct while others have to stop and
puzzle over it. He’ll go a long way, I think. In fact, if I don’t stay on my
toes, I might find him promoted to chief over me.”
“Not
likely, Cait,” Number One said, smiling.
“Well,
not for a while. But he is good.”
They
sat silently for a moment, sipping at the tea. Then Caitlin nudged Number One.
“How’s the captain?”
“As in
what?”
“As in,
I usually get a full rundown from you on how he looks, how he seems to be
feeling, what he’s been doing. This time, no mention at all. Something wrong up
there?” She lifted her eyes toward the ceiling to indicate the bridge.
The
exec shook her head, studying the depths of her tea as if to read leaves in the
bottom of the mug. “I don’t know. Last time we based on Earth for R&R, he
came back happy. He talked about this woman he met. I gathered it was serious.”
“I
remember your saying so.”
[85] “She’s an Academy
cadet now, but I was sure Chris”—she corrected quickly—“the captain would come
back from this leave announcing the engagement. But ... nothing. Not a word.”
“Maybe
he didn’t get to see her. She could have been on one of the mandatory cadet
cruises.”
“Mmm.”
“What
were you hoping for?”
“Nothing.”
“Number
One, remember me? This is Caitlin you’re talking to, not some stranger.”
The
exec silently studied her tea, and Caitlin studied her. Finally, Number One
looked up at her friend. “I was hoping for an answer. He’s engaged, he’s
married, something definite—not dead silence. He’s been very preoccupied, even
a little moody. It’s not like him.”
“Why
does that bother you?”
“A
happy captain means a happy ship.”
“That’s
a
cliché, and I don’t believe you
mean it. How long have you served with him now, four years?” Number One nodded.
Caitlin considered it, then she said quietly, “You know, I never asked you how
important Chris Pike is to you.”
“He’s
my commanding officer.”
“I had
the impression he means more to you than that.”
“Caitlin
...”
“Now
I’m sure of it.”
“Cait.”
“Maybe
something happened between him and this woman. Maybe it’s time you let him know
how you feel about him.”
[86] “I can’t do that.
I—I don’t feel anything toward him.”
Caitlin
snorted in aggravation. “You might be genetically supreme by your planet’s
standards, Number One, but you’re a rotten liar. What you mean is, you don’t
want to let him know how you feel. I understand. You work closely with him. And
it’s not just on the bridge. You’ve backed him when he’s been in dangerous
situations planetside. You’re both professionals, and you think the
relationship could be compromised if it gets personal. On the other hand, there
are married couples in command posts on other ships. The relationship could be strengthened.
Did you ever think of that?”
“He
doesn’t—couldn’t—” Number One stammered, then blurted, “He thinks I’m perfect!”
“I know
a lot of women who’d give anything to have a man like Chris Pike think that
about them.”
“Perfect
for them and perfect as applied to me are two different things.”
Caitlin
studied her friend for a long moment, knowing she sometimes felt odd and out of
place, despite her poise and strength of personality. Genetic engineering was
common on several planets, but it was normally used to correct potential birth
defects and other errors of nature. Number One, however, had been completely
“designed and engineered,” with an emphasis on intelligence, even temperament,
strength, and a pleasing appearance. She was the product of someone else’s idea
of what a perfect woman should be. As it happened, a good many people agreed
with the design engineer, but ...
“I think
you’re projecting your view of yourself [87]
onto him. Why don’t you find out what he thinks? Let him know how you
feel.”
“I ...
might.”
“Yes.”
“If
he’s free.”
“Yes.”
“If
it’s off duty.”
“Yes.”
“And if
I have the nerve.”
The
so-called graveyard shift was entirely satisfactory for Lieutenant (j.g.)
Montgomery Scott’s extracurricular activity. The ship kept a day and night
schedule, and during the graveyard shift most work areas were nightlit to
assist the nocturnal illusion. There was never less than a full complement on
duty in the engine room, but the chief engineer and assistant chief seldom
stood that watch themselves. Engine-room personnel, therefore, were fairly free
to amuse themselves as they wished.
The
hardware Scott had concocted in the past few days was intricate but not
terribly large. Since the members of his shift knew what he was up to and were
sworn to secrecy, he could construct his invention without fear of revelation.
Bob Brien appeared in the engine room at 0200, his mischievous blue eyes
twinkling in anticipation. “Do you have it, Scotty?”
“Of
course, man. Do you like the look of it?” Scott moved to a console and lifted
the tubing-and-container contraption into view from behind it. It was spindly
and awkward and not entirely beautiful.
“We-e-ell
...”
“Och,
man, you’ve no eye for the engineering of it,” [88] Scott said
disparagingly. “Look here.” He pointed out its salient features. “The
ingredients go in here, the boiler.” His finger traced along the slim
silver line of piping from the bulbous lump to the next streamlined square of
metal. “Through the coil to the collector, where it all comes together and ...”
He paused reverently. “... Meshes.” Scott moved his hand along the final
line of piping as he finished. “And out through the pipe into any receptacle
capable of holding one-hundred-percent true engine-room hooch.”
“It
seems so simple,” Brien said doubtfully. “We had something like this when we
followed the Lionheart’s recipe.”
Scott
snorted disdainfully. “This is just the mechanism, man. The recipe, now,
that’s a secret known only to the practitioners of the art. And if you think
the Lionheart crew would give it to you, you’d believe in many a thing
that doesn’t exist in this world or any other. My recipe, now, is a
fact. It came from the lowlands, from the soft and smoky hills, and it has age
on it, history on it. A thousand years of Scotts brewin’ it. It’s
bewitched and bedeviled and an enchanter besides. And on top of that”—Scott
grinned broadly—“it’s a mighty good drink.”
Brien smiled
back. “I believe it, Scotty. But where do you plan to put that thing? We can’t
leave it here in the engine room.”
“No?
Try this.” Scott carried the contraption over to the tangle of pipes that drew
coolant off the core where dilithium crystals underwent the bombardment that
transformed matter and antimatter into usable power for the warp engines. He
shifted the peculiar piece into a position that seemed to meld right into [89] the
pipe puzzle. “I can link it in here. Stand off a pace, and you can’t tell
there’s anything strange about it being there. Look closer, and it seems like
an extra piece of piping in the system. It just draws a bit of heat off the
core for the boiling process—no harm done to anyone—but the result is one sweet
batch of engine-room hooch.”
“You’re
sure?”
“Sure
as sure can be.”
GS391, AN UNPREPOSSESSING PLANET when the ship’s sensors
first touched it on orbital approach, proved to be equally unappetizing close
up. Spock read out the gloomy statistics from the science station as they
flashed up on the screen above his console. T’Pris stood beside him, logging a
copy of the readout into her tricorder for use on the surface when the landing
party beamed down.
“Smaller
than Earth, only marginally a Class M planet.
No bodies of water that qualify as oceans, but there are thirteen large lakes
that may be considered inland seas. Six major land masses characterized
uniformly with low mountains, plains areas studded with grasses and small
trees, best described as a veldt. No higher-intelligence life forms. Birds and
insects predominate, but there are some small carnivores and herbivores,
nothing on the mammal intelligence scale as high as apes or dolphins. It is an
old planet, wearing away, uncultivated and unpopulated.”
[91] “No signs of
habitation at all, Mr. Spock?”
“None
detected, Captain. However, the robot probe was correct in reporting large
pieces of shaped metal. They are located in the southwestern hemisphere,
scattered over approximately two square miles of terrain.”
“Can you
determine the nature of the debris with ship’s sensors?” This from Number One.
Spock
leaned over his console, his long, thin fingers swiftly tapping controls that
denned and refined the information being received by the long-range eyes of the
ship. Finally, he glanced up, significantly looking at T’Pris before he looked
at Pike. “Sensor analysis of its alloy content indicates the metal debris is
ancient Vulcan in its origin.”
“The He-shii,”
T’Pris murmured.
“The
odds are astronomically in favor of it,” Spock agreed.
Pike
swung around in his chair and nodded to the two Vulcan officers. “Get your
landing party down there and verify, Mr. Spock.”
Spock
was already heading for the lift door, T’Pris close on his heels. “Aye, sir.
We’ll beam down in nine minutes and six seconds.” The lift doors swished open
at their approach, and Spock half turned to lock eyes with Pike. The captain
was staring at him in some amusement at the preciseness of the time
specification. “My people have been standing by in the transporter room,
waiting for your order to go.”
“Thank
you for that enlightenment,” Pike said wryly. “I’ll expect a report from you in
ten minutes and ten seconds. Or thereabouts.”
The
small team of Vulcans that waited for Spock [92] and T’Pris in Transporter Room 2 was a mixed
group of specialists—an engineer, an astrophysicist, a computer
analyst/technician, and a junior navigator. There were eleven other Vulcans on
board, but Spock had chosen a representative cross-section of age and clan to
comprise the landing party.
They
turned toward him and T’Pris as if drawn by a string as they stepped into the
transporter room. “There is no doubt in my mind that the unnatural metallic
objects on the planet surface are the remains of a spaceship,” Spock announced.
“If it proves to be the wreck of the He-shii, it may be possible Vulcan
will finally regain the Glory.”
“May it
be so,” the astrophysicist, Sefor, intoned.
The
others echoed it ritually. “May it be so.”
Spock
nodded, and they took their places on the transporter platform. The transporter
chief waited until they were all correctly positioned, then said, “Ready, sir.
I have locked coordinates onto the middle of the debris field.”
“Energize.”
The
shimmering glow of the transporter grew over the six figures, covering them. As
the mechanical hum rose to its peak, the glow abruptly vanished, taking the
Vulcans with it.
They
rematerialized on an undulating plain carpeted with thick wild grass that
stirred slightly in a low breeze. As they looked around in silence, T’Pris automatically
turned on her tricorder and scanned the nearby debris.
The
shattered pieces of metal that lay strewn across the landscape bore witness to
catastrophe. The ship had died violently. The searing heat of an unbraked [93] entry
into the atmosphere left burn scars deep in the metal. Clearly, she had been
ruptured and broken as she came down in her blazing death throes. Parts of her
uniquely shaped hull had fallen in a pattern consistent with explosions that
hurled wreckage from high above, not from impact with the ground. The
transporter chief had put them down close to the largest piece of hull section.
It was the last and barest bone of a ship—weather, age, and small predators had
worn and nibbled it down to the outer skin.
“The
metal is definitely of Vulcan origin.” T’Pris’s voice was low and controlled.
She hesitated in what might have been a trace of emotion just once. “From the
degree of ... of deterioration from exposure to weather and natural erosion,
its age is approximately—”
“It is
the He-shii,” Spock interrupted flatly. He pointed to the faint trace of
lettering that trailed up the side of the large hull piece. The ancient Vulcan
script was barely readable as the last part of the ship’s name and a portion of
its identification number.
The odds
of recovering anything intact from this desolate wreck were so low that Spock
did not bother to waste time calculating them. Still, he moved toward the large
piece of barren hull, more in curiosity than in the hope of finding anything.
T’Pris dutifully followed him, scanning. Their tricorders might be able to
detect and analyze clues, something—anything—that might hint at what had
happened to the He-shii.
As
Spock and T’Pris stepped within three meters of the hulk, a metallic, grating
voice suddenly spoke. It took a second for Spock to recognize the words and [94] realize
their import. He started to whirl around toward the others, a smile breaking,
but he remembered to check himself in time. The face they saw as he completed
his turn to them was implacable and Vulcan. “Ship’s message beacon.”
Pike
and Number One met the Vulcan landing party in the briefing room. Boyce had
trailed along, his interest piqued by the unexpected find. The message beacon
had been placed on the table and was still broadcasting. Its surface had been
badly damaged, pitted and scorched, but the metallic voice uninterruptedly
graveled on in an incomprehensible tongue, obviously repeating a message over
and over.
“Ancient
High Vulcan, sir,” Number One said after listening intently for several
seconds.
Six
sets of Vulcan eyes snapped to her at almost the same instant. The look was
approving. Pike studied her in some surprise.
“You
understand it?”
“I recognize
it,” she replied evenly. “The old tongue is still used in a number of
formal Vulcan ceremonies, but I do not understand the content except for a few
words.”
“Number
One is quite correct, Captain.” Spock moved forward a step and placed a hand on
the beacon, thumbing a control on its underside. The metallic voice stopped.
“Lieutenant T’Pris has recorded the message for our records. I believe I can
give a reasonably accurate translation at this time. However, if you wish to
wait for an exact word-for-word transcript—”
[95] “I’ll take your
version of it now, Spock. We can cross-check it later for any discrepancies in
the translation.”
“Very
well, sir. It begins with the call sign and name of the ship. The message was
recorded by Captain Stepn. By the tone of the voice, I would say it was
recorded hurriedly and under stress. The He-shii was breaking up as it
neared GS391. The ship was doomed, and the few surviving crew members were
abandoning her to take to a life shell. One of them was of clan Archenida, and
he was carrying the Glory with him. They had decided to cast their lives in the
hands of fate. The life shell would have had provisions and oxygen for ten
occupants for three months.”
“Warp
capacity?”
The
young engineer, Spahn, moved slightly, an alert expression on his face. Pike
nodded to him. “Yes, Ensign?”
“Our
ancestors did not have such a term, sir, but the life shell would have had a
power drive that would give them the equivalent of Warp 2.”
“So
this life shell—something like a shuttle, I take it?” There were affirmative
nods from the Vulcans. “The life shell would have been able to cover fair
distances at low warp capacity for some time.”
“Far
longer than the occupants would have lived, if no suitable planet were
encountered,” Spock noted quietly. “Captain Stepn gave the course they intended
to steer. He states in his message that he had decided to stay with the He-shii.
I believe he meant for the message beacon to be ejected into space,
possibly in orbit around GS391, so that it would be activated by the approach
of any starship that ventured by. [96]
Unfortunately, several identifiable noises at the end of the message imply that
the He-shii broke up even as he was recording, and the ship and the
beacon simply fell to the planet surface in a flaming wreck. The beacon was
activated by our presence, possibly by the workings of the tricorders.”
Number
One tapped the now silent beacon with a long, shapely fingernail. Blue
polish this week, Boyce noticed. The first officer had decided tastes in
cosmetic colors. The blue matched the intense hue of her eyes. “You said
Captain Stepn gave the course the life shell was taking.”
“He
did, and I believe you will find it interesting. In our reckoning of the
coordinates, their course was 32 mark 180 degrees.” Spock let the information
drop into their minds as a leaf dropped into a still pool, spreading gentle
ripples.
Pike
and Number One got it at the same time. “Areta lies directly on that course,”
Pike snapped.
Number
One nodded and added, “With a three-month food, water, and oxygen supply and a
sufficient warp capacity, they would have made it if they didn’t deviate from
that course.”
“They
would not have deviated,” T’Pris said. “They had decided to accept their
destiny as it came. The course, once chosen, would be kept.”
Pike
looked around at them—the Vulcans taciturn and waiting, Boyce cheerfully
curious and interested, Number One neutral but with an alert intensity dancing
in her eyes. “Number One,” Pike said. “Take us out of orbit and set course for
Areta at Warp 6. We had no reason to scan for spaceship debris on the [97] planet before, or to ask about any mutants
with pointed ears. This time we will.”
Spock
was seated in an attitude of meditation when his door chime pealed softly. He
rose, frowning slightly as he turned. He expected no one. “Come in,” he called
as he pushed the hood of his robe back and down around his neck. The door slid
open, revealing T’Pris.
“Oh,”
she said as she saw the formal robe. “I beg pardon. I did not realize you were
meditating. I will call again later.”
“No.
Please come in. I was having some difficulty concentrating properly.” He
acknowledged ruefully to himself that it was not a prevarication. He had been
having trouble keeping his mind in the correct state for clear meditation. He
had received a formal message from T’Pring on the ship’s personal message
channel. To be absolutely correct, he had received a statement of her bride
price, and it was high—fifteen hundred nakh a month. He hadn’t
especially minded that; the income from his estate would pay it easily. What
had disturbed him was that when he had tried to bring T’Pring’s face to his
mind, he found it difficult to do so. He had perfect recall, but when he
concentrated on a memory of her features, he could bring up only a vague,
formless impression of an oval face with dark eyes, framed by dark hair—and no more.
Yet he frequently found himself clearly envisioning the face of this woman
before him—and not only her face but her body, her movements, her voice.
Perhaps it was only her proximity, the day-to-day working [98] relationship that had begun to develop between
them, but he had worked with Vulcan women before, and none had ever hovered in
his mind like this. He should be feeling the closeness of his betrothal link
with T’Pring. Instead, he was haunted by this young widow to whom he had no
more than working ties. He reflected ironically that he had never felt a
link with T’Pring.
He
gestured T’Pris toward a chair. “Saya?”
“Yes,
please.”
Spock
went to the food compartment in the wall and spoke the order. In a moment, two
cups of the steaming liquid were delivered in the small enclosure. He carried
them over, gave her one, and sank into a chair opposite her, cradling his cup
in his hands. “Was there something you wished to discuss with me?”
“I have
been thinking of the Glory. Do you believe there truly is a possibility of
recovering it now? Even if the life shell safely reached Areta, so many things
could have happened to it, to them—”
“You
are engaging in useless speculation. When we reach Areta, we will find what
there is to find.”
She
sipped at the saya, her eyes fastened on the utilitarian carpet
underfoot. “Of course, you are correct, Mr. Spock.”
“Was
that all?” He cursed himself for sounding too harsh. He had realized suddenly
he didn’t want her to leave.
“No. To
be honest, I wanted to see what your life was like—in here. In private.”
“Why
should that interest you?”
To his
surprise, she looked up at him with dark eyes that sparkled with just a hint of
humor. “You are something of an enigma, Mr. Spock. You know [99] Vulcans can never resist an unresolved puzzle.
You are one of us and yet not. You are reputed to be more Vulcan than any other
Vulcan. Certainly, you are reputed to be more duty-bound to Starfleet than the
most dedicated officer of any other race. Yet you seem so alone among other
officers, alone even in the midst of other Vulcans.”
He
shifted in his chair uneasily. Without directly inquiring, T’Pris had managed
to raise questions he would rather not answer. It was interesting to him that
he was not offended by her asking. “I may seem alone to those who do not know
me. I have friends.”
“On
Vulcan?”
“And in
Starfleet. I am also”—he hesitated, then continued—“betrothed. I have declared
the formal intent to marry.”
“That
is to be expected. But why is she not here with you?”
“T’Pring
does not serve in Starfleet.”
“T’Pring,
of the family of Solen?”
“You
know her?”
“Of her.”
T’Pris studied Spock a moment, then dropped her gaze. “When I brought Sepel’s
body back to his ancestral estate for burial, Solen, his daughter T’Pring, and
his sons came to pay respect. She and her escort were courteous to me.”
Spock
carefully considered the statement. Vulcan women never gossiped; they floated
quiet whispers, but whispers of truth. “Her escort—Stonn, I believe. His family
has served Solen’s house with honor for centuries.”
“A
shame you and she cannot be together,” she finally said. “My husband would not
have considered [100] our marriage on any other basis.” She
allowed her eyes to rove over the copy of the ancestor statue from his family
shrine which dominated one corner of the room, the traditional woven cloth in
his house design which draped it. Bringing her gaze back to his, she said
quietly, “I wept for a long time after he was killed.”
“It is
not seemly to show grief, T’Pris.”
“Nonetheless,
Spock, I wept.” She set aside the empty cup and pushed to her feet. “Perhaps I
am not the most Vulcan of all Vulcan women.” She looked at him levelly. “I
trust it will not spoil our working relationship.”
“No
...”
“I am
sorry to have disturbed your meditation. I will not keep you further.” He
started to rise, but she held up a negating hand and quickly let herself out.
It was
only after the door closed behind her that Spock realized that not once had
they addressed each other as officers, but rather they spoke as friends. He
pulled the hood of his robe up over his head and settled himself again on the
floor mat to begin his meditation. T’Pris’s face still floated on the
viewscreen of his mind.
Arrival
over Areta was routine and uncomplicated. Pike actually enjoyed seeing the
predominantly yellow-brown ball growing larger and larger in their viewscreen
as they approached at impulse speed and dropped into a standard orbit. He
noticed that the harsher colors of the devastated areas of the planet were more
softened by blues and greens than when he [101]
had been there before. Spock’s verbal analysis confirmed Pike’s notion that the
two major city areas had begun to spread, encouraging the growth of trees and
shrubs as well as irrigating more fields to raise crops.
“Start
a planetary sensor scan, section by section, Mr. Spock. If the life shell got
this far, there’s a good chance it was able to set down somewhere.”
“The He-shii’s
accident occurred after Areta had suffered its own catastrophe, Captain,
and before any major recovery of the planet’s environment.” Number One felt she
had to point out the unpleasant possibilities. The executive officer frequently
had that unhappy duty. “Even if the Vulcans were able to put the shell down
safely, there may not have been any real chance of survival on this planet.”
Pike
nodded grimly. “I’m aware of that, perhaps more than anyone else here.” The
townspeople in the two cities that survived were fortunate in that they had
prudently placed a number of key facilities underground before the holocaust.
The nomads who survived did so in bleak areas that were not involved in the
devastation. The mutants barely managed to stay alive in small groups and
probably only because the gene damage they suffered made it possible for them
to live in the hot spots the others couldn’t tolerate. Gradually, the mutants
had moved to the mountains and rallied there while the nomads held the deserts
and the few oases close to the two cities. The life shell might not have had a
choice about where it set down, and the Vulcans aboard probably had no inkling
of Areta’s history. If they survived, it might have been as mutants. If their
descendants were found alive, it was [102]
possible they would no longer be recognizable as Vulcans. Pike glanced around
at the silent, thoughtful bridge crew. “Start your sensor scan, Mr. Spock.”
The
tall Vulcan silently turned to his station and began to key in the elements for
which the sensors would be scanning. Other bridge personnel went on with their
routine duties.
It was
three hours before Spock straightened up and turned back to Pike.
“Sensors
are now picking up some scattered metal debris on the surface, definitely the
alloy used in Vulcan starships and life shells.”
“Position?”
Number One asked quickly.
“Planetary
coordinates—latitude 90 degrees, 20 minutes, longitude 130 degrees, twelve
minutes. According to the planetary maps logged on the preliminary scan of this
planet, this area is one of the most desolate sections of the great desert.”
“On the
viewscreen, please.”
Spock
hit a switch, and the map quickly appeared on the screen. Pike recognized it,
having studied the entire desert area and the sparse concentration of nomadic
tribes before his first trip down to the surface. “Not only desolate, Spock.
It’s still so wild that the nomads don’t even frequent it. A little too close
to mutant areas to suit them, I think. The only good thing about it is that
there was very little fallout detectable when the first scouting ship did the
preliminary scans.”
“Didn’t
they do a full scan?” Boyce inquired from an unoccupied engineering station.
“I’m surprised they didn’t spot the metal debris.”
Spock
had been consulting his library computer, [103]
and now he looked around at the older man in approval. “In fact, they did,
Doctor. However, they appear to have assumed it was a relic caused by the
holocaust. They did not scan the makeup of the metal itself; they only marked
its existence on the surface, as they marked other devastation. They were
looking for life, not metallic pieces of what they would call junk.”
“Mr.
Spock, take your landing team down.”
“Yes,
sir.”
“And
Mr. Spock?” The Vulcan paused to look inquiringly at the captain. “I hope you
find it this time.”
“May it
be so,” Spock replied.
The
scene was almost a duplicate of the one on GS391. The landscape was different
and far more barren. The mountains in the distance were saw-toothed, jagged in
their youth, and unlike the ground-down molars of the smaller and older planet.
But the landing party personnel were the same, and the transporter chief had once
again set them down close to the largest detectable piece of debris.
It was
recognizably part of an old Vulcan life shell. Pieces of it had been cut off
and used to create several rude shelters. As the team slowly moved among the
lonely relics, Spahn forged slightly ahead. Suddenly, he called out and pointed
to a plot of ground a little behind the shelters.
“There,
sir!”
The
others, except for Spock, gathered around him to look where he was pointing.
T’Pris let out a sad little sigh. The restless wind and the shifting sands had
not been able to move the traditionally shaped rock [104] cairns
that had been built over seven bodies laid to rest there. The spitting hum of a
phaser sounded behind them. Reacting quickly, they drew phasers and ran toward
Spock standing rock-still in the encampment near one of the shelters.
“What
is it?” Sefor called.
“How
many did you find?” Spock asked, ignoring the question.
“Seven,”
T’Pris said. “That could not have been all, though. Who would have buried the
last?”
“He was
not buried,” Spock replied quietly. “He stayed to do his duty. Here.” Spock led
them to one of the shelters. A makeshift door had been fashioned from one of
the life-shell hatches. Spock had had to phaser it to be able to push it open.
Inside the dim and musty interior stood a low table fashioned of rock and a
slab of metal from the life shell. The desiccated skeleton of a Vulcan male lay
stretched in front of it, as though he had lain down fully prepared to die. A
container wrought of ancient silver in a geometric design sat atop the low
table.
Spock
looked around at Sefor and nodded to him. “You are the eldest. Please,” he
said, gesturing at the container.
The
astrophysicist hesitated, then he stepped forward and slowly opened the lid.
And gasped. “It is the Glory. Spock, it is the Glory! Finally.” He
reached in reverently with both hands and lifted the stone for the rest of them
to see. Even in the weak light filtering into the shelter, the huge stone—the
size of a large cantaloupe—gleamed in Sefor’s hands. Then, sensing who the body
at his feet must have been, he replaced the great emerald in its container. “He
would have [105] been
clan Archenida, of course. By fate, he must have been the last to die, but even
if he had not been, he would have insisted that he lie here with the Glory.”
“I
believe we will find you are correct, Sefor. We will look further in here to
discover if any recorded message was left.” Spock indicated two small, flat
trunks set against one wall. “If there was, we will know the final fate of the
party. If not, perhaps it is enough that it was we who found them and who will
bring them home.” He flipped open his communicator and said crisply, “Spock to Enterprise.
Captain Pike.”
“Pike
here.”
“We
have found the remains of the Vulcans who escaped in the life shell, sir. We
have also found Vulcan’s Glory.”
“Well
done, Mr. Spock. Will you need any assistance down there?”
“Yes,
sir. We will require a burial detachment to remove the bones of our honorable
dead to the Enterprise for transfer to Vulcan and proper interment
there.”
“Security
will have a crew down there in ten minutes. Anything else?”
Spock
looked around at his compatriots. “No, sir. We will bring the Glory aboard
ourselves.”
PIKE WAS ALMOST CHEERFUL as he put together the articles
he would take down to the planet surface with him. The question of the Glory
had come to a successful conclusion. Starfleet Command was ecstatic at the
message he had sent reporting the artifact’s recovery. That done, Pike had very
little more interest in it. He had examined the stone when Spock brought it to
him and acknowledged with Number One and Phil Boyce that it was, indeed, a
remarkable gem. It had almost dwarfed Pike’s hands when he held it. Even uncut,
its rough natural facets had glinted and glowed in the light, striking green
sparks that enhanced its rich natural color. He had given it back to Spock with
the order that it be placed in the security vault until they returned to
Vulcan. Foremost in his mind now was Areta.
Well,
he mused as he laid out a nomad desert robe, Areta was almost foremost
in his mind. Janeese had been too much in his thoughts since he returned from [107] leave. He welcomed the opportunity to get
away from the ship, to beam down alone among strangers to execute a mission
that, it was hoped, would see the townspeople and nomads of this civilization
one step closer to a better life and a higher planetary survival rate. He was
to look into the trade links they had made in the four years he had been away,
to judge their progress. If it was healthy, as he hoped it would be, he had
orders to leave it alone, and he would do so happily. If it had declined, his
orders were still to leave it alone, but he would regret the waste and the loss
of a civilization struggling to rebuild its world.
He was
already wearing the close-fitting pants and shirt made of spun ucha hair.
He sat down to pull on the high boots with tops that adhered tightly to his
calves. The burnooselike outer robe would go over all, and, carrying a nomad’s
possessions bag and a water container, he would be ready to go.
As he
rose, he caught a glimpse of himself in the mirror and paused to stare wryly at
his image. He saw what Janeese had probably seen in him at first—an undeniably
handsome and youthful man with an athlete’s build and, when he was in uniform,
a star-ship captain’s stripes on his sleeves. Chris Pike wasn’t an arrogant
man. His looks had been striking from the time he was a toddler. He had
discovered early on that a handsome face would not protect him from the hard
knocks and disappointments in the world, nor would they help him in the fierce
competition of Starfleet where he had cast his career. He had learned to rely
on his mind and his instincts and the natural qualities of leadership he
possessed and to dismiss the face nature had given him. Still, there had been
women—one in [108] particular who had meant much to him, but
who had regretfully bowed out of his life because she was unwilling to be part
of Starfleet and couldn’t bear the idea of the long separations required by his
missions. The other relationships had been impermanent, not taken seriously by
either Pike or the women. Not that he had taken them lightly, either, but both
parties recognized their impermanence and
had let go without regret.
Janeese
had been different. She had been introduced to him by mutual friends two and a
half years ago when he had gone to visit his parents in Mojave. She was
interested in becoming a Starfleet officer and became more interested in the
career after they met. They approached each other warily, but they became
lovers by the time his leave was over. While Pike had taken the Enterprise out
on her next mission, Janeese had been accepted and started training at the
Academy. He received frequent messages from her, filled with affection for him
and enthusiasm for the Academy and Starfleet. Two years had gone by swiftly,
and his leave this time had coincided with cadet vacation so they could meet
again in Mojave.
Pike
had not risen to the rank of captain without possessing an ability to read
people. The minute he saw Janeese, he knew something was wrong. When he took
her in his arms, he understood what it had to be. She was trying too hard to be
warm and affectionate, and her body was stiff rather than pliable in his
embrace. He had forced himself to keep his voice light and his smile gentle as
he asked, “When did you meet him? Do I know him, or is he a classmate of
yours?” The man who had captured Janeese’s heart in Pike’s [109] absence was a Starfleet instructor, a desk
man, not a spacer like him. Irony was something for which Pike had a
philosophic appreciation. He allowed his appreciation of it to save him from
bitterness and disappointment in Janeese. He was a caring and giving man by
nature, and he had no desire to spend his life alone, with only the love of
space and a starship in his heart. But he wondered often, and he wondered now,
where was the woman who would gladly share that life with him?
Pike
sighed, turned away from the sad-eyed captain in the mirror, and slipped on the
outer robe. It fell loosely about him, and he belted it, arranging the folds in
the overlapping style of the tribesmen. Already hooked on the belt was a sheath
holding one of the sharp-bladed dree knives. A dree was a nomad
tribesman’s (or woman’s) most valuable piece of equipment—weapon, utensil, and
tool all in one. The possessions bag was rectangular and made of the tanned
hide of the ucha, the gazellelike creature the nomads herded. Inside
were personal items that might be found in any tribesman’s bag. Pike’s
communicator rested in one of the deep pockets of his outer robe. The folds of
the fabric would prevent it from being noticed, and the nomads’ respect of
person and possessions would keep anyone from accidentally discovering it. He
had opted not to carry a phaser with him. The bulky water container in the
shape of a pliable half-cylinder actually carried one of Pike’s most important
tools. A universal translator was sealed in a waterproof receptacle in one end
of the container. It picked up the spoken word and translated it into Starfleet
standard via a small bead microphone Boyce [110]
had implanted in Pike’s ear. The
captain had sleep-studied the Aretian language in the nomads’ dialect before
going on his first mission and reapplied himself to it before this one, and his
command of it was reasonably fluent. The translator was a backup. It not only
confirmed or corrected what he understood he heard, but it also offered
suitable answers in Aretian if he needed to fall back on the prompting. Pike
hung the water container by its short straps from hooks on his belt and slung
the possessions bag on its long strap over his shoulder. Then he headed for the
transporter room.
Lieutenant
Commander George Meadows caught him in the corridor just outside Transporter
Room 3. “Sir, if you have a moment?”
“Is it
urgent, Meadows? Surely Number One or Mr. Spock can deal with any problems or
questions ...”
“This
should come from you, sir, if you know what I mean.”
“Frankly,
Meadows, I don’t.”
Pike
usually had only routine dealings with the ship’s geologist. Though Meadows
ranked Spock, the second officer headed up all science divisions on the ship
and logically would be the person Meadows consulted. Meadows was short and thin
and tended to be slow and economical in his movements. Pike had found the man’s
information on planetary geology and mineralogy accurate, detailed, and
valuable each time he had called upon him. Meadows had always seemed a calm,
even placid, man. (“Rather like his precious rocks,” Phil Boyce had commented
on one occasion.) Now, however, he looked anxious and tense.
[111] “It’s the stone,
Captain—Vulcan’s Glory. I’ll need permission from you to study it.” Before Pike
could respond, Meadows rattled on, his ardor rising as he spoke. “An emerald
that size is unprecedented. And it’s reported to be virtually flawless, another
precedent. This is the opportunity of a lifetime to catalogue it, measure it
once and for all, holograph it for posterity ...”
“No,
Meadows.”
“What?
Sir?”
Pike
shook his head. “I can’t allow it. Vulcan’s Glory belongs to them. You can
apply to the Vulcan High Council through Starfleet channels for permission to
catalogue and record it. That’s as far as I’ll go.”
“But,
sir, it’s a geologist’s dream.”
“And an
object of historical reverence for Vulcan.”
“Sir,
you have to understand ...”
“Commander,
the answer is no, and it is final. Is that understood?”
Meadows
looked like a disappointed child, his face crumpling in near tears. “Yes, sir.”
He walked away stiffly, muttering half under his breath. “It’s the opportunity
of a lifetime. Geologist’s dream ...”
Pike
watched him leave, then turned and punched a nearby wall comm, “Pike to Spock.”
The
answer came back almost instantly. “Spock here, sir.”
“Spock,
I’m ordering you to keep the Glory in the security vault until we can properly
return it, unless we receive other orders directly from the Vulcan High
Council. Clear?”
On the
bridge, Spock curiously arched an eyebrow and glanced at Number One, who was
seated in the [112] command chair. The first officer arched an
equally curious eyebrow back at him. What was this all about? “Clear, sir. I
will also relay your order to Security Chief Orloff.”
“Good.
Pike out.”
Pike
turned back toward the transporter room and his interrupted mission. He beamed
down into the desert under the friendly cover of night, as he had planned. No
one had seen him; the nomads seldom stirred out of their camps after dark. Pike
had chosen coordinates near the primary herding and grazing routes of the tribe
with whom he had first made contact. Sensors had shown a fairly large group
camped four kilometers away. In all likelihood, it was the tribe he knew, the
one led by Farnah, a shinsei of great stature. Pike decided he would
walk toward the camp directly after he beamed down. There was little chance of
anyone questioning his comings and goings, but he wanted to leave a fairly
well-marked trail for some distance, in case someone happened across it.
He had
covered almost two kilometers before he felt confident enough to make his own
camp for the night. Pike’s possessions bag provided a personal tent of soft,
compactly folded material that would ward off the sun during the day and keep
body heat in during the chill desert nights. There were a few natural predators
in the desert, but they were inclined to seek prey less combative than the
tribespeople—or Pike. The smaller creatures that hunted in the night were no
danger to him, and the tent was sealed to keep them out. He set it up swiftly,
scooped out a comfortable hollow for his hips, pushed up a pile of sand for his
[113] pillow,
and prepared for sleep. He could do nothing more until morning.
Pike
dreamt of Janeese, clearly seeing her honey-blond hair as it curled softly
around her face, creating a frame for her dark brown eyes, pert nose, and
gently smiling mouth. She wore the dress she had worn when he asked her to be
his, a gossamer thing in a shade of old rose, material that shifted and shaped
and clung to her body sensuously. But that was wrong, because in the dream
their friends were just introducing them, and she was looking up at him with an
interested sparkle in her eyes that told him she liked what she saw. Someone
was murmuring her name to him—Janeese Carlisle—and he felt himself smiling back
at her, responding to her with an emotional jolt he had not felt for some time,
unfamiliar but not unwelcome. Then the scene seemed to shift, and she was
introducing him to someone, the instructor at the Academy to whom she had
become engaged. She was pressing Pike’s hand, dropping into his palm the
friendship ring Pike had given her before he left on his mission. “Sorry,
Chris,” she was saying with tears in her eyes, her voice shaking. “I’m so sorry
...” They were riding in the mountains on the two quarter horses Pike kept at
his parents’ home. Janeese was a good rider and handled her mount well. She was
asking him questions about Starfleet, about the Academy, telling him her dream
of venturing among the stars. She was looking at him adoringly as they rode
side by side and saying, “With you, Chris. I want to be out there with you.”
She and Pike were curled together in bed, bodies still moist from making love,
his hands [114] running through her tumbled hair as he told
her how much he cared for her. “I love you, too, Chris. I love you, I love
you.” And then she was shaking her head, sobbing, saying again, “I’m so sorry,
Chris. I’m so sorry. You weren’t here ... I was lonely ... Tom was a friend. A
friend at first, and then more. You weren’t here. I’m sorry. I’m sorry. I’m so
sorry, Chris ...”
Pike
woke up sweating, and he abruptly pushed the folds of the tent aside to let in
some of the cold night air. He sat cross-legged, staring out at the brilliant,
star-flecked sky. Janeese had affected him more deeply than any other woman,
had gotten in under the skin. Losing her—and in so mundane a way—bothered him a
good deal more than he let on. He had walked away from her tears, casually
pocketing the ring she had returned as though he had accepted her rejection. He
sighed and admitted he wasn’t as tough as he made himself out to be. Not about
Janeese. That one had hurt deeply.
T’Pris
had not planned to work late in the lab until a line of research inquiry had
not given her the answers she anticipated. She stayed at her station, her curiosity
piqued by the new questions raised, following where they led. She was
concentrating so intensely on her screens and her science computer that the
inquiring cough behind her surprised her. She whirled in her chair to find
Meadows standing there.
“Sorry,
Lieutenant. I didn’t mean to frighten you.” He didn’t look especially
apologetic, but then T’Pris hadn’t been frightened, either.
“Is
there some way I can assist you, Commander?” she asked politely.
[115] “Maybe. Could I
ask you some questions about the Vulcan’s Glory?”
She
eyed him neutrally, weighing it up in her mind that these were natural concerns
of a geologist who also doubled as a mineralogist. The Glory was a legendary
stone, and she understood Meadows had been denied the opportunity to study it.
She nodded slightly, just once. Meadows promptly showered her with a barrage of
questions about its diameter, its weight, its shape, the placement of its
natural rough facets. She answered as best she could, but she finally lifted
her hands in defeat.
“I am
sorry, Commander Meadows. You desire too much technical information. I have no
expertise in gemology.”
Meadows
pushed in closer to her, reaching out eagerly to almost touch her hand. She
withdrew, uncomfortable with the human closeness of the man, but he ignored it.
“Don’t you see, that’s exactly what I was trying to tell the captain. No one on
this ship can research that stone, capture it on holograph and in a technical
log, no one but me. I have the knowledge to apply. Surely you Vulcans
don’t deny the rest of the Federation a record, a mere look at the
Glory?”
“I
cannot say. It would be a matter for the High Council.”
“On
this ship, it’s the captain’s word that’s law. If you could put in a good word
with Pike for me, that would be all. You’re a Vulcan and a scientist. Your word
would mean a lot.”
“I am
sorry, Commander. Captain Pike has given explicit instructions for the security
and handling of the Glory. To do as you suggest would offend my [116] personal
honor. It would be a defiance of the captain’s orders.”
Meadows
stepped back, hastily apologetic. “Yes. Yes, of course, Lieutenant. You’re
absolutely correct. Captain’s orders. A matter of honor. Naturally, you
couldn’t interfere. I’m sorry I intruded on you. Please forget I said anything
at all.” He half bowed and left her alone, scurrying out the door that just
barely slid aside in time for him to clear it.
T’Pris
stared after him thoughtfully, a small frown crinkling a V between her eyes. She turned back to her
science computer and began to renew the line of research that had so interested
her, but she found herself pausing again and again, considering the incident
with Meadows and not liking it.
She
finally set her research aside and went to Spock’s quarters, but she hesitated
outside the door. She had interrupted him once before. What would he think of
her calling on him at this late hour? Still, she felt he should know of
Meadows’s approach to her. She was also an honest woman, and she admitted to
herself that she wished to see Spock again, alone and off duty. She had loved
Sepel deeply. They had been childhood playmates and friends all their lives.
His death had left her alone and lonely for companionship for the first time in
her memory. The year since his passing had been empty, except for the saving
grace of her work. Spock, with the aura of mystery created by his half-human
heritage, with his very correct manner, with his attractive mien, had touched
her as Sepel had not. She frankly admitted to herself that Spock roused in her
desires that her lifelong friend and husband had not. That surprised her and
also pleased [117] her.
T’Pris reached out and touched the annunciator at the side of the door. Almost
immediately, Spock’s voice called out through the speaker, “Enter.” The
door slid open.
She
stepped through the door and found him waiting for her. “Mr. Spock.”
“T’Pris.”
“Something
happened a short time ago which I think you should know. It bears on the
Glory.”
“Tell
me.” He led her to the low couch in the sitting room area of his suite and
politely waited for her to seat herself. “Something to drink?”
“No,
not now. I thank you for the courtesy.”
Spock
lowered himself to the couch beside her. “What is it that disturbs you?”
“Lieutenant
Commander Meadows came to me in the lab. He requested that I take his part with
Captain Pike, that I ask that he be allowed to examine and catalogue the Glory.
I told him that was impossible. He must know the Glory is sequestered in the
security vault, as the captain ordered. The only change in those orders must
come from the Vulcan High Council. I refused to assist him.”
Spock
studied her for a moment, their eyes locking. He nodded briefly. “Your actions
were entirely correct.”
She
hesitated, then slowly said, “Yes.”
“There
is a problem you perceive.”
“Not a
problem. But it should be considered that perhaps the commander has an equally
correct argument. The Glory is unique, precious, and possibly the most rare
stone in the known galaxy. All he wishes to do is holograph and measure it,
catalogue it for [118] posterity, for the knowledge of the
Federation planets. Can that be wrong, Spock?”
Spock
hesitated, considering it. “No, not if that is the only thing Meadows wants.
But he is a human. He is subject to a certain personal conceit, something that
might even be called greed—academic greed. He is the ship’s senior geologist.
If he is the one to do the cataloguing, the holographing, the measuring of the
Glory for the historical records, his name becomes associated with it. He may
be asking for this permission for entirely personal reasons and personal gain,
which is, perhaps, why Captain Pike has invoked the security requirements he
has and why he has said only the High Council may change his orders. The
captain is an intelligent and perceptive man. You were correct in refusing
Meadows’s request, as I have said.”
“Then I
have disturbed you for nothing.”
“I was
not occupied. When the chime rang, I thought it might be you.”
T’Pris
glanced away, almost shyly. “Why should you think that?”
“You
have a way of knocking at my door when I have been thinking of you.”
“Of me?
Not T’Pring?”
“You
also have a way of asking difficult questions.”
She
nodded, quietly acknowledging the fact. “So my parents said, and so said my
husband. But now I am T’Sai T’Pris, Aduna Sepel kiran. For
humans, a widow. For Vulcans, free to choose a new mate.” She turned to look
directly at him. “Or a lover. That is a difficult question to consider.”
“I am
betrothed,” he said softly.
“But
not wed,” she said as softly. “Not yet.”
[119] Spock studied her
for a long moment, considering what he knew of her, what he felt for her, the
surprising emotions she called up in him. And he remembered what he knew of
T’Pring, what he felt for her. The only emotions T’Pring brought forth
in him were duty and obligation laid on him by others. Slowly, he reached out
his hand to T’Pris.
Lightly,
gently, almost fearfully, their fingers touched and caressed.
Night
had fallen on the city of Sendai, wrapping its narrow streets in shadows. The
twin moons of Areta had not yet risen, and only the stars lit a figure in black
clothes moving quietly and stealthily from one pool of darkness to another. A
few unshaded lamps still shone out onto the walks, making oblong slashes across
the streets. As the figure in black slipped swiftly through one such slash, the
light caught its face for a moment, revealing a handsome youth of perhaps
eighteen seasons. His name was Bardan Aliat, and he was the heir and pride of
the prosperous merchant Melkor Aliat. What he was doing now would certainly not
fuel his father’s pride but rather his outrage. It was late enough that the
only people Bardan might encounter on the walks would be those who had tasted a
little too deeply at the local drinks shop, none likely to recognize him.
His
greatest fear of discovery came from the watchguards, who patrolled the high
walls that circled the city on an irregular time schedule. Bardan, however, had
taken the trouble to cultivate friendship with a young guard named Andor Clite
and had learned his duty times. The great gates were still ajar, waiting for [120] any last stragglers from the fields and the
road to come in for safety. Mutants never came this close to the city, but they
had in the Bad Times, and the townsmen never forgot it. There was still time
before the Closing, but once the gates were locked for the night, they did not
open for anyone or anything until morning light.
Bardan
found shelter in an alley mouth in the street beside the wall and squinted up
to make out the figure approaching along the walk on top. He could just see the
watchguard silhouetted against the starlit sky. It was not his friend; it was
the woman with whom Clite shared the watch. Bardan pulled back a little farther
into the shadows and studied the street. It was wider than the ones he had
traveled to reach this point. This was one used for the carts that moved their
produce and merchandise to the markets. He would have to cross to the gate
without cover. He reached under his jacket and brought out the timepiece his
father had given him just two weeks ago. If Clite had been correct, he should
be reaching this point on the wall very soon. He stared up again, saw the woman
almost opposite him, and yes! Clite was recognizable approaching from the
opposite direction. Bardan slunk back into the alley shadow until the two sets
of measured footsteps merged as they passed each other and then separated
again, moving away.
As soon
as both watchguards had paced far enough past, Bardan ran for the gate on the
balls of his feet, almost soundless. He had crossed only half the street when
he heard one set of heavy ringing bootsteps suddenly stop. Why? Bardan could
not pause; he pelted on, stopped gasping in the looming dark of the gate
recess. He couldn’t see from there what the [121]
watchguard was doing or which one it was. Had he been seen? If he had, why
hadn’t the watch raised a challenge? A townsman running out of the city at
night was suspicious enough. He could bluff his way through somehow, saying he
was restless and had come out to share part of the watch with Clite. Then he
heard a striker and the distinctive puff puff of a chooka. Bardan let out his breath. It was Clite, who “suffered the vice” of
smoking. The young watchguard had only stopped to light his pipe. The booted
steps resumed their rhythmic pacing.
Bardan
touched his hot face and found he was wet with a sweat so heavy it was
streaming in rivulets. He mopped himself with a nose cloth, took a deep breath
to steady himself. Clite’s steps could still be heard going away. In the
opposite direction, he could hear the faint sound of the woman returning on her
rounds. Clite would be a little slower because he had stopped for that moment
to light his pipe. Bardan had to go now. Quickly, he slid around the
edge of the huge gate, paused in the recessed shadow of the outer gate portal
for just an instant, and then quietly ran through the night. The giant kerra
tree that stood sentry outside the gate hid him from view as the female
watchguard solemnly paced by. Another moment, and she and Clite would pass on
the wall, heading for the opposite ends of their duty round again. Bardan
waited, shivering in the warm night as his muscles tensed nervously. The two
watchguards met, crossed paths again, and walked on. Bardan left the protection
of the thick tree bole and ran down the road toward the desert, the night
wrapping its web around him. No cry was raised behind him. No one had seen him.
He had done it!
[122] Bardan hurried
along the starlit desert road as fast as he could manage. He was in good
physical condition, but he had seldom been out of the city at night, and the
sounds that came ominously from so many places around him kept him in a state
of constant tension. He found himself panting heavily and pausing often to look
over his shoulder. The wind made a soft sighing over the dunes. There were
night birds crying and other nocturnal creatures making strange noises. There
was always the danger of mutants. He had heard of raids conducted this close to
the city now and then, if the food in the mountains where they lived was
sparse. He didn’t know if it had been scarce recently, but he thought nervously
that it might have been. He peered ahead and managed to make out the
dark shapes of the kerra trees that formed a scrawny oasis here on the
rim of the desert. That was his destination, but now that he had reached it, he
hesitated. It was dark and still among the trees. Suddenly, the pale starlight
of the sky overhead and the night noises that had disturbed him seemed much
more friendly than that black stand of trees. He moved into it slowly, as
silently as he was able. It seemed to grow darker as he came under the shelter
of the thick-leaved branches. He held out a hand in front of him and promptly
ran into the massive trunk of one of the trees.
As
Bardan reeled back, startled, a shape suddenly leaped out from behind the tree
and pounced on him. He shouted in fear as the robed and hooded figure knocked
him to the ground and half fell on top of him, grabbing his wrists in a strong,
fierce grip. As Bardan struggled wildly, he abruptly realized that the figure [123] holding
him down was shapely and sweet-smelling—and giggling uncontrollably.
“Silene!” he
roared, angry now because he had been caught in fear.
“Hush,
hush,” she laughed quietly. She put a hand over his mouth lightly and rolled
off him. “You are soft yet, love. Not your fault. Wait until the desert
toughens you. Then I will never again be able to surprise you like that.”
He sat
up, brushing sand off him, still pouting. His eyes had begun to adjust to the dark
under the trees, and he could make out her lovely features, framed by the
material of her hood. He had no need of the light to know she had long, thick
chestnut hair and witching green eyes. The people of her tribe were all fair in
coloring, though their skin was always tanned brown by the sun. She tilted her
head mischievously, still smiling at him.
“Forgive
me?”
He
wanted to pretend he was angry, but her smile was prompting one of his own in
response. Finally, it broke across his face, and she launched herself into his
arms, knocking him flat again, but this time it ended in a kiss that satisfied
them both. When she raised her head, she said solemnly, “I think I am
forgiven.”
“Most
heartily forgiven,” Bardan agreed. “But Silene, we have to hurry. We’re not that far from the city. I wasn’t followed,
but if anyone looks in for me after I supposedly retired to bed and they find
I’m not there ...”
“Yes,
love. You are right. We will need distance between us and both our families. We
will begin now.” She rose to her feet in the easy, graceful manner of the [124] nomad people. It was a move Bardan had never
mastered. He clambered up after her and found she was holding out a hand to
him. “Come. I have two meercans tethered here.” She led him farther back
under the trees, again smiling saucily back at him. “They are two of Father’s
best.”
Bardan
winced. “I suppose it was clever of you to take them, but he’s going to be very
angry.”
“They
were promised to the man who would bond me. Fortunately, no man had yet come
forward, and I chose you as bond mate. The meercans are yours now.” She
reached the two saddle animals that snuffled affectionately against her sleeve.
“Did you bring nothing to our bonding, love?”
“Well,
my father has no meercans, and I couldn’t carry much of his merchandise
with me. I brought some food for us. And”—he jingled a pouch at his
belt—“Father does have money. We can buy what we will need when we reach
Andasia.”
Silene flung
her arms around his neck and nestled against him. “I have chosen a man of
wisdom,” she murmured.
The
basic operating principle of the matter-antimatter engines of a starship was
relatively simple, as so many brilliant ideas are. A dilithium crystal was
suspended in the center of the injector core and subjected to a carefully
directed stream of matter from the top of the core and one of antimatter from
the bottom. The planes of the faceted crystal absorbed the two streams of
matter that were deadly to each other and redirected them into a
compatible river of material that produced warp power for the engines. [125] However, sometimes—not often, but
sometimes—a little thing or two could go wrong. Nothing that would endanger the
engines, or even the ship, but which could make a difference in the equipment involved in the operation of
the system or anything attached to it.
The
engineering graveyard shift was quiet as always. Scott had chosen this time to
start through his first batch of engine-room hooch. The curiously shaped
pipe-and-bulb arrangement that formed his still had been installed
inconspicuously in a tangle of other pipes that hooked into the maintenance
scope that looked into the injector core for routine inspections and servicing.
As he had pointed out to Brien, no one had noticed it in the least, and it
blended into the background of pipe and tubing that surrounded the core so
naturally that no one was likely to. Scott carefully uncapped the maintenance
scope hole, moved aside a neatly inserted (and nearly indetectable) circle in the wall of the scope hole,
inserted a funnel, and began to pour in the mash and pure water that were the
base of his recipe. There were other ingredients, which he measured out
carefully and slipped into the tube in the wall. That done, he poured in more
water, waited a moment, then took a careful sniff at the tube. The expression
that passed over his face was pure bliss. His grandfather had told him you
could always smell the quality of the end product in the first mix of the
recipe, and Montgomery Scott’s nose told him this would be a perfect batch. Let
them talk about the Lionheart, he thought. Wait until they get a taste
of this brew! He happily closed the scope hole and went back on duty.
At that
moment, the dilithium crystal in the core [126]
suffered an infinitesimal fracture along the edge line of a facet. Crystal
fracture was one of the few inherent drawbacks to using dilithium, but it
happened so infrequently (and every ship carried a number of backup crystals)
that it was felt the risk was worth taking in exchange for the immense power
possible through the system. This fracture was so tiny that only a microscopic
investigation would have revealed it. With the warp engines in low idle while
the ship was in orbit, it did not affect the efficiency of the crystal in
transforming matter and antimatter into the correct mix of energy required. It
did, however, result in a few stray gamma rays being thrown off in a direction
not intended by the designer of the injector core. They bounced along the line
of the maintenance scope hole and found the slightest edge of an opening in the
side wall that did not inhibit their passage into the piping there.
The way
had been long and arduous for the two riders in the desert. Silene had known the direction she was heading,
guided by the stars, but Bardan had to take her leadership on faith. He trusted
her, she was desert born and bred. But still, he had never turned his own life
over to anyone so completely as he had to this slim young woman he loved. He
had his moments of fear and vague doubts until the large kerra tree
oasis loomed up before them, just as Silene had said it would. She smiled over her shoulder at him, and he could
see that luminous look on her face in the light of the two moons which now
shone high in the sky.
“Here
we make camp,” she told him as he urged his mount up beside hers. “No one will
be here. This [127] place
is my tribe’s winter graze, and they are south of Sendai now. They are not due
to be here for months.”
They
moved into the shelter of the big trees and found a flat, grassy space near the
center where a spring fountained into a sweetwater pond. Silene slid from her mount, handed Bardan the reins
as he did the same, and told him to tend the meercans while she set up
camp for them. Unaccustomed to being ordered, Bardan balked at first and then
quickly realized her job was the more complicated. He tended the beasts
quickly—unsaddling, watering, and feeding them. While he was occupied, Silene set out utensils, started a small sheltered
fire in an old scooped-out cookpit, and assembled a meal that smelled wonderful
to a man who had eaten little before beginning this adventure. She had also
laid out sleeping rolls and had a full plate and cup ready for him when he
rejoined her.
“I
could eat a meercan on a spit,” he told her with a smile. She stared at
him, shocked, and he realized he had just violated one of the nomad’s most
sacred rules. No one spoke of a meercan’s death; the beast was too
valuable to the tribesmen. The only way a meercan would ever be eaten by
a desert dweller was if it was too old or too injured to be saved. The death of
a meercan under any circumstances was a major loss to a nomad. “I’m
sorry, sweet. It was a phrase, a townsman’s phrase,” he assured her quickly.
“It means I’m hungry, that’s all.”
“You’re
sure?”
“Yes, Silene. I wouldn’t want to eat a meercan. Really.”
“I’ve
made ucha meat stew.”
[128] He took a quick
taste, then a larger one as the flavor burst on his tongue. “I like it. It’s
wonderful.”
“Do you
mean it?”
“I’ll
never lie to you, Silene.” He
set his spoon in his plate and reached out his hand to touch her lovingly.
She
looked away, pretending to be withdrawn. “The wise women of my tribe say a man
is already lying when he says such a thing to a woman.”
“I come
from a different tribe. I thought that was why you loved me.”
“Oh,
yes.” The pretension was banished by her brilliant smile. Suddenly, their
hunger was gone and the plates were set aside, and hunger of another kind
overcame them. The bedrolls and blankets were close by, and it was only a
matter of moments for them to spread them and find each other, touching and
being touched, making discoveries they had not yet permitted themselves. They
were so deep in their love, so lost in sensation, that they never heard the
soft, padding footsteps that should have been their warning.
The
creatures that leaped from the darkness, yanking Bardan away from Silene, were grotesque in the moonlight that filtered
through the kerra trees. Bardan caught a glimpse of their faces and
twisted, frightening bodies as they grabbed him. Mutants. He saw Silene fighting grimly, silently, trying to twist
away from her captors to pull out the dree knife on her belt. Bardan
tried to reach her as the mutants easily subdued her. She continued to kick and
struggle until they bore her to the ground. Bardan shouted in rage and threw
himself against the two mutants who held him. Strong as he was, they were
stronger, and he was controlled as easily as a child. The mutants had him [129] and Silene trussed up and slung on their saddled meercans. They had their
own mounts—odd animals something like meercans and yet unlike. Mutants
also? The creatures’ language was difficult to make out, but Bardan found, if
he listened carefully, he could understand the gist of what they were saying.
What he understood he didn’t like. They were heading for the mountains the
mutants controlled, the Druncara Range. No normal who had ever gone into the
Range had ever returned.
PIKE WOKE TO A DAWN that was a soft glow on the horizon,
rapidly spreading to a golden flood of sunshine. He made himself a cold
breakfast of ship’s rations and water as he sat on the sand and watched Areta’s
sun rise. From this point until he returned to the ship, he would have to eat
as the people around him ate. Finishing the rations, he collapsed the personal
tent and folded it neatly into his possessions bag. The tribe of nomads should
be less than two kilometers south of him now, and he began to walk in that
direction.
The
desert wind that had blown most of the night had dropped to a whisper, and the
sand lay still on the gentle dunes that dominated the landscape in this area.
It had been a stroke of good luck that the first time Pike had beamed down and
approached the tribe led by Shinsei Farnah, he had appeared striding out
of the midst of a desert sand devil, a swirl of sand whipped up by the swiftly
changing winds running [131] ahead of a storm.
The great nomad leader, Sadar-es, had come to the tribes in exactly the same
manner, and Farnah’s people had welcomed Pike generously because of the
coincidence. Sadar-es had been a loner, something of a hermit, but either
intuitive or learned enough to foresee the gathering trouble among the people
of the planet that meant a catastrophic war. He had preached everywhere he went
that the coming war would destroy them if they stayed close to the cities. The
original tribespeople had then been little more than scattered individuals and
groups who preferred to live off the land in the rural areas of their world,
the rough equivalent of farmers and ranchers. More and more people had come to
listen to Sadar-es as he spoke eloquently about the shadow of death that hung
over Areta when the great powers that ruled the planet finally clashed in the
war that would inevitably come. Many left the cities and embraced the
philosophy the desert hermit preached. Before the final conflict descended on
Areta, Sadar-es had led his followers deep into the desert fastnesses, where
they had molded themselves into the nomad life now followed by their descendants.
After the holocaust, Sadar-es had stayed with his people until they formed
themselves into the eight tribal units that survived to the present. He saw
them begin to organize their tribal government and taught them everything he
had known of desert survival. He was calculated to be in his eighty-first year
when he had abruptly taken up his possessions bag and water container and
disappeared into the wilderness, never to be seen again.
The two
cities that survived, Sendai and Andasia, had had leaders who also believed in
the message [132] Sadar-es had preached, but they had no wish
to give up their cities. Instead, they had begun to build down, burrowing into
the bedrock beneath their cities and creating a safe shelter there. The
townspeople had survived the holocaust by going deep and staying there until
the surface environment was clean enough to support life again. Then they had
emerged and started building up, beginning with stout city walls
encircling their enclaves to protect them from marauding mutants as well as the
tribespeople, whose nomadic ways they did not trust. Sadar-es was a legend
among the city dwellers, too, a prophet whose vision saved them but also a
renegade connected with the tribes. They were grateful for his warning and that
their ancestors had heeded it, but they were just as happy he had disappeared
into legend.
There
were any number of tales about Sadar-es, one of them being that another prophet
like him would come to the people to lead them in a new direction. Pike’s
appearance out of the sand devil had led Farnah’s tribe to adopt a reverential
approach to him, which he quickly worked to dispel. He insisted he was just a
wanderer, content to live outside a tribe but needful of their company now and
again. He told a story of originally being bora to a tribe occupying desert
lands on the other side of the planet, far enough away that his tale should go
unchallenged. (His assumption was correct; Farnah’s people never roved that far
from their own established territory.) Pike told them he felt the need for
solitude and meditation, and the nomads respected his story, asking few
difficult questions. Pike had also carefully refrained from making any
statements that might set him up as a [133]
potential prophet, but his shrewd direction in discussions of trade among the
tribes had planted the seed of the idea that perhaps establishing mercantile
contacts with the townsmen might be beneficial to all.
The
tribespeople had successfully bred and herded their uchas from the
beginning. These were hardy animals that needed little more than brush and
scrub grass, some wild grains, and water to survive and multiply. The uchas provided
milk, meat, long coarse hair that could be clipped off and spun into yarn, and
hides for tanning. The nomads also cultivated the arts and crafts of
leatherwork, weaving, pottery, jewelry of beads and desert stone, hunting, and
a kind of hawking using a falconlike bird called a torep which they
trapped and trained. They knew how to make food from the succulents, wild
plants, and herbs of the desert and the oases. Their most revered weapons—dree
knives, hunting spears, and swords—were relics handed down from before the
holocaust, from father to son, mother to daughter. Firearms of any kind had
apparently been set aside once the knowledge of how to create them and their
ammunition had vanished. The disposition of a weapon after the owner’s death
was a serious matter and never lightly made. Their language was fluent and
beautiful, often sensitive, and they could guide themselves by the sun and the
stars, but only the makleh of the tribe could read or write or do sums.
Pike equated the makleh with the tribe’s secretary-treasurer. He or she
did all the trading for the group; ensured that monies, animals, or trade goods
were correctly paid and received; and recorded all agreements and all
disposition of wealth through marriage or death.
[134] The townsmen had
controlled their subsurface environment since the holocaust and were beginning
to exert some control over the ground near the cities. They had developed a
viable, though limited, agriculture in addition to the crops they grew
hydroponically and were also successful in raising small animals and poultry as
well as a variety of edible fish in their ponds. They used wind and solar energy
for power and obtained their water from the deep wells they had sunk. They had
become sophisticated in weaving and dyeing fiber material from native strella
plants and had developed a paper much like papyrus. They had stores of iron
and copper and formed utensils and decorations from these metals, but alloys
were beyond them, as well as beyond the nomads. The townspeople had maintained
their education system, though many of the products and resources they had
known in their history had been lost to them. It was considered unlettered not
to be able to read and write, to master mathematics, at least one basic
science, or one craft.
To any
outside observer, the two groups could benefit from trade with each other, but
first the initial barrier of distrust had to be hurdled. Pike had been able to
act as a mediator between Farnah’s tribe and the townspeople of Sendai by the
simple expedient of suggesting the nomads set up a colorful camp outside
Sendai’s walls and open a bazaar as they would do among their own people at a
tribal oasis. The townspeople had been wary of this activity outside their
walls, until they had seen it was peaceful—and the food smelled good—and the
merchandise seemed so very attractive and unique to their experience. A day [135] and a half later, Farnah and his makleh, Berendel,
welcomed a contingent of Sendai’s leading merchants headed by Melkor Aliat. The
initial group was soon followed by a larger one that discovered there was room
to deal and trade, with each side the better for the barter. Pike had slipped
quietly away that night, knowing that communications lines were open and the
two groups were on their own and on their way.
Chris
Pike mentally reviewed most of this history as he trudged through the sand in
the direction of Farnah’s camp, guided by the sun. He sighted the low huddle of
ucha-hide tents in the middle distance and moved quickly toward them,
expecting the warm welcome extended to anyone who came to a nomad tribe with an
open hand and a peaceful heart.
What he
walked into was chaos.
Farnah’s
voice was bellowing in anger and frustration from the main tent. Pike could
hear the more gentle tones of Farnah’s wife, Ingarin, saying something else,
only to be drowned out in another roar of rage from the chief. A gabble of
secondary male voices chorused Farnah’s outrage. Other tribesmen and women
huddled in groups, looking toward the main tent, murmuring together in low
tones, shaking their heads. The makleh, Berendel, spotted Pike and came
toward him with the traditional carelessly graceful hand gesture of welcome
that moved from belt level out to the right, ending with the palm up and open.
It showed that the greeter held no weapon to use against the visitor.
“You
grace us again, Indallah Krees.” Indallah meant “wanderer.” He
had used his first name, which [136] sounded more like
a nomad name than his last. Berendel would not ask where he had been in the
interim when he had not been seen. It would be up to him to inform her, if he
wanted to. The smile on her face was genuine and attractive. Berendel was a
striking woman, with sharp hazel eyes, fine aquiline nose, and sculptured
cheekbones. Pike guessed she was somewhere in her forties, lean and wiry, her
skin weathered by the sun and the wind.
“It is
you who grace me with your welcome, Makleh Berendel,” Pike replied.
Another bellow of rage erupted from the main tent, and his eyes involuntarily
shifted there. “I hope there is no trouble visited on the tent of Shinsei Farnah.”
“Trouble
and grief, friend Krees,” Berendel said. “His daughter has disappeared in the
night.”
Pike’s
mind spun back over four years. He remembered that Farnah and Ingarin had five
strong sons and one daughter. “The little sprite with the big dark eyes—Silene?”
“The
joy of the shinsei’s life,” Berendel agreed. “And not so little now.”
She looked around as Farnah burst out of the tent and surged toward the
tethered meercans, followed by his wife, his five sons, and their wives.
“Come, you must see him now.”
“He is
distracted—”
“He
will not become less so, Indallah Krees.”
Berendel
set off toward Farnah, and Pike had no choice but to follow her. She waved and
called out to the shinsei, bidding him to see who had come to the camp.
The big man looked around in anger, and his face twisted into something that
was near a welcome [137] when he saw who it was. Hospitality was
important, especially toward one who had lodged in their tents before. He
hitched himself around to face Pike and Berendel as the makleh led Pike
to him. The others of the family waited on Farnah’s response. With an effort,
he made the welcome gesture, which Pike returned to him. “You grace us again,”
Farnah grunted.
“You
offer me grace, shinsei,” Pike said politely. “I hear from Berendel that
you have suffered a loss.”
Farnah’s
anger rose again. “My child ... my desert flower ... my only daughter ...
kidnapped!”
Ingarin
shook her head and stamped her foot, determined to be heard. “She has not been
kidnapped, my man. Your sons have told you two meercans are gone from
the tether line. There is no sign of a struggle, and only one set of tracks
from our tent to where the meercans were tied. Every other member of the
tribe is here, willing to take up chase after her. I tell you she has run off.”
“Why
should she run away from her home, her parents, her brothers?”
Ingarin
glanced at Berendel in the timeless look that women share when they clearly
want to shout, “Men!” Berendel dropped her eyes and pulled her head once
to the right, half a negative shake, eloquent in its briefness. Ingarin turned
back to Farnah, almost equal to her husband in size and certainly equal in her
anger, now directed at him. “Why does any nomad woman leave her home? For a man.”
“What
man? Name him!”
Ingarin
poked Farnah in the chest. “Do you not [138]
remember three grazings ago when we came near Sendai for the trading? Silene came to us, shyly, ashamed to tell us what
was in her heart.”
“She
said she was drawn to a town boy,” Farnah snapped, as if it were not
worthy of his attention.
“And
you raged in anger and forbade her ever to see him again.”
Farnah
shrugged, dismissing it. “She agreed she would obey. What of it, woman? Silene has been content to do her duty as daughter
of this house ever since.”
Ingarin
shot another glance at Berendel and one at Pike, looking for support. “She said
she would obey. She seemed to be content. But we are a half-day’s
travel from Sendai and a new trading, and Silene—”
“Has
been kidnapped by that upstart cur!”
“Silene has
run off to meet him. Or perhaps some other, though I doubt that. We cannot know
her heart, but whoever she went to, she went voluntarily. I risk the good of my
word on that.”
“The
tracks seem to say our mother’s words are true, Father,” one son ventured.
Farnah
turned on him angrily, still unable to accept that his precious jewel of a
daughter could do such a thing. “Then this boy has used Silene’s innocence and
trust to persuade her to run away with him. To ruin her and leave her.
These townsmen are not to be trusted.” He glared at Pike, and the captain hoped
fervently that Farnah did not remember that Pike had subtly encouraged the
traffic between town and tribe.
Berendel
moved slightly, a gesture toward Pike. “Indallah Krees has come from the
direction Silene [139] appears
to have taken, shinsei. Perhaps he has seen something.”
Pike
quickly reviewed the look of the terrain he had hiked over. He had seen no
tracks leading out toward him until he had neared the encampment. “I camped two
kilometers from here when night fell, shinsei. I was tired and fell
asleep soon after dark. I heard nothing in the night, but perhaps weariness
took hearing from me. I saw no tracks when I came to you until I came on some meercan
trail back there.” He gestured over his shoulder.
“Asleep
and heard nothing, eh? It is easy to die in weariness if mutants or other
marauders are about, friend Krees.”
“I will
sleep lighter in the future, shinsei.”
“Enough.
We will trail the meercans and catch up with my disobedient daughter and
this boy, if that is who is with her. You spoke with those trademen, Krees, did
you not?”
“When first
you went to trade, yes.”
“I have
never spoken with them. But perhaps you and Berendel can deal with them if need
be. We must get Silene back.”
“I’ll
do all I can,” Pike said quietly. The girl had surely complicated things—the
boy, too, if Ingarin was correct that it was a plan the two of them had
hatched. But if the girl could be brought home none the worse for the
adventure—or if some suitable resolution could be worked out—perhaps the
promising trade agreements between Farnah’s tribe and the Sendai townspeople
might not be jeopardized. Strangers were welcomed into the tribe and often
through [140] marriage. But Pike did not know who or what
the boy was or his motives, and his welcome might be dubious at best. If the
young man could not adapt to the tribe, he would be cast out, and Silene would be shamed. Her shame would rebound on
her father and cost him honor, possibly the leadership of the tribe.
Although
the wind had blown much of the night, it had been fairly gentle, and the meercans’
tracks were deep. The partially filled-in hoofprints were still clearly
visible to trackers with the experience of Farnah and his sons. Ingarin was
left to follow on with the other families and the herds. Berendel and Pike
mounted meercans and accompanied the main group of trackers which would
travel far more quickly.
At
first, the tracks headed almost directly for Sendai, as Farnah expected. There
was no discernible trail leading from the city to the nomad encampment, and it
seemed to prove Ingarin’s contention that Silene had taken the two. meercans (“Farnah’s
best,” Berendel had confided to Pike) and gone to Sendai to meet someone.
Then
the tracks began to veer to the east, away from the city. Farnah deliberated
over them with his sons and included Pike in the conversation.
“Perhaps
someone else stole the mounts and Silene as well,” the youngest son, Neepah, suggested.
“But
you say no one else is missing from the camp,” Pike pointed out. “And these
tracks say no one came from the city for her.”
There
was a nod of agreement all around. Finally, Farnah’s eldest son, Durlin, spoke
up. “Father, if we continue in this direction, we will end at Antorin Oasis.”
[141] “I see it in the
trail,” Farnah agreed. “But why should Silene ride to our spring encampment if she was to meet the town boy?”
“It is
within walking distance of Sendai,” Berendel pointed out. “A safe meeting
place for both, perhaps?”
“Silene was
lured there,” Farnah said with finality. “Great promises must have tempted her
there in spite of my orders.”
Berendel
murmured quietly to Pike, “Great promises or perhaps great love.”
“You
are often the matchmaker for the tribe, makleh. Do you believe in love?”
She
smiled slightly. “The girl was of an age to be bonded, and several young men
were interested in her. No one spoke of love, only of the size and value of her
dowry. Silene spoke to her mother
of her caring for the town boy. Why do you think the girl has gone?”
“I
think you’re quite right.”
It was
midafternoon, a quiet time on the Enterprise. She held steady in standard
orbit, no navigation required, very little monitoring of instruments. Meadows
was counting on the peaceful ordinariness of the day to assist him. He was
taking a huge risk but one he justified to himself as absolutely rational and
entirely called for. The security man at the vault appraised Meadows as he
approached. Meadows recognized him as Security Officer Reed. This could be
difficult. Meadows had been hoping for a less experienced officer, but he
intended to carry his plan through nonetheless.
“Good
day, sir,” Reed said politely.
[142] “Hello, Reed,”
Meadows said casually. “I’ve come for the Glory.”
Reed
shot a curious look at him and frowned, but Meadows was already offering him
the clipboard he carried under his arm. “Captain Pike’s authorized me to
evaluate and document it for the library-computer records. You know, measure
it, weigh it, holograph it, that sort of thing.”
“Yes,
sir, I understand.” The security guard examined the authorization clipped to
the board. The captain’s signature was clear at the end of the order.
Meadows
felt a bead of sweat roll down his chest and hoped his face wasn’t perspiring
as noticeably. He had worked for hours on the signature, carefully copying it
from departmental orders Pike had previously signed. The scrawled “Christopher”
was lumpy and descended from the initial clear letter into a wavy line. “Pike,”
however, was written strongly and firmly, as though the surname meant more to
the writer than the given one.
Reed
looked up again and smiled. “Everything seems to be in order, sir.” He turned
and, shielding the electronic combination from Meadows’s view, entered the
number and letter series that would unlock the vault. The heavy door swung
open, and Reed stepped inside the big safe. He appeared a moment later with the
Glory in its carrying case. “Here you are, Commander Meadows.”
Meadows
took it, thanked him, and started to turn away. “Commander.” Reed’s voice
stopped him in his tracks. “How long do you think it will be before you return
it? I’ll have to put it in my report.”
“Oh.
Oh, yes. I would say three hours to do the job [143] properly, but it might
take longer. That’s all right, isn’t it?”
“Certainly,
sir.” Reed smiled and gave him a friendly half-salute. “Just be careful with
it.”
“That
goes without saying, Officer Reed.” Meadows walked away, balancing the heavy
carrying case in his left hand. The Glory was his, for a little while, anyway,
and he could hold it and examine it with no one else to interfere. That was all
he wanted. But once it was done, Pike would see the value of his study of the
stone. Meadows was absolutely certain the captain would not waste his effort
insisting that the evaluation be eradicated. The captain would understand that
Meadows was entirely justified in what he was doing. Entirely justified.
Dr.
Philip Boyce lazily leaned back in the reclining chair that molded gently to
his body and stared at the ceiling of his sickbay office in pleased rapture.
The good feeling had something to do with the shot glass in his hand. He
glanced at the chronometer and grunted. The timing was perfect. He reached out
to the ship’s intercom button on his desk and tapped it.
“Boyce
to Bridge.”
“Number
One here. What is it, Doctor?”
“You
have exactly one minute to the end of your duty shift, correct?”
He could
almost see the first officer frowning slightly, wondering what he was up to.
Her voice came back noncommittally. “That is correct, Doctor. And if you
know that, you didn’t call me to ask for the time.”
“You
are correct. Next question from you is, Whaddaya want? Also correct?”
[144] “An inelegant
phrase for you, but accurate.”
“I am
about to satisfy your curiosity. When you come off shift in”—he checked the
chronometer again—“ah, thirty seconds, I’m inviting you to drop by sickbay to
participate in a scientific experiment of great importance.”
There
was a pause, then her voice said, “I’m surprised you don’t feel Mr. Spock
would be more suitable for such an experiment.”
“Sorry.
He’ll have to wait for his promotion. Only first officers qualify for this one.
Are you coming?”
There
was a slightly longer pause than before. “I will be relieved in
exactly five seconds, Doctor. Then I’ll be down.”
Boyce
grinned cheerfully at the intercom. “I’ll be waiting.” He tapped it off and
relaxed back in his chair. He had one eye on the chronometer, mentally counting
off the minutes, and had reached five when the sickbay door slid open to admit
the executive officer. She glanced around at the unoccupied beds and then
crossed to the door of Boyce’s office to look in at him. Her eyes shifted from
his face to the glass he held. “About this scientific experiment of great
importance?” she asked.
He
raised the glass to her in salute. “First batch of the new mission.”
A smile
lifted the corner of her mouth, and her deep blue eyes softened slightly. She
stepped into the room and comfortably hitched one hip up on the edge of his
desk. “It was kind of you to invite me, Phil.”
“Chris
and I usually christen the first wringings together, but I thought you might
like to join me in his absence.” He hooked another shot glass from the [145] cabinet behind the desk, poured out a
half-measure from a beaker, and handed it to her.
“You’re
being a miser with that.”
“Wait
until you taste it before you judge your fellow officer. Skoal, prosit, à votre santé, down the hatch.”
She
chuckled, lifted the glass toward him in a toast, and took a sip of the
waterlike liquid. Her eyes widened as she swallowed, and for a moment the
white-hot sear of it down her throat held her speechless. Boyce looked at her
benignly. When she could manage it, she gasped, “What is in this?”
“Good,
huh?”
“Good
is not the word, my dear doctor. More like—ambrosia. Nearly lethal until it
gets to your stomach, but ambrosia after that.” She looked deeply into the
glass with great respect. “Warming, too. Who’s responsible?”
Boyce
studied the glass he held, considering the question. “Well, we’ve never had a
batch like this before. Stands to reason it’s a new man. What do you think?”
“Hmm.
Most likely an engineer. Two or three new ones this trip.” Number One took
another cautious sip of the brew, held her breath as it burned its way down.
“You know, this is better than the Lionheart’s.”
“I
wonder what’s in it.”
“It has
been my experience, Phil, that when it comes to engine-room hooch, it is often
better not to ask.”
“Oh,
well, in that case, drink up.”
They
solemnly tilted their glasses together, tapped rims, and did exactly that.
* * *
[146] Farnah’s party
reached Antorin Oasis in the late afternoon. As they entered the shadow of the kerra
trees, they heard voices at the center of the grove, near the deep pool
that welled there. Pike saw several pedal vehicles standing just inside the
oasis. The tribesmen quickly dismounted and moved forward, hands on the dree
knives at their belts. Pike and Berendel followed just a little behind
them.
The men
standing at the pool were townspeople. Pike recognized one of the prominent
merchants he had met four years before, Melkor Aliat. Aliat was as tall as
Faraah, but with nowhere near the same bulk, a strong man but soft with town
living. He had an aristocratic face, a thick mane of gray-flecked dark hair and
intelligent brown eyes. As he saw the nomads approaching, he turned on them
angrily.
“So
you’ve come back to the scene, have you? Where is my son? What have you done
with him?”
“Your
son?” Farnah snapped. “We have no concern for your son.” He turned to Berendel
and Pike. “Speak to this one.”
Aliat
moved in on Farnah, ignoring the others. “Bardan was forbidden on pain of death
to see the nomad girl.” He snorted disdainfully. “The boy is young, gullible,
believing he loved her. I thought it was settled and done months ago when I
ordered him to forget her. But last night he left the city, and we followed his
trail here. This is your oasis, Shinsei Farnah. Was it your girl who
lured him?”
“Lured
him!” Farnah roared. “Silene would never—”
“Your
people kidnapped him—”
“Never—!”
[147] Pike and Berendel
pushed in between the two shouting fathers, separating them gently, careful of
their dignity. “Shinsei Farnah, Trader Aliat, please. A moment to speak
quietly.” The two men backed off a few steps, glaring at each other.
“Good
men,” Berendel said in a conciliatory voice, “surely there is some agreement to
be reached here. I am makleh of Shinsei Farnah’s tribe, but I see
there are two sides to be considered here.”
Pike
had conferred briefly with Durlin, who had rejoined the group after scouting
the oasis and studying the ground. Now he turned to the two fathers. “Two sides
indeed. Shinsei Farnah, your own son has examined the tracks. The thing
that is clear to him is that Silene brought two meercans from your camp to this oasis. Another
person—we will assume it is Bardan—walked here from the direction of Sendai.
Two persons rode out together, away from the city.”
“It is
true, Father,” Durlin said. “You may study the evidence yourself. The ground
has been walked over by these townsmen here in the oasis, but the tracks in and
out can be easily read.”
Farnah
and Aliat glared at each other, angry and stiff in their assumptions. Pike
exchanged a glance with Berendel and nodded at her to speak. “The two must have
met here by agreement, good men. There was no kidnapping. They have run off
together.”
“Then
your son plotted this!” Farnah snapped at Aliat. “My daughter is pure, naive.”
“Pure?
Bardan is shy, inexperienced. He has no idea of the desert. It was your
daughter who—”
“Good
men! Good men, please!” Pike interrupted. The two men subsided, glaring
at each other but [148] grudgingly listening to Pike. “There is no
blame attached to either of you. I think these two young people decided they
loved each other and that their parents were wrong to demand that they stay
apart. So they got together. Whether they love each other and should be married
is a question to be worked out.” Farnah and Aliat both grunted angrily at the
same time. Pike shook his head. “You are rightfully concerned with their
welfare, but nothing can be done until they are found. Let me go after them and
bring them back to you. Surely they will both see that running away from their
families and their duties is not the best beginning for a marriage—if there is
to be one. It is up to you, their fathers, to speak through the makleh about
a correct, acceptable marriage bargain.” He paused and looked at the two men.
They were glaring at each other but seemed to have calmed a little.
Farnah
turned to Durlin. “In what direction do the tracks lead from here?”
“Toward
our winter graze at Tisirah Oasis, Father.”
“Mmm,”
Farnah grunted. “Silene keeps
to the places she knows will provide them with water and shelter.” He looked at
Aliat. “What say you, Trader Aliat? Shall we let Indallah Krees bring
our children to their senses?”
“Yes,”
Aliat snapped. “But I’m going with him.”
“So am
I.”
Pike
winced. Alone he might have been able to convince the two youngsters that they
should come back and seek out a suitable marriage agreement in accordance with
custom. With their fathers at his heels, the young couple might be far more
difficult to [149] deal with. “Makleh Berendel, will you
come with us? I think there may be need of your services as a mediator.”
Berendel
bowed her head and touched her palms together lightly. It was a symbol of
acquiescence and agreement to the suggestion. Only Pike saw the expression on
her face, the half-smile and twinkling eyes that told him she realized this was
going to be a touchy, but amusing, situation.
T’Pris
moved her knight to the second level of the three-dimensional chess game and
looked over the board at Spock. He nodded, approving the move which put one of
his bishops in danger. The long, slender fingers of T’Pris’s right hand crept
along the top of the table beside the board and caressed Spock’s left. He
captured her hand in his and raised it to his lips, the game forgotten. Their
duty tours were over for the day; there was a long night to follow.
She
smiled at him and rose, tugging him with her. As one, they moved to the bed.
She reached up to playfully dishevel his shining dark hair with the ruffle of
bangs that started over his brow. He started to move to straighten it, but his
hand involuntarily went instead to the coil of braid that crowned her head, and
he found himself unfastening the pins that held the braid in place. She allowed
him to free the braid and helped him loosen the thick hair that hung to her
waist. She shook her head, and the curtain of hair cascaded around her
winsomely. They moved sideways together, instinctively found the bed,
stretching out on it. Smiling, his eyes half closed in lazy anticipation, Spock
held up his right hand, fingers spread, and [150]
T’Pris matched it with her left.
The tactile contact sent a flow of warmth through him. Their eyes locked, and
the look went deeper, mentally chaining them together. He sent the first gentle
probe along the bond, reaching out to her.
T’Pris
opened herself to him, welcoming him, the merging of their feelings racing
after the intimate mind touch. He felt her glory in the flickering touches he
sent along her most intimate nerve endings. She began to tremble in
anticipation and joyously sent back the same. The simple fingertip-to-fingertip
touch shifted as he grasped her hand fully, fingers winding together tightly.
Her
mind touch became bolder, more sensual, under his encouragement. He felt her
hesitation about probing too deeply yet, a little afraid of her full Vulcan
abilities matched to his. He sent another caressing thought along the bond,
urging more from her, wanting to feel the full envelopment when both minds were
open and responsive. Just as the delicate touch of her sensitive reached
him, the desk comm wailed with the traditional bosun’s whistle, and Number
One’s crisp voice spoke.
“Mr.
Spock, please report to me in the geology lab immediately.”
Spock’s
hand tightened on T’Pris’s briefly, then he rose and tabbed the intercom. “I
will be there in five minutes.”
“Very
good. Number One out.”
Spock
turned to T’Pris, his eyes warm and gentle and promising. “Whatever it is, I
will hurry to be done with it.”
[151] “I will wait.”
“Wait
just as you are now.”
Catlike,
she stretched her lithe body on the bed and smiled at him. “As you wish, master
of my heart.”
Spock
felt an emotional shock that plunged from his chest to the pit of his being,
and his breath caught for a moment as he stared at her. The phrase was
traditional, exchanged often between husband and wife and between betrothed
lovers. T’Pring had never used the phrase to him. T’Pris meant it; he could see
it in her eyes, a look of love that was soft and gentle and forever.
“I will
return as soon as possible—mistress of my heart.”
“I
accept your word as a promise,” she said gently.
Spock
hastily put his uniform to rights and left.
The
geology lab was not very familiar to Spock. He had not yet had an opportunity
to work closely with the scientists and technicians there. When he arrived, he
found Number One and Dr. Boyce waiting with Security Chief Orloff. Another man
hunched timidly near the lab door, as though afraid to stay but forced to.
Spock glanced at all of them curiously as he entered the lab, but before he
could ask why he had been called, the first officer stood aside and gestured
behind one of the work tables.
Lieutenant
Commander Meadows was sprawled on his back on the deck, his eyes staring at the
overhead lights. Spock immediately realized that the man was dead. His eyes flickered
back to Number One.
“Meadows
told his lab technician, Sandson, he wasn’t needed on duty this shift. At first
he took the [152] time off, but Meadows’s order bothered him,
so he looked in on the lab fifteen minutes ago and found him like this.”
“Not a
natural death, I assume.”
“You
assume right,” Boyce said flatly. “Meadows was murdered.”
“Why?”
“That
is the question we’re here to investigate, Spock. The man was innocuous,
inoffensive, a scientist who tended to his business almost to the exclusion of
everything else. Who would want to murder him, and, as you ask, why?”
SPOCK CAREFULLY SCANNED the geology lab, then brought his
eyes back to Orloff. “There seems to be no sign of a struggle.”
“Suggesting
Meadows knew his assailant.” The security chief nodded. “I noted that, too.”
“Since
no one has beamed onto the ship, it has to have been a member of the crew,”
Number One said grimly. “I don’t like to think about the implications of that.
Starfleet doesn’t normally harbor murderers in the ranks.”
“An act
of passion, perhaps?” Spock ventured.
“Meadows
never seemed to have any, except for his rocks,” Boyce commented dryly.
Number
One turned to him. “Never mind the sarcasm, Doctor. Have you determined the
cause of death?”
“Oh,
yes. Quite simple. Meadows was strangled.”
Spock
glanced at him quickly. He had had only a cursory look at Meadows’s corpse, but
suddenly he [154] felt the intuitive flash of what humans
called a hunch. “Pardon me, Doctor. Do you mind if I examine the body?”
“No, of
course not.”
Boyce
stood aside as the Vulcan knelt beside Meadows’s corpse. Spock leaned close to
study the man’s throat, carefully tilting the head to one side to examine the
neck column.
Number
One noticed and pushed forward a step. “Something?”
“This
man was strangled in a very particular way, Number One.”
“Explain,
please.”
“I am
speaking of a Vulcan method of killing.”
Number
One’s eyebrows arched upward skeptically. “Is that possible? I understood
Vulcans to be a peaceful and uncommonly logical people.”
“Now
they are,” Spock said. “In ancient days, we were warlike, savage. There are
several hand-to-hand killing methods that were practiced. One was tal-shaya,
the breaking of the neck. Another was lan-dovna, strangulation by
one hand. It is still taught in Vulcan self-defense techniques. One does not
wish to expect a killing attack on Federation planets, but one goes ...
prepared to defend oneself.”
“Meadows
didn’t strike me as someone who’d attack a Vulcan,” Number One said pointedly.
“No.
But attack or defense is not the question. It is the method we have under
scrutiny. I have never before seen a victim of lan-dovna, but the
evidence is unmistakable.”
The
executive officer turned inquiringly to Boyce. “Do you concur, Doctor?”
[155] “I don’t know
anything about this technique Spock’s talking about, but yes, the marks are
plain on Meadows’s throat. Only one hand was used to strangle Meadows. The
right hand, if you’re interested.”
“Can
anyone other than a Vulcan do this lan-dovna?” Number One inquired.
“I do
not believe so. Certainly no one else on this ship.” Spock paused, then went on
doggedly. “I must tell you that Vulcans of both sexes are trained to accomplish
this feat by the time they are adolescents. The most likely suspects for this
murder would include all Vulcans on board.”
“I see.
Thank you, Mr. Spock. You’ve been most informative. Commander Orloff and I will
undoubtedly be calling on you again for assistance.”
“I must
point out to you that I am also a suspect.”
“Noted.”
Orloff
pushed his way forward, feeling neglected in this discussion. “We have to
inform the captain at once.”
“No.”
Number One shook her head and then held up a hand in the face of Orloff’s
protests. “We’re under strict captain’s orders not to communicate with him on
the planet surface. To do so might place him in danger, or at very least might
put him in an embarrassing situation. We must wait for him to contact us. With
that as a given, I will conduct the murder investigation until such time as the
captain can do so himself.”
“Motives,
Number One?”
“Your
guess is as good as mine, Commander. Until we discover one, we’ll have to
operate on the idea that the murder was for unknown reasons, possibly [156] unpremeditated. We will sequester and question all Vulcan personnel on the
ship until we discover the murderer.”
T’Pris
turned to Spock, smiling softly as he entered his quarters. She realized
something was wrong when she saw his grim face. “What is it?”
“Lieutenant
Commander Meadows has been murdered.”
“Murdered?”
“Approximately
two hours ago, by Dr. Boyce’s estimation. Rigor mortis had not yet set in. The
body was only just growing cold.”
T’Pris
lowered her eyes in sympathy, thinking of the earnest man who had so urgently
entreated her to put in a word for him with the captain in regard to the Glory.
If Meadows had had selfish motives for making the request, he still had wanted
it to further Federation knowledge of a great Vulcan artifact. “He was a good
geologist. I did not know him well, but he seemed to be an efficient scientist,
a capable officer ...”
“I
know, T’Pris. But there is more. He was murdered by a Vulcan.”
“No.
That could not be.”
“There
is no question of it. The murderer used lan-dovna.”
She
stared at him, horrified. “But that is taught only in self-defense. Meadows
could not have attacked anyone. He was not a physical person. It would have
been laughable for him to attack a Vulcan for any reason.”
“Nonetheless,
it was the technique used. There was [157]
no sign of a struggle, of an
attack. It appeared to me as though Meadows was the one attacked.”
“Why
would anyone—least of all a Vulcan—wish to murder him without provocation?”
“I
believe Number One and the security chief will be giving that question the most
serious consideration. But ...” He paused, and a gentle smile curved his lips.
“I also believe it will be a while before they call you and me for
questioning.” He reached for her, and she smiled back, sensuously running her
fingertips up the palm of his hand.
Number
One and Orloff immediately set up a preliminary interrogation of the seventeen
Vulcans. None of them except Spock and T’Pris appeared to know the reason for
the questioning. As luck had it, all of them had been off duty at the time of
the murder. Every one of them contended that he or she was alone at the
probable time of the murder, except for Spock and T’Pris, who admitted they
were together. Number One lifted an eyebrow at that information but accepted it
equably otherwise. Starfleet had no strong rules about fraternization between
officers, and personal affairs were usually kept personal. T’Pris was a widow;
Spock was not married. Number One would not condemn a relationship between
them, unless she discovered it was a cover for murder.
She
turned to the screen mounted on Orloff’s desk and called up the personnel file
on T’Pris. Almost as soon as it was displayed, Number One said, “She’s clear.”
“Why do
you say that?” Orloff asked.
Number
One tapped the screen display. “T’Pris is [158]
left-handed. Most Vulcans aren’t, but a small percentage favor the right brain.
Boyce was positive the murderer was right-handed, which lets her out.”
“Could
she be ambidextrous?”
“No.
According to all Starfleet testing, she is totally left-handed.”
“She
and Spock claim to have been together most of that evening. Would she cover for
him? The relationship appears to be ... close,” Orloff said discreetly.
Number
One debated with herself and finally nodded. “She might. But is it conceivable
that Spock is a murderer?”
“He’s
half-human, Number One. Maybe that cuts the conditioning, makes him vulnerable
to passion. She said Meadows approached her earlier in the evening. What if she
told Spock something that roused his anger—or his jealousy?”
“Perhaps.”
Number One considered it and finally rejected it. “Every notation on Lieutenant
Spock says he embraces a code of nonviolence that would simply preclude his
being a murderer. He is also the one who pointed out the exotic strangulation
technique that neither you nor I would have easily detected. I just don’t
believe it is possible, Orloff. And what would be his motive?”
“It’s
the motive that puzzles me in the first place. We know Meadows was a fine
scientist in his field but a nonaggressive man by nature. Not one to pick a
fight—if a fight can be picked with a Vulcan. What could have
precipitated his murder?”
“I’m
not a detective,” Number One said quietly, “but I like to read mysteries,
especially the classics. I’m not sure I’m quoting correctly, but I believe Sir [159] Arthur Conan Doyle had Sherlock Holmes say
something to the effect that when all obvious possibilities have been
exhausted, the only possible answer is the impossible. So, while it
seems impossible that a Vulcan committed murder, it also seems impossible that
anyone other than a Vulcan committed the crime.”
“Including
Lieutenants Spock and T’Pris?”
“Somehow
I find it difficult to include them. They swear to being together. Unless I
discover some other clue that would link them to the murder, I’m inclined to
dismiss them from consideration. There are still fifteen other Vulcans who are
suspects, Mr. Orloff. None of them can account for themselves except on their
personal word, and all of them admitted to being able to perform the killing lan-dovna
technique. I’m afraid we’re committed to discovering who among them killed
Meadows—and why.”
Pike
had been wondering to himself how he had managed to be at the head of this
strange troop of gypsies on the way to the Tisirah Oasis. He had offered to
lead a search for the two straying children of Shinsei Farnah and Melkor
Aliat, convinced that the young people had simply eloped and would soon be
found happily together and defying their parents’ conventions. Then it would be
a simple matter of their facing parental anger and effecting reconciliation.
Somehow, the string of people who insisted on accompanying him along the trail
left by the two youngsters had multiplied into Farnah and his sons, Melkor
Aliat and his attendant friends, the following nomad tribespeople, and all
their animals. Pike was not ungrateful for the tracking services of the nomads,
but [160] the trail was so broad and clear that even
he could have followed it without real trouble. The long cavalcade that
meandered after the tracking head of Farnah and his sons was worthy of a
crusade.
He
looked back at the muddle of people and animals ambling along behind them and
frowned. Berendel, riding beside him, noted it and smiled quietly. “Something
troubles you, Indallah Krees?”
“I
think you understand what has happened between these two young people, makleh.
Rebellion against what their parents decreed and a chasing after their own
hearts. That’s between them and their elders. Who are all these others who seem
to have an interest in the matter?” Pike sighed wearily. “Why do these things
have to get so complicated?”
Berendel
smiled slightly. “You have little experience in the ways of dealing with
people, I think.” Pike shot her a sharp glance, one engendered by his years of
command. Though she could not know that was behind the look, she shook her head
and amended her statement. “Not people. You have dealt with them—I see that in
you, Krees. Perhaps it is the emotions that you do not quite understand here.
As a makleh, I see all these things in making a barter, a will, a
marriage. It is always the high feeling that will tell in these dealings, the
loves and the hates, the suspicions and the trust. When emotions run so high,
there are many who must be interested in them, because they will win or lose by
the decisions that are made.”
“And in
this case?”
“Ah. Silene is the last child of her father’s loins, the
only daughter. He thinks of her as his desert flower, [161] pure and sweet as those flowers are. She is
only seventeen seasons, and he cannot believe she can possibly have the urges
of a young woman who wants her own man. Another difficulty—the young man she
wants is not acceptable to Farnah because he is a town boy. Aliat is a merchant
of importance. Bardan is his only son, his heir, and Bardan is moved to love a
nomad girl. Unacceptable to Aliat, despite the emotions and desires of his son.
Now, who gains if both these wayward children are disowned by their fathers? I
have bargained for my people with Aliat, and I know there is a stepson who
assists him in his business. It is likely this boy would come into more
inheritance if Bardan is disowned. Shinsei Farnah’s daughter has a
sizable dowry that would go to her brothers if she were shamed and cast out by
her father. I do not say that any of this will happen, but it could. All those
who follow us are here to see what will happen. Greed and curiosity are common
failings among us, yes?”
“Common
to many beings, I think, makleh.”
Berendel
nodded to indicate ahead of them. “Tisirah Oasis,” she said. “Perhaps we will
find these children now and make a settlement of this thing.”
Before
Pike and Berendel reached the outer edges of the kerra tree grove, they
heard the wail of sorrowing tribesmen. “What’s happened?” Pike kicked his meercan
to greater speed and entered the shade of the thick trees. As he drew up,
he could see Farnah’s tall bulk in the center of the oasis, pacing up and down
in a frenzy. Aliat was on his knees beside the pool, beating his fists on the
ground. Pike dismounted quickly, dropping the beast’s reins so it would stand [162] obediently in a ground hitch. Berendel
followed him, sliding off her meercan with the instinctive grace of the
nomad.
“Shinsei
Farnah, what is it?”
The big
man flung out a hand toward the pool and the ground beside it. “My daughter is
gone beyond saving. The tracks tell all—there!”
Pike
and Berendel moved closer to the poolside, where Aliat knelt in sorrow with
Silene’s brothers. The youngest, Neepah, looked up at them and gestured toward
the personal possessions scattered beside the water where a camp had been set
up. The rumpled blankets lay beside the ashes of the fire that had died. Even
Pike could read the signs of the struggle in the remnants left on the ground,
and the tracks in the soft earth at the edge of the pool were unmistakable.
Bardan’s and Silene’s were regular and small beside the twisted, gross prints
that studded the ground.
“Mutants,”
Neepah said sadly. “Silene and
the town boy were camped here. The beasts came out of the dark and carried them
away.”
“Where?
What direction?”
“Toward
the Druncara Range.”
“Why
should the mutants come here?” Pike frowned, studying the situation carefully.
“This is very far from the Druncaras. The mutants don’t come such distances
lightly.”
“You
are correct, friend Krees,” Berendel said. “I have not heard of them
approaching so close to us or to the townspeople in many years. There is
something strange about this.”
[163] Melkor Aliat rose
to his feet, tears running down his cheeks. “My son is lost. Lost forever.”
“Perhaps
not, Trader Aliat,” Pike said. “These tracks seem very clear and easy to
follow.”
The
others stared at him, blank and silent. Durlin shook his head sadly. “There is
no hope of saving them, friend Krees. The mutants kill their captives. It is
said they ... that they eat their flesh. Our sister is dead, and the foolish
town boy with her.”
“You
will pardon me if I don’t accept that as a pure fact,” Pike snapped irritably.
“You’ve given up before you have even tried.”
“But it
is useless.”
Pike
turned toward Aliat and Farnah, who stood together, joined for this moment in
grief for their children. “I would like a moment to myself—to meditate on this
great sorrow that has visited you.”
“As you
will,” Farnah responded. He gestured deeper into the grove of kerra trees.
“There is quiet there and peace for meditation.” He looked around as the van of
the followers began to arrive at the edge of the oasis. “I must tell Ingarin of
our loss.”
“I’ll
come with you,” Aliat said suddenly. “It’s my loss, too.”
Famah
studied him briefly and nodded. “Yes. It is no comfort, but we both share the
sorrow. Come then, Trader Aliat.”
Pike
watched the two men move away, leaving the group beside the pool. “I will be a
while in meditation, Makleh Berendel.”
“Do you
think you will find an answer to this tragedy?”
[164] “Perhaps. I don’t
know, but I will try.” Pike walked away, picking a path among the trees of the
oasis that would move him out of sight of the nomads. When he was far enough
away, he reached inside the voluminous pocket in his robe and pulled out his
communicator. Flipping it open, he waited for the cheerful pip of its active
signal and then said, “Pike to Enterprise.”
Number
One glanced up quickly as the communications officer swung around in his seat
toward her. “Captain Pike, Number One.” She tabbed the communications button on
the chair arm and snapped, “Number One here, sir. I’m very glad to hear from
you.”
“Trouble?”
“Yes,
sir. We’ve had a murder on board.”
“What?”
“Lieutenant
Commander Meadows was killed several hours ago—”
“Number
One, if this is a joke ...”
“Dead
serious, sir. That’s not a pun.”
“Motive?”
“I’m
sorry, sir. That’s one of the things we’re investigating right now.”
Pike’s
sigh was audible. Number One could picture him shaking his head in frustration
as he said, “You’ll have to handle it for now, Number One. I have a double
kidnapping down here to deal with. The son of one of the merchants and the
daughter of a nomad leader have been taken by mutants. I have to try to get
them back, alive and whole. If I can do it, the alliance between the
townspeople and the tribes just might be [165] saved. I want a Vulcan and a couple of other alien crew members to
beam down to assist me—”
“Negative
on the Vulcan, sir. All of them are under suspicion for the murder.”
“Vulcans?
All of them?”
“Well,”
Number One amended, “except for Lieutenants Spock and T’Pris. We’ve cleared
T’Pris, and she claims she and Spock were together at the time of the murder.”
“Do
you believe her?”
Number
One turned it over in her mind, remembering what she had said to Orloff in
their discussion of the matter. “Yes, sir. I do. I don’t believe Spock could
have been the murderer. That’s just a gut feeling, you understand, but I’ll
stand on it. I’ll send Spock and two other aliens down to you in twenty
minutes.”
“Make
it ten, Number One.”
“Yes,
sir.”
“Do
you have enough help to continue the murder investigation?”
“Affirmative.
In addition to Commander Orloff, I’ll enlist Lieutenant T’Pris and Dr. Boyce to
assist.”
“Good.
Now, listen to my instructions carefully. Spock and the others are to beam down
wearing particular costumes and in a very specific place. I’ll give you the
coordinates ...”
Farnah
and Aliat huddled together beside a cook fire, ignoring the others around them,
refusing food, sharing a grief universal to parents. Melkor Aliat, widowed many
years, was grateful for the little niceties Ingarin offered him in comfort. She
was insistent [166] that
he have a bit of tea, that he sit with them to wait for Indallah Krees. Neither
man was hopeful, but somehow Ingarin kept a brighter view. She sometimes felt
women had to take a different outlook for the sake of their sanity, that there
was light on the other side of darkness, that for every loss there was a gain,
that for each tragedy there was some hope to counterbalance it. Ingarin had
placed her optimism on the wanderer. She didn’t know why, but she had always
sensed a purer strangeness about him than just the tale he told of being a
loner.
“He has
been longer than he said he would be in meditation,” Aliat said fretfully. He
stood up to peer into the deeper darkness of the oasis trees.
“Meditation
is one with the man. Who can say how long it should take?” Ingarin said
quietly. “It is as long as it needs to be.”
“Yes,
of course. It is not my way, but I understand you have the right of it, madame.”
She
smiled a little shyly at him, liking him for the honorific. “My name is
Ingarin, Trader Aliat. If our children are in love as they say they are,
perhaps we should speak as friends.”
Aliat
looked away as Farnah pushed to his feet in agitation. “Silene is not a city woman. She would never be happy
behind that boy’s walls.”
“Perhaps
not, my man. But the boy may be happy in our tents.”
“No,”
Aliat said quickly.
“It is
not for you—either of you—to say. It is for them,” Ingarin pointed out calmly.
“And if we do not gain them back, our ideas of what they want are for naught.”
[167] Pike reappeared
among the kerra trees, and Farnah saw him first. “Indallah Krees
is here.” They waited for him to approach, and he smiled encouragingly as he
neared them.
“I’ve
decided I will continue after the mutants and bring your children back if they
are still alive. If you’ll both come with me, or delegate others to come with
me ... ?”
“No, it
is not possible,” Aliat said. “My men and I are not outside-born. We know
nothing of the desert and the mountains. We would only be a drawback to you.”
Pike
turned to Farnah and saw the big man pulling back inside himself as much as the
townsman. The shinsei had no excuse as valid as Aliat’s, but he shook
his head firmly. “There is no use to going, Indallah Krees. No one—no
one—comes back from the Druncara Range. Not alive. Sometimes bones have
been found, left as signposts to mark the mutant lands. Our children are lost
forever.”
“I tell
you they certainly will be if no one tries to save them. And you who love them,
even you will not go with me?” Pike stared challengingly at Farnah and Aliat,
and the two men dropped their gaze away from him.
“I see.
Very well. I will go.”
Ingarin
pushed her way forward. “You cannot go alone. A large band of men might have a
chance, but not one by himself. You will also be lost to us.”
“I do
not propose to go alone.” Pike turned, shaded his eyes against the bright
desert light that beat against the cool of the oasis, then pointed. “They’ll go
with me.”
[168] The others turned
to see three hooded and robed figures trudging through the desert sands toward
the oasis. They moved purposefully, striding across the ground, looking neither
left nor right at the nomads and townsmen tending meercans and crouched
around small campfires.
Pike
held up an arm and called out to them. “To me. Here.” They moved unswervingly
toward Pike, finally stopping before him and executing deep bows. Their heads
were completely shrouded by the hoods of the desert robes, and their faces
could not be made out.
“We
have come to serve you, Indallah Krees,” one of them intoned deeply.
“Who
are these men?” Farnah asked.
“Not
men,” Pike replied. He gestured to the three, who reached up and pushed back
the hoods to reveal their faces. Those who could see them gasped and
involuntarily took a step away.
“Mutants!”
The word rippled among the
onlookers, softly at first and then louder as it reached the outer edge of the
group. Instinctively, some of the nomads reached for their weapons.
Number
One had sent Lieutenant (j.g.) Endel, the reptilian Kelyan, Lieutenant Ars Dan
from engineering, a short Dioptan with a reddish complexion and a gnarled,
troll-like face—and Mr. Spock.
Pike
flung up a hand and looked around at the Aretans. “These are my friends.
They’ll go with me where you will not—and with luck and grace, we will find the
two children you value.”
Farnah
and Aliat exchanged a look, saying much within it. Clearly, the wanderer
commanded these [169] mutants,
and if that were so, it might be that he actually would be able to
recover Silene and Bardan. “Friend
Krees, we will camp here and wait for five days for you to return. If you have
not come back by then ...”
“If we
haven’t returned by then, you will know we are dead. But I expect we will be
back in less time than that, shinsei. We’ll bring your children—or their
bodies—back to you. I promise it. Do we go with your blessing?”
Farnah
nodded. “The grace of life and hope go with you, Indallah Krees,” he
said quietly.
“From
all of us,” Aliat added.
Pike
bowed to the fathers and Ingarin. Then he turned, gestured to his three
crewmen, and began to walk away from the oasis, toward the Druncara Range which
loomed darkly in the distance.
NUMBER ONE paced the top level of the bridge, frowning in
thought, turning over the problem of the murder. Orloff was reinterrogating the
Vulcans one by one, but his brief reports to her had all been negative. The
bridge watch glanced over at her from time to time; none of them spoke to her,
not wishing to disturb her concentration. The lift doors slid open behind her,
and she swung around to face Security Officer Reed as he came off the elevator.
“Number
One, I just heard about Commander Meadows.”
“Yes?
What’s your interest?”
“Well,
I wondered about the Glory.”
“What
exactly did you wonder, Mr. Reed?” The young security officer looked around,
plainly worried. “You see, ma’am, the commander came to get the Glory, and I
released it to him, but now—”
“What
do you mean, you released it to him?”
[171] “He had the
captain’s signature on an order to allow him to examine the stone. You know,
for scientific purposes. He said he’d return it in three hours or so when he’d
finished with it. But he hadn’t brought it back when I turned over my duty
shift to Lieutenant Bryce. I didn’t think too much about it, because he said it
might take longer. But when I went down to the rec room, I heard the commander
had been murdered. So I wondered, what about the Glory? It should be returned
to the vault, don’t you think?”
Number
One sighed heavily. “It should if it were in our possession, Reed. You’d better
come with me. Commander Orloff and I are going to want to hear all the details
on this.”
Orloff
examined the clipboard and authorization Reed had given him, finally shook his
head. “Obviously a forgery.”
“Not
too obvious a forgery, commander, or Reed wouldn’t have been taken in.” Number
One had studied the signature purporting to be Pike’s. After a moment, she
said, “It looks to me as though Meadows might have copied the captain’s
signature from routine ship’s department orders. He did it well enough to get
past a cursory examination, which is all Officer Reed here could be expected to
give it under the circumstances.”
Orloff
glared at her, then at Reed. “There were strict orders to keep the Glory in the
security vault unless other orders came through from the Vulcan High Council.”
[172] “True. But Reed
was on duty at the vault and couldn’t have known then whether or not the
captain had reversed that order. The post is tucked off in a corner, with only
one man assigned to it each shift.”
“It’s a
lonely station,” Reed agreed.
Number
One nodded. “And here, apparently written out and signed by the captain, is an
order to release the Glory to a scientist of the ship for good and valid
reasons. If I’d been on duty, I probably would have accepted it, too. Reed
might be faulted for not conferring with you before he let Meadows take the
Glory, but even you might not have questioned a written order from Pike.
Meadows was taking a chance that the order would come under some scrutiny, but
not too much. The man seemed to be obsessed with the stone, wanting to study
it, even against captain’s orders. He contrived to get hold of it. That was his
crime.”
“But
why murder him?” Orloff asked. “What was the harm in his examining it for the
record?”
“The
Glory is a national heritage, an historical artifact of great importance not
only for its actual value but for what it means to the Vulcan people. Perhaps
one of the Vulcans on board learned Meadows had violated the captain’s order,
took offense at him handling it ...”
“I
could accept that if Meadows had been challenged, perhaps even beaten up for
what he had done—but murder, Number One. Why murder the man for his
trespass? And, more important, where is the Glory now? We went over that lab
from top to bottom for clues. There was no sign of the stone.”
[173] Number One shook
her head, sighing. “I don’t know. All I know is that Meadows’s murder and the
disappearance of Vulcan’s Glory are tied together—and a Vulcan on board this
ship is the criminal.”
Pike,
Spock, Endel, and Ars Dan followed the distinctive mutant animal tracks until
they were well out of sight of the oasis and anyone who might have followed
them. Berendel and Farnah had trailed them for a short way, urging the use of meercans
on them until Pike had had to accept the animals. He had not intended to
have to deal with the mounts, but the only way to stop Farnah from continuing
to follow them with good advice was to take the proffered animals and ride
away. When they had gone far enough to be clear and had checked their back
trail for any shadowers, Pike waved the group together and dismounted. The
others followed suit, and Endel gathered up the reins of all four meercans. “Tether
them over there,” Pike said, pointing to the side of the trail. There was small
shelter in the shade of several kerra trees there, and Endel led the meercans
to it. Pike flipped out his communicator and contacted the Enterprise.
Number
One was not on the bridge, but the third officer was on duty. She responded
quickly. “Enterprise. Oyama here, sir.”
“I need
a sensor scan for any life-form clusters in the Druncara Range. If you need
coordinates, the planetary mapping scan will give them to you.”
“One
moment, sir. We’re scanning for you now.” There was another moment of silence, then Oyama’s voice came clearly
over the communicator. “There is [174]
a large concentration of life forms in the high treeline of the central
massif. Possibly a village or an encampment.”
“Nothing
between where you are reading me now and that reading in the Druncaras?”
Silence,
then Oyama replied, “No, sir. That is all.”
“Good.
Four to beam to a point within one kilometer of that concentration of life
forms.”
“Yes,
sir. I will give the coordinates to the transporter chief now. We will put you
down in an area east of the life-form concentration. Sensors show trees and
rock formations there that will offer some cover so you will not be seen
beaming in. Enterprise out.”
Pike
looked around at the others. “Whatever the mutants plan for Bardan and Silene, they wouldn’t risk doing anything to them
here on the flatlands. They would have headed for their refuge in the
mountains, and I doubt they stopped until they reached it. The encampment or
village—whatever it is our sensors are reading—is the most likely place to find
our two runaways.”
“We
have been delayed in discovering where the victims were taken, Captain,” Spock
pointed out. “If the mutants are as savage as they are reported to be—”
“Possibly
even flesh eaters,” Ars Dan put in.
“Possibly
so,” Spock agreed. “If they are that savage, sir, we may be far too late.”
Pike
nodded, acknowledging the possibility. “Bardan and Silene could be dead. I hope not. However we find
them, I’ve promised to return them to their parents.”
[175] Suddenly, there
was the distinctive high hum in the air that signaled the beginning of
transportation. The four officers positioned themselves in preparation for it.
A glittering, sparkling glow covered their bodies, shimmeringly outlined their
shapes for a brief moment, and then slowly dwindled to nothingness. The high
hum faded away and left the desert silent except for the soughing wind.
T’Pris
asked to see the murder scene after Number One delegated her to the
investigation. There was no reason why she should not, and the first officer
opened the sealed lab for her scrutiny. Boyce and Number One followed her in,
wondering what she might see that they had not. She wandered through the lab,
carefully studying everything. She stopped beside the science computer on the
lab table where Meadows had worked and activated it. She ran a quick check of
its files, then ran it again. At the end of ten minutes, she turned to Number
One and Boyce, frowning.
“Well,
Lieutenant?”
“There
is nothing tangible, Number One. But there is something else, an intellectual feeling
I have.”
“Feelings?”
Number One smiled at the younger woman. “I didn’t think Vulcans admitted to
such aberrations.”
T’Pris
tilted her head and allowed a brief curving of her lips. “I said an intellectual
feeling.” She paused, trying to pin it down. “Something does not fit into
the mosaic we are putting together here.”
“How
so?” Boyce asked. “I think it’s pretty clear on the evidence. A Vulcan
apparently murdered [176] Meadows using a
known Vulcan killing technique. Whether it was premeditated or not is in
question. Meadows had the Glory in his possession. The Glory is gone.
Presumably, the Vulcan who murdered Meadows took it.”
“Yes,”
T’Pris agreed. “Presumably. Apparently. But in spite of the many
circumstances that seem to say Vulcan, there is something non-Vulcan here. I admit only a Vulcan is trained
to use the lan-dovna technique and has the strength to use it
successfully. It is possible a Vulcan could have learned of Meadows’s
appropriation of the Glory and interpreted his handling of it as an insult or
even the violation of a sacred relic of our people. Vulcans have a highly
developed sense of justice. The murderer might have been moved to avenge that
sacrilege if it was interpreted as such.”
“Aren’t
we saying the same things?” Boyce asked.
“No.”
“Explain,
please,” Number One said.
T’Pris
lifted her hands in a helpless gesture, shaking her head slightly, trying to
explain the un-Vulcan elements that were
troubling her. “Even if such a thing happened, the Vulcan who committed the
crime would be forced by honor to turn himself in for punishment. To take
someone’s life even by accident is so deeply against the code we live by that
there would be no other action possible for a true Vulcan. We have yearned for
the recovery of the Glory for so long. Now that it has been found, taking it
for personal gain would be unthinkable. The person who murdered Commander
Meadows and stole the Glory is hiding behind lies. No Vulcan would do that.”
[177] “But you admit it had
to have been a Vulcan who committed the crime.”
“It
would seem so. I have no explanation for the dichotomy, Number One. I only know
it exists, and it puzzles me completely. And there is something else.”
“Yes?”
T’Pris
turned toward the science computer on the lab table. “If Dr. Boyce is correct
about the time of death, Commander Meadows apparently had the Glory in his
possession for almost two hours before he was murdered. His reason for getting
it in the first place was to study it, record all its aspects, holograph it for
Federation records. He must have used this computer to do at least some of the
preliminary work, but no record, no files of any kind, exist that indicate he
did so. That seems to say those files were erased by the criminal. Why?”
Number
One nodded. “Good question, Lieutenant.”
Montgomery
Scott came off duty ready to turn in, but Bob Brien had other ideas. When Scott
entered their quarters, Brien was counting up a stack of credit chips and
smiling happily over the tally on his pad. “Scotty! Glad you’re back. Time to
get to work.”
Scotty
headed straight for his bunk and collapsed on it. “I’ve been at work,
man. D’you not see the chronometer? I’ve been an extra two hours on shift
recalibrating the starboard impulse engine.”
“Never
mind about that. Look at these orders we have to fill.” Brien leaned over him,
pushing the pad in front of his face.
“Don’t
know why she slipped out of calibration like [178] that,” Scott mumbled.
“Might’ve jumped too fast to warp after she came out of drydock ... maybe too
high a warp ... didn’t take enough time ... to run her up to speed before ...”
His eyes slid shut.
Brien
dropped a handful of credit chips onto his roommate’s chest. “C’mon, Scotty,
wake up.” Scott pried open his lids and groaned. “We have customers to
satisfy.” Brien’s mischievous blue eyes sparkled happily. “They want more of
that hooch. I checked our stock, and we can fill about half the orders now, but
you’ll need to start another batch through.”
“Later,”
Scott moaned, flopping over on his side. “I canna do it now.” He tried but couldn’t stifle a
body-shuddering yawn. “Later ...”
“Scotty,
you don’t understand. Our customers are clamoring for the product now. “A
snore rose from the bed, reverberating richly in the quiet room. Scotty was
dead to the universe.
Pike
led his small team through the trees and tumbled rocks that stubbled the
mountainside. The Druncara Range ascended from the plain in a series of ridges
that were thickly wooded on the lower flanks, thinning out to skimpy
rock-strewn slopes at the tops. The transporter chief had set them down about
halfway to the top of the third major ridge. Most of the trees were heavy-boled
and resembled those of the evergreen family, though there was a scattering of
deciduous trees and a variety of bushes, grasses, and mosses on the lower levels.
The treeline was just a little above them, and there was still enough cover for
the men to move freely toward the coordinates which [179] sensors
had pinpointed as a probable mutant settlement. They did come across a
stone-fenced mountain pasture in which strangely formed animals grazed. These
were oxlike in body formation but with three eyes and what appeared to be
dromedary humps in the center of their backs. One particularly large specimen
was penned away from the rest of the small herd, possibly a bull. The beast
snorted at their approach and watched them warily until they had passed by.
Spock
had been using his tricorder to get a triangulation on the settlement and now gestured forward. “Life forms ahead of us,
Captain. Probably on the other side of that rise.”
“All
right, let’s split into two parties here and take a look at the situation.
Endel, Ars Dan, you make a sweep to the left, and we’ll take the right. We’ll
meet back here in fifteen minutes.”
Pike
nodded to Spock, and they headed on an angle up the slope. A few minutes later,
they were belly down, carefully parting some brush at the crest of the rise to
peer down into the valley below. They saw a well-established village, composed
of artfully designed buildings of mortared stone. Family homes were graced with
porches and verandas that sported heavy growths of vine as shade curtains. The
streets were unpaved but of hard-packed earth that obviously saw a lot of
traffic.
The
hill on the opposite side of the valley had been terraced, and small fields
there were under cultivation. A stream tumbled and shouted down the hill on
that side to spread into a pool at the foot of the slope. Pike could see a
well-made bucket and pulley [180] mechanism that
lifted pool water up the terraces to irrigate the fields.
The
people they could see moving about the streets and working in the gardens were
performing perfectly normal tasks, but even from this distance their appearance
was hideous. Few of them looked alike. All had malformed bodies—too many limbs
or not enough, and some of these were strangely shaped. The faces that could be
seen were warped and inhuman, a terrible contrast to the handsome nomads and
townspeople from the flatlands below.
“Looking
at their way of life here,” Pike said thoughtfully, “makes me wonder if the
mutants are as savage as everyone thinks they are.”
“They
do show a talent for building and agriculture, sir. Still, history has shown
that many races even more sophisticated than this were capable of the crudest
savagery. They did kidnap Silene and Bardan.”
Spock
lightly touched Pike’s arm and pointed a long finger to the left. The building
was on the edge of the village and not very different from the others, except
for the mutant who appeared to be on guard in front of it. A female mutant approached
the building, carrying a heavy basket covered with a cloth. She paused beside
the guard and lifted a lacquer-ware box from the basket. The guard allowed her
to pass into the building with the rest of her burden. The man sat down and
opened the box to reveal a selection of small delicacies that he began to pop
into his mouth with gusto. Five minutes passed, then the door opened, and the
woman reemerged carrying a different basket filled with empty dishes.
[181] Pike signaled
Spock to retreat back down the slope, and they paused at the bottom to confer
in low voices. “A guarded building. A number of dishes of food going in and
out,” Pike said. “That has to be where they’re keeping them prisoner.”
“A
logical conclusion, Captain. It is possible the mutants could have some
criminals of their own held there, but more than likely it is the two we are
seeking.”
“Now,
all we have to do is get them out.” Pike looked at Spock, who stared back
noncommittally. “My grandmother used to say everything is easy with the mouth.
It’s the doing that’s hard.”
“An
excellent observation, sir.”
“I have
an idea, something like an old Indian trick.”
“Did it
work for the Indians?”
Pike
searched Spock’s face. Perfectly serious; he was not making a joke. “Yes.
Frequently.”
“Ah. Then
I suggest we rejoin Lieutenants Endel and Ars Dan and plan the details.”
Number
One and Commander Orloff faced the squads of security officers and engineers in
the large briefing room with the battle plan they had worked out. The Glory had
to be on the Enterprise; therefore, the entire ship had to be searched
from disk top to keel bottom. The ’tween decks service passages and Jefferies
tubes would be examined with a fine-tooth comb, and the engineers would open up
any areas that promised a hiding place. Anything that even hinted at being a
potential concealment for the Glory would be investigated.
[182] Scott and Brien,
seated together, exchanged a horrified glance. “It’ll have to be moved,” Scott
whispered frantically.
“We can’t.
We have too many orders to fill. Maybe they’ll look the other way if they
happen to notice it.”
“Not
while Number One’s in charge of the search. The chief engineer won’t be able
to ignore it.”
Brien
glanced around to be sure he wasn’t overheard, then he hissed, “We have to keep
it producing up to the last possible minute and then move ahead of the search
teams. We’ll double in behind them when they’ve cleared out and reinstall it.”
“I
canna just be carryin’ the thing through the corridors as it is,” Scott
snapped. “It’s too big. It’ll have to be broken down and reassembled and then
reinstalled.”
One of
the other engineers leaned forward to poke his head between them. “Quiet, you
two. I’m trying to hear the exec.”
Lieutenant
Pete Bryce had raised his hand and caught Number One’s eye. She nodded to him.
“Bryce?”
“I
understand we have fifteen suspects. If their quarters are going to be
searched, what are we going to do with them while we conduct it?”
“Commander
Orloff is handling that.”
Orloff
briskly stepped forward. “All suspects will be held in detention cells while
their quarters are searched. They will be returned to house arrest when the
search teams are through in those areas.”
T’Pris
had been given the difficult assignment of informing her Vulcan colleagues of
the detention. [183] Most of them accepted it in proud, cold
silence. Sefor, the senior Vulcan, served as spokesman for all of them when he
demanded to know why they had to be detained in cells.
“As
long as we are suspects, we will be watched and guarded. None of us can possibly
escape the ship. Must we also suffer the humiliation of being locked up?”
T’Pris
lowered her eyes, understanding the pride that made him ask the question, and
she was ashamed at what she had to say next. “Commander Orloff and Dr. Boyce
will be administering a truth-detector test to each of you while you are in the
cells.”
“A
truth detector used on Vulcans? This is an insult, Lieutenant.”
“I
agree. But they have the right to apply it. A murder has been committed, and
the Glory has been stolen. Someone must be lying.”
“Someone,
yes. But not necessarily a Vulcan.”
“It is
someone with the strength and the technique to commit the murder using lan-dovna.
To your knowledge, could anyone other than a Vulcan do it?”
Sefor
frowned deeply, his brows drawing together in a straight, dark line.
Reluctantly, he sighed and said, “No. It seems to point only to a Vulcan, but I
swear on my honor that I do not believe any one of our compatriots could or
would commit such acts.”
“The
evidence does not agree.”
“Evidence
may be interpreted many ways, Lieutenant. With no hard clues, no witnesses, and
no motive attributable to any one of us, it may be that the interpretation of
the evidence is incorrect.”
* * *
[184] Boyce and Orloff
stared at each other over the truth detector after the last Vulcan had
completed the bout of questioning. The machine was sensitive not only to minute
body responses—pulse, heart, degree of perspiration—but it had the capacity to
register voice inflections that betrayed untruths as well.
“I
don’t believe it,” Orloff grunted.
“I’ve
never known this thing to fail,” Boyce said.
The
door of the interrogation room slid open, and the two men looked up as Number
One entered. “Well, gentlemen?” She dropped gracefully into a chair opposite
Boyce. The doctor looked away from her uncomfortably. “Am I jumping ahead too
far if I guess the tests were inconclusive?”
“Not
inconclusive,” Boyce replied. “They were all negative.”
“Excuse
me?”
Boyce
brought up the results on the detector’s broad, flat screen. ‘‘According to
this, they’re all telling the truth.”
“Could
there be a malfunction?”
“It was
tested before we began,” Orloff said.
“We’re
talking about Vulcans. To a great extent, they control all emotions, even their
voice levels—”
Orloff
shook his head. “Boyce thought of that beforehand. We pre-tested on Lieutenant
T’Pris. We asked her to throw in several lies to routine questions to check the
machine’s response to a Vulcan. It picked out the misstatements instantly.”
“It’s
their sense of honor,” Boyce put in. “To lie is dishonorable, shameful. Even
for T’Pris, who only lied in order to check the machine’s response, it was [185] uncomfortable for her to do so—and the
machine registered it.”
“Difficult
as it is to believe, Number One,” Orloff said, “this evidence points to
our suspects’ being innocent.”
“Then
who in hell is guilty?” Number One looked at Boyce and Orloff in frustration.
Neither man had an answer. The executive officer shook her head, stirring her
long mane of dark hair around her shoulders. “No. Sorry. At least one of them must
be lying—and able to hide it from the detector.”
Once
the sun dropped behind the mountains, darkness came swiftly to the Druncaras.
Spock and Pike watched the village below. Lights began to glow in a number of
windows, and the smell of cooking began to rise, wafted by a light breeze. As
soon as it was dark enough to hide them from any casual watchers in the town,
they began a slow and careful descent of the slope, angling toward the end of
the village where the “prison” building stood a little apart from the others.
The temperature had dropped as the sun had gone down, and the guard—a different
one—had left his post beside the door to go inside. Though he couldn’t see
them, Pike knew Lieutenants Ars Dan and Endel were working their way down the
flank of the hill at the other end of the village.
Pike’s
foot slipped on some loose pebbles, and the stones skittered and bounced down
the slope. He and Spock froze where they were, scarcely breathing. There was no
shout of discovery or any particular stir in the village. Something that
sounded almost like a [186] dog wuffed in a throaty bark, but it
subsided after a moment. Normal night sounds continued—the flutter of a
nocturnal hunting bird’s wings overhead, the shush of the wind in the trees,
some softly peeping insects in the long grass.
Spock
and Pike moved ahead again, stepping carefully. They reached the bottom of the
slope and gratefully dropped behind the cover of a woodpile that rose more than
six feet in height. The cords of wood were stacked against the windowless side
wall of the suspected prison building. The hours they had spent in observation
had revealed that there was a back door to the building. No one seemed to use
it, and it was probably locked. With the guard inside, the front entrance also
was likely to be locked or barred. Much as he hated to do so, Pike had been
forced to request phasers beamed down for himself and Spock. He hoped they
would only have to use them to get into the building, and not in the sight of
the mutants. The guards they had seen had not appeared to be armed, but small
weapons could easily have been concealed in the bulky clothes they wore. Pike
reached into the pocket of his desert robe and brought out his communicator. He
flipped it open, muffling the characteristic beeping signal against his chest,
then he spoke quietly.
“Pike
to Endel.”
“Here,
sir,” the throaty voice of
the reptilian lieutenant whispered back from the communicator.
“Ready
any time you are, Lieutenant.”
“Aye,
sir. Endel out.”
Pike
tucked away the communicator and pulled out the phaser pistol. Spock already
had his ready. “Set it [187] for cutting,” Pike said softly. Spock nodded
and quickly made the adjustment.
On the
far side of the village, there was a sudden hollow whump, and a flash of
light tore the night apart. The smell of smoke and the roar of flames rose
immediately. Doors flew open, and the pounding of feet and alarmed shouts
signaled that the mutants were leaping to the source of the disturbance. The
hoarse wuffing of several dog-animals joined the din, the body of noise
swiftly moving toward the opposite end of the town.
“Now,”
Pike snapped.
He and
Spock leaped toward the rear door of the prison building. Taking positions on
either side of the door, they aimed their phasers at the knob area and cut a
shimmering line around it, the phaser beams slicing through the heavy wood like
a hot knife through butter. Pike kicked the door in and entered first, Spock
following close on his heels.
The
interior of the small room was dark, cluttered with boxes and sacks, possibly a
food storage area. Light gleamed around the edges of a door in the wall
opposite them, and they moved toward it with military precision.
Suddenly,
the door slammed open, and the mutant guard loomed in the entrance. Behind him,
they could see the figures of a handsome boy and a lovely young girl, the boy
arrested in the act of putting his arm protectively around the girl. The guard
dodged aside, evading Spock’s attempt to reach out and apply a Vulcan neck
pinch. The mutant’s arm slashed out, and the blow knocked the Vulcan back
against the wall. [188] Pike sidestepped the guard’s headlong lunge
at him, tripped the mutant, and sent him sprawling. He lay still, stunned, and
the two officers sprang into the main room.
Pike
reached the girl as she seemed to cringe away from Bardan, and he pulled her up
by the arm. Spock turned toward the boy, holding out a hand to assist him. Silene twisted as she was pulled toward Pike. Her dree
knife flashed in her fist, and the’ viciously sharp blade sliced a long cut
in Pike’s robes, uncomfortably close to his ribs. Spock moved to try to pull Silene away from Pike. Bardan let out a roar of
anger and flung himself at Spock, tackling the tall Vulcan and bringing him
crashing to the floor. Pike found himself trying to hold a wildcat in check—a
cursing, wriggling desert woman who was actively trying to cut out his heart.
SPOCK HAD RECOVERED from his surprise at being slammed to
the ground by Bardan and pushed the boy away from him to scramble to his feet.
The boy clawed up Spock’s legs and managed to swing a punch that Spock blocked.
The Vulcan caught Bardan’s arm and twisted it behind him. There was a
bloodcurdling roar from the back room, and the mutant guard barreled through
the open door. Spock released Bardan, pushing the boy into the path of the
mutant so that they collided with a dull thump as he desperately struggled to
get his phaser reset on stun.
Pike
had his hands full trying to subdue Silene, who didn’t seem to appreciate the fact that he was there to rescue her.
The girl expertly feinted with the knife toward Pike’s throat and then came in
under his guard, going for his midsection. He got an arm down in time to block
the thrust and divert it enough to escape with only another harmless cut
through the robe, the sleeve this time. “Stop it!” he panted. “We’re [190] trying to—” Silene slashed again. Pike finally managed to grab
both her wrists so she couldn’t work the knife. She promptly bit his arm.
The
mutant guard pushed Bardan aside and leaped at Spock. Spock abandoned the
phaser and sidestepped, pushing hard as the man rocketed past him to land in a
heap, the breath knocked out of him. Bardan came at Spock again, but Spock
fended him off with one hand long enough to reach down and deliver a Vulcan
neck pinch to the guard. The mutant stiffened as the pressure point in his neck
flamed, and then he slumped to the ground. Bardan broke away from Spock and
lunged for his throat. Spock trapped the boy in a bear hug and lifted him,
struggling, from the floor.
Pike
wrenched his arm away from Silene’s wicked teeth, spun her around, and finally
trapped her arms behind her back. She tried to kick him, and he gave her a
violent shake. “I said, stop it! We’re here to rescue you.”
“Go
away!” Silene shouted. “We have no
need of you!”
“What?”
Pike stammered. He pulled Silene around
to face him. “What did you say?”
“We’re
not going with you,” Bardan snapped. He had stopped struggling, and Spock
slowly released him. The boy and the girl stood glaring angrily at their
would-be rescuers. “Let us alone.”
“Your
fathers want you back safe,” Spock said.
“No.
Our fathers want us back apart.” Silene moved over to the fallen mutant, who was starting to stir. Spock stared
in astonishment. No one had ever [191]
shaken off a Vulcan neck pinch so quickly. As Silene helped the mutant to sit up, she said, “We
are safe here.”
Pike
looked from one to the other in confusion. “But you were kidnapped by force,
carried off, held prisoner here ...”
“We
were carried off by the mutants,” Bardan agreed, “but we’re not prisoners.”
The
mutant pushed to his feet, Silene hovering
beside him. “Are you unharmed, Panlow?” she asked in concern.
He
patted her arm reassuringly, squared himself around to face Pike and Spock. “I
am Panlow, chief of this village. Who are you?”
“They
were sent by our fathers.”
There
was a scuffling sound outside the door, and then it abruptly opened. An
embarrassed Endel and Ars Dan were thrust unceremoniously into the room by
several angry mutants. “They destroyed almost a cold turn’s worth of firewood,
Panlow,” one of them grumbled angrily.
Ars Dan
looked at Pike in chagrin and shrugged his shoulders. “Their dogs—I think they
were dogs—hunted us down, sir. We were unable to escape them.”
Panlow
had been studying Spock, Endel, and Ars Dan with sharp interest. He moved
toward them almost accusingly. “You are mutants like us, yet you wear the
clothes of the desert, and you come here on the orders of the flatlanders. Why
have you deserted your own kind?”
Spock
shot a look at Pike, in that one glance requesting permission to speak for
them. Pike [192] nodded. “We are not of your kind, Panlow. We
have learned to work in harmony with the flatlanders. We are not considered to
be different in the way you are.”
“There.
You see?” Panlow cried to the other mutants who had crowded into the room.
“There is hope for my plan. This is the proof of it. We need not be isolated in
these mountains any longer. We can find a way to live with the others to the
benefit of all.”
Pike
cleared his throat. “You still haven’t explained about the abduction of these
two.”
“They’ve
treated us with kindness,” Bardan said. “They want us to be emissaries for
them.”
“Panlow?”
The
mutant leader was almost unbelievably ugly, his face twisted into a grotesque
parody of what was considered normal. His voice, however, had the timbre and
quality of a trained speaker. Despite his ungainly body, when he moved there
was a certain nobility and grace about him. He swept his four-fingered hand toward
Silene
and Bardan, and a smile warped
his face. “I have planned for a long time to take some normals from the
flatland, but they had to be young enough to accept us as we are. They also had
to be old enough to understand that we wished to make contact with their people
and why. These two, they fell into our hands as we moved closer to their lands
to scout.”
“They
have much to offer our people,” Silene said. “Things we have never been able to find or make for ourselves.”
“That’s
true,” Bardan put in. “They mine ores we’ve never even seen ...”
“We
control these mountains.” Panlow nodded. [193]
“And the ores and minerals that are rich here. We have the forests, the
animals, birds, and fish that the flatlanders would find rare and exotic. There
is wealth and abundance here that they can never have because they fear to
venture into our territory. We have unique trade goods which would benefit
them, and they have trade goods we need.”
“I
see,” Pike said quietly. “What you really want is a chance to trade with the
nomads and townspeople of the flatlands so all would benefit.”
“Exactly.”
Panlow smiled. “We have spied on them when they have not known it. They are
progressing, leaving the holocaust behind them. We wish to do so as well. These
two children could be our bridge to understanding with the others of this
planet.”
Pike
turned to Silene and Bardan. “What
about you two? What do you think about all this?”
“When
they carried us off, we were frightened,” Silene said. “But they treated us with gentleness,
with concern, as though they feared to hurt us. When we got past our terror, we
saw them as people, not mutants.”
“They
believe we can help them, and I think we can. But we have to be able to talk to
our people, especially our parents, as adults. I mean, they have to
accept us as adults.”
“You
did run away against their wishes, instead of presenting your love to them as
grownups.”
Silene flared
again, pushing toward Pike angrily. “They only saw us as spoiled children
defying their wishes. They took no time to see us as two people who love each
other.”
Pike
tilted his head and smiled charmingly at her. [194] “I’ll grant you have a point there. I think it’s only because you’re
both so very young. But I believe we might be able to assist you—and Panlow’s
people—to get what you want.”
Orloff
reported to Number One every half-hour, but it was clear both he and she were
frustrated. Number One and T’Pris stayed on duty on the bridge while the
majority of the security and engineering personnel searched the Enterprise rivet
by rivet. After Orloff had reported one more time that nothing had been found,
Number One irritably clicked off the intercom and looked at the Vulcan woman.
“I feel like I’m chasing some kind of will-o’-the-wisp.”
“I am
not sure I understand the reference,” T’Pris said politely.
“It
means pursuing a goal that’s not really there, an illusion. I believe the Glory
is on this ship and we can find it. But I’m not sure we’re going about it the
right way. I think there’s something I’m missing, but I don’t know what it is.”
She smiled, and the smile softened the lines of her face into friendliness.
“And if that sounds confused and frustrated, that’s about right.”
“Is it
possible we are looking for two persons?” T’Pris asked. “It could be one was
the murderer and one is an accomplice—possibly a non-Vulcan—who might move the Glory ahead of our
search teams.”
“Would
a Vulcan murderer trust a non-Vulcan
to do that with the Glory?”
T’Pris
considered it, then shook her head. “The point is taken. I do not believe that
would happen—if the murderer is a Vulcan.”
[195] “Are you back to
that? I thought we’d all agreed only a Vulcan could have committed the murder
in the way it was done.”
“I
believe humans have a saying, ‘Never assume.’ It appears to me we have all been
guilty of assuming only a Vulcan could or would use the lan-dovna technique
to murder Meadows. I admit it seems so obvious, but perhaps that is what the
killer meant us to assume. Our traditions and rituals are not secret on this
subject. As Spock pointed out to you, it is a self-defense technique that is
taught. There are many who have studied our philosophy and combat techniques,
though it is seldom that a non-Vulcan
has the strength to carry out many of them. Still, if we allow for the
strength, a non-Vulcan could very
possibly execute lan-dovna. I wish to follow a theory that our criminal
is not a Vulcan. If we take that assumption, what other candidates on board do
we have?”
Number
One thought about it, liked the possibilities, and nodded to T’Pris. “All right,
Lieutenant. Follow that line of thought and bring the answers back to me. Who
else might have committed this murder, and why?”
“C’mon,
Scotty,” Bob Brien hissed. “They’re right behind us.”
Scott
moved a little faster down the corridor, walking with a peculiarly stiff-legged
gait. Brien, carrying an inconspicuous toolbox, hurried on ahead. He stopped
again and impatiently waved Scott on. Scott angrily hobbled up to him. “It
isn’t easy to run with three distillery pipes down your pants leg!” He [196] gestured at Brien’s toolbox. “You get to
carry all the small parts and catch jars in there.”
“Well,
it was your idea to transport them that way. Come on, now.” Brien
nervously threw a look down the corridor behind them. “Security’s through with
the engineering search. We can circle around and go back in through the number
four entry. There’s a service closet there—it has to have been inspected
already. We’ll dump all these parts in there until you go back on shift
tonight.”
“About
time, too. I may never be able to walk right again.” Scott awkwardly hitched
his left leg along, unable to flex his knee.
Brien
tipped him his twinkle-eyed grin and patted his shoulder. “It’s worth it. I
delivered all the jars we had in stock, and there’s a whole batch of orders to
fill when you get set up again.”
“Bob,
I’m starting to believe you’re money mad. Do ye see yourself as a tycoon or
some such?”
“Tycoon?
We’re just above breaking even on this. No, it’s the happy, smiling faces I see
when our crewmates take a taste of this first-class hooch you’ve concocted. And
a happy crew is—a happy crew.”
Scott
grunted as they finally reached the engineering entry. “Agreed. But just above
breaking even—” He paused thoughtfully. “We should have a better profit
margin.”
Phil
Boyce finished the last of his sick-call chores—no more heavy than usual. There
were the usual small accidents people suffered—bruises and cuts, a head cold
(that common ailment still had no sure cure), an [197] upset stomach from overindulgence in a particularly rich dessert the
night before. Boyce cleared away his instruments and left sickbay in the charge
of his head nurse.
He
stopped in the rec room for a cup of coffee. Must be the atmosphere or
something, Boyce thought. Rec-room coffee always tasted better than sickbay
coffee, even though it was actually piped from the same source before being
delivered through the food slots. As he sat at a table sipping the brew and
casually glancing around at the other off-duty personnel in the room, Boyce
noticed a common phenomenon and realized he had actually been seeing it for
several days. He tossed down the rest of his coffee and went to a nearby wall
intercom.
“Dr.
Boyce calling Number One.”
Her
voice came on instantly. “Number One here.”
“Where
are you?”
“Bridge.”
“I’m
coming up.”
When
the lift doors swished aside for him, Number One turned to look at him from the
command chair. “Something wrong?”
“Just
something odd.” He moved to her side and stood there, thinking about it. Her
restless little move in the chair brought his attention back from his musings.
“Sorry. I realized I’ve been seeing it the past couple of days and not paying
much attention to it,” he said abruptly. “Have you noticed that a lot of our
crew members seem to be smiling a lot lately?”
“Phil
...” she said dangerously. The warning was implicit in the tone of her voice: Don’t
waste my time.
[198] “Oh, I don’t mean just
happy. The ones I’m talking about have this fatuous little half-smile on
their faces, and their eyes look kind of glazed.”
“Are
you suggesting this crew is bazorged? Smashed? Looped? Three sheets to the
wind? Drunk?”
“Well,
not on duty. It’s the off-duty ones I’m seeing.”
“You’re
sure?”
“They
have all the signs of being sloshed to the gills.”
She
thought it over, then nodded briskly. “All right. Haul in everyone who’s
suspect and check them over. Off duty is one thing, but if anyone came on duty
in that condition, it could present a danger to ship operations.”
“I
suspect it’s that new hooch. Inside gossip says it’s all over the ship.”
“Source?”
“For the
hooch? Nobody’s talking on that one. The stuffs too good.”
Number
One sniffed and shook her head. “It’s no good if it affects the crew like this.
Get on those exams, Phil. It’s important we find out exactly what’s happening.”
T’Pris
had been excused from other duties to concentrate on her investigation into
other possible suspects. She had opted to tap into the library computer from
her station in the biology lab, and she had been busy at it for hours.
When
she came off duty on the bridge at four o’clock, Number One decided to see if
T’Pris had [199] made
any progress. As she entered the biology lab, T’Pris was taking a brief break
from the computer, rubbing eyes that were tired from staring continuously at
the screen.
Number
One smiled at her encouragingly. “You don’t have to spend every minute on this,
Lieutenant. Take an hour break and relax.”
“No, I
cannot. It is important to our honor that I discover who else other than a
Vulcan might have committed this murder.”
“Have
it your way, then. Have you found anything, any leads at all?”
“I
ordered up detailed personnel records on every crew member. Not just the
service jackets—personal history. The kind of thing Starfleet has in depth on
every member of the fleet.”
Number
One raised an eyebrow. “That information is strictly classified.”
“Yes,
but we are discussing a murder here. On Commander Orloff’s request, Starfleet
has opened the records of personnel on this ship to me. I believe I might have
found an interesting line of information to pursue. Something promising, but I
do not have it all yet.”
“Notify
me when you do.”
“As
soon as I can verify all the data.”
Number
One nodded to her and left the lab. T’Pris hurried back to her station and
renewed her pursuit of one little thread of information she had discovered, one
that promised a revelation if her assumption was correct.
* * *
[200] Phil Boyce was
studying one more overhead diagnostic screen as the patient in hand lay on the
sickbay bed smiling vacuously and staring into space. He sighed and ran his instruments
over the body one more time; they confirmed what the overhead was telling him.
“All
right, you can get up,” he said. The crewman remained prone, smiling. Boyce
gestured to the assisting nurse. “Give him a hand, Nurse Blayton.” He turned
away to find Number One waiting for him at the sickbay door. He jerked a nod
toward his office. “Come on in.”
The
exec slumped down in a seat across from Boyce and waited. Boyce sat down and
shook his head. “Never saw anything like it.”
“Like
what?”
“Technically,
they’re all drunk as skunks. Alcohol content in their blood is sky high.
There’s some disorientation, a certain
loss of motor and speech reflexes, but no physical discomfort. There is one
little thing that bothers me because I can’t figure it out.”
“It’s
the little things that kill you, Phil. What is it?”
“They
all admit to consuming engine-room hooch, but every one of them swears he had
no more than two drinks. Of course, they don’t seem to remember much after
that, but one or two drinks shouldn’t have this effect on people—not all of
them, anyway.”
“You
and I each had a glass of that hooch not too long ago. I wasn’t affected. Were
you?”
“No,
but then the symptoms indicate we might not remember whether or not we were affected.”
Number One threw him a warning look, and he amended his [201] statement. “I know I wasn’t. I had minor
surgery to perform that afternoon, and Blayton confirms my memory that I was
functioning normally. But remember, you and I only had a half-shot apiece, not
full glasses of the stuff.” Boyce tapped his fingers on the desk, running it
through his mind again. “All I can think of is some kind of contamination. I’ve
never seen anything like it. Usually the stuff is potent but no more harmful
than a double shot of Saurian brandy. This is something different.”
Number
One sighed and shifted her weight in the chair. “So it seems as though another
search is in order, this time for a contaminated still.”
“Couldn’t
you just order the culprit to come forward in the interests of public health?”
“You know
damn well the making of engine-room hooch usually has a blind eye turned on it,
but it’s still illegal. The bootlegger can face a stiff demerit penalty,
possibly loss of a commission. You don’t think the contamination is deliberate,
do you?”
“No, I
don’t. This effect is so unusual, I don’t think anyone could’ve planned it.”
“So, a
mistake. I don’t believe in penalizing an honest mistake if I don’t have to.
We’ll have to find the still, though, and disable it, and then broadcast the
reason for our action.”
“What
about the search for the Glory?”
Number
One somberly shook her head. “No sign of it. This ship has been swept, dusted,
and polished inside and out looking for it—and nothing.”
“It has
to be here.”
“I
agree, unless someone destroyed it—and I can’t [202] imagine why anyone would do that, not after killing for it.”
Now she
had it. T’Pris was elated. Here was the trail that led to the answer. It was a
matter of logic, once one saw all the facts laid out. It was late; she had not
taken a break to eat or rest for hours, but the exhilaration of the hunt gave
her the adrenaline surge she needed to keep going. Her attention was so deeply
rooted in the puzzle she had been slowly unraveling that her reflexes were just
a fraction slow. She didn’t realize someone was behind her until the very last
moment. Then she heard the soft scrape of a boot sole on the hard deck.
The
pungent smoke of cookfires rose over the kerra trees of Tisirah Oasis as
the women prepared supper for the men in the dusk. It had been five days since Silene and Bardan had disappeared, four since the
man known as Krees had gone looking for them with his mutant aides. Melkor
Aliat had sent word back to his household and his shop that he would not return
until Bardan’s fate had been determined. A number of the townsmen who had
accompanied Aliat this far had returned to Sendai, but several friends remained
with him. They would have pitched a lonely camp under the trees with only
bedrolls and a borrowed cookpot had not Ingarin insisted on having them join
her family for meals. With that courtesy extended to strangers, Shinsei Farnah
could not avoid inviting them to sleep under cover of the family tent.
After
an initial wariness, the two fathers found a [203] number of subjects to
discuss—and a number of common opinions they shared, especially in regard to
trade. Both men sadly had come to the conclusion that their children were lost
to them forever. If Indallah Krees and his strange assistants returned,
the fathers were convinced it would be with the bodies of their son and
daughter. Ingarin and Makleh Berendel kept their own counsels and with
far more faith than the men.
Ingarin
was presiding over her daughters-in-law as they prepared the evening meal, when
she suddenly straightened, alert and listening. “What is it, Mother?” one of
the young women asked, but Ingarin shushed her. Gradually, it could be heard,
far off but distinct. The wind carried the soft tinkle of many small bells, all
jingling in a gentle rhythm.
“Someone
comes from the Druncaras!” The cry came from a lookout posted high in a kerra
tree. The entire camp surged as one to the edge of the oasis to see who it
was.
They
came along the trail from the Druncara Range slowly. The pack animals were so
heavily laden that they could move no faster than an ambling walk which sounded
the cheerful bells attached to their harnesses. No less than thirty animals
made up the caravan, each watched over and chivied along by a brawny mutant.
Pike, Spock, Endel, and Ars Dan rode the meercans borrowed from Farnah,
pacing sedately at the side of the caravan. Silene and Bardan led the party mounted on meercans
richly caparisoned with beautifully woven exotic cloth of bold colors laced
with metallic thread.
[204] Farnah stared along the road, shading his eyes with one
hand. “It’s them! They’re alive!” he cried. He clapped Melkor Aliat on the
shoulder. “It is them!” He scowled suddenly as he looked a little closer
at the approaching animals. “On my two best meercans ...”
Silene
and Bardan led the caravan into the oasis. Pike had thought there would
be cheering, but the nomads and the few townspeople among them were quiet,
warily drawing back away from the mutants. If the mutants were aware of it,
they gave no sign, merely prodding the pack animals along with intricately
carved walking sticks. The two young people stopped near the tents and
dismounted, tossing the reins of their mounts down in a ground hitch. The pack
animals halted behind them, Pike and the others sliding off their mounts and
moving after Silene and
Bardan.
Silene
reached out toward Bardan, and they approached their fathers hand in
hand. Ingarin sized up Bardan with a nod of satisfaction. The boy had some
strength to him, or her daughter would not have chosen him. He was a
good-looking lad, and Silene seemed
to be deferring to him, something she would never do if she did not respect
him.
“Father ...” Bardan began.
Aliat and Farnah moved forward at the same
time, reaching out to enfold their children in their arms. “You’re well? You’re
unharmed?”
“Yes, yes,” Silene assured Farnah. “We were well treated.”
“You young whelp, you’ve caused us a great deal
of [205] worry.” Aliat shook his son’s shoulder,
dropping into irritation now that the danger was over. “Bad enough you ran off
without any consideration for me or our business. But to run off for this
girl—”
“She
ran off for me.”
“The
more fools the both of you, then,” Farnah snapped. He grabbed Silene’s hand and
started to pull her away toward the main tent. “Come then, Silene, back where you belong.”
Silene dug
in her heels and yanked hard, breaking free of her father’s grip. “No!”
“Daughter—”
“Shinsei
Farnah, I suggest you address the new mutant ambassadors in a more
respectful manner,” Pike said quietly but pointedly.
Farnah
and Aliat turned toward him, both staring in astonishment. “What?” Farnah
stammered. “What?”
“What
do you mean, mutant ambassadors?” Aliat demanded.
“I mean
exactly what I said, Trader Aliat. Panlow, the mutant leader, has adopted
Bardan and Silene as his children.”
“What!”
Farnah roared.
Pike
ignored the angry bellow and went on. “And he has given them the power to speak
for him among you, to trade with you.”
“Trade
with the mutants?” Aliat snorted in derision. “What could they possibly have to
trade that we might want?”
“They’ve
brought a few offerings with them which you might care to examine.” Pike winked
at Silene.
[206] The girl gestured
to the mutants beside the pack animals. They immediately began to unload the
packs, spreading ground cloths on which to lay out the merchandise for
inspection. The nomads and the townsmen gathered closer in curiosity. Pike had
to admit Panlow’s men played their parts well, bringing out the different items
one by one and then adding to each pile, every piece different and more
intricate than the previous.
The
onlookers began to whisper, to nudge each other. Silene and Bardan moved among the mutants, picking
up and displaying items so that they could be better seen. There were
glittering gemstones, some rough and some faceted, some of them set in intricately
wrought gold and silver jewelry; luxuriously thick furs, several made into
hoods and capes; richly colored and glazed dishes, jars, goblets, and pots. A
gasp went up among the nomads when a mutant laid out a small armory of
steel-bladed knives, swords, and lances.
Bardan
smiled and took a jug from one of several set out on a ground cloth. He
uncapped the jug, caught up two of the pottery goblets, and poured a ruby
liquid into each. He graciously offered the goblets to his father and Farnah.
“The
wines of the highlands are especially fine,” he said smoothly. “The soil and
the weather there are all particularly conducive to the cultivation of grapes.”
The two
older men sipped hesitantly at first and then appreciatively. Farnah stared
into the goblet, rolling the sip of wine around his mouth and then swallowing.
“It is rich and full-bodied,” he commented to Aliat. “Not sour and thin like
your wines.”
[207] Aliat scowled at
the critical remark. “Not harsh enough to remove paint and tan ucha hide
like yours, either,” he shot back. He turned to Bardan. “We can offer ten keshels
for each gallon jar of this wine.”
Bardan’s
eyebrows rose. “Father, there is no need to be insulting. The mutants are
prepared to trade, not to give their goods away.”
“It was
a fair offer!”
“Not
for wine of this quality, which no one else has.”
“We
offer fifteen keshels for each gallon jar,” Faraah suddenly said.
“We
could be the exclusive dealers in Sendai, Bardan,” Aliat insisted. “Surely the
sole distributor should get a discount.”
“Perhaps,”
Bardan agreed. “But our clients—that is, our people—have no desire to have any
exclusive distributors dispensing their merchandise. They will deal fairly with
all who wish to trade.”
“Twenty
keshels for each?” Farnah put in.
Bardan
smiled at him. “Silene’s father is as wise a man and as clever a trader as she
has told me. Twenty keshels a jar is a good price. How many will you
want, Shinsei Farnah?”
“A
moment, my son. I, too, wish to place an order,” Aliat said.
“At
twenty keshels a jar, of course,” Bardan replied firmly. “I cannot
possibly take less.”
“Oh,
very well. Twenty a jar.”
“Done.”
Bardan smiled. He brought out a bead counter and a writing sheet to keep track
of the orders and the prices. “I would also like to have you sample [208] the crystal wine, an outstanding white wine
I believe you will enjoy ...”
Pike,
Spock, Endel, and Ars Dan stood quietly aside, watching the progress of the
trading. Everyone was openly interested in the items on display. The women were
particularly taken with the furs and silken cloth Silene was busily showing them. She called up her
mother and Berendel and draped them both in yards of fine material to
demonstrate how well the colors looked, how softly the cloth fell.
“You
know, Spock, I have a feeling those two kids are going to handle their new
responsibilities pretty well.”
“I
agree, sir. They are not quite the same children who ran away to defy their
parents and please themselves,” Spock said quietly. “They have made choices
that have placed them here. They chose to run away to make their own lives.
They chose to trust the mutants who carried them off. They chose to accept the
role of ambassadors and negotiators between the mutants and their own people—a
good indication they were ready to take on an adult role in their lives.”
Pike
studied the trading scene before him. The nomads had started to bring out some
of their trade goods. Aliat and his townsmen begged for time to return to
Sendai and bring back merchandise of their own. Silene and several mutants were marking off spaces
where booths could be set up around the oasis pool.
Bardan
climbed up on a large rock at poolside and called for quiet. “There is a great
deal of bartering to [209] be done here. You
all have merchandise to sell and trade. We have begun to lay out booth spaces,
enough for all. In four days’ time we will conduct a trade fair here. Anyone
with goods to sell will be welcome. But tonight, we will celebrate the bonding
ceremony of Silene to me and me to her!”
There
was a cheer of approval from most of the onlookers, including Ingarin and
Berendel, Pike noticed. Shinsei Farnah and Melkor Aliat were not quite
as happy as everyone else, but they would have to make the best of it. Their
children were determined to work out their own future.
“I don’t
think we should allow ourselves the luxury of staying for the wedding, Spock.
These people are well on their way to building an integrated society by
themselves, and I think we should leave them to it.”
“Will
they not notice our disappearance, Captain?”
“They
know I’m a wanderer, Spock, and the rest of you are mutants. No one will really
question our slipping away.”
Spock
nodded, his eyes on the happy couple in the middle of a group of well-wishers.
That should be the way he and T’Pris celebrated their togetherness. He was
formally bound to T’Pring, but there were ways to end the betrothal, even now.
They were frowned upon, but they were legally acceptable. Sarek would be
furious, Amanda would be disappointed, but Spock would finally feel satisfied in
himself. He had felt uneasy about T’Pring for a long time—her coldness and her
distance made him uncomfortable with her. He knew he had never loved her; he
had desired to [210] please
her to honor his obligation. It was only their parents who had chosen to try to
join them. T’Pris was the woman who owned his heart. T’Pring would never be
more than someone who had been assigned to marry him. If they married, she
would keep up the appearances expected of her—but only on Vulcan. T’Pris would
be with him, united in their careers as well as in marriage. It was better
ended between him and T’Pring, and the sooner the better.
Pike
touched Spock’s arm, jerked his head toward the trees at the edge of the oasis.
The other two lieutenants followed them as they drifted away from the busy
group of traders still hovering around the displayed merchandise. Quietly,
unnoticed, the four officers reached the far side of the grove. When they were
safely screened by the trees, Pike brought out his communicator and flipped it
open. “Pike to Enterprise.”
“Enterprise
here,” came the immediate response.
“Four
to beam up.”
“Aye,
sir.”
There
was a moment’s wait as the order was relayed down to the transporter room. Then
the familiar hum began to sing in the air, and the men froze as the atmosphere
around them began to sparkle. The glittering transporter beam covered them
completely as the hum rose to a whine, and then they were gone.
Number
One was waiting for them in Transporter Room 3 when they beamed in. As soon as
transportation was complete and the men moved off the platform, the executive
officer stepped forward. Pike knew from her face that there was more trouble.
[211] “Number One?”
“I’m
sorry, sir. There’s been another murder on board—the same method as the first.”
She looked pityingly at Spock. “The victim was Lieutenant T’Pris.”
SPOCK’S FACE WAS IMMOBILE; although he wanted to cry, he
refused to let the tears form. His body trembled violently. “Where is T’Pris?”
he demanded hoarsely.
“Her
body was removed to sickbay,” Number One said kindly.
Both
Pike and the exec were watching him closely. Spock didn’t care. He moved toward
the transporter-room door, weaving uncertainly, staggered by his grief. “I must
see her.”
“Dr.
Boyce will show you where she is.”
“Alone,”
Spock snapped. The doors slid open before him.
“Call
Boyce and tell him,” Pike ordered quietly. Number One moved to the intercom on
the transporter console as Spock exited and the doors swished closed.
T’Pris’s
body had been removed from the lab where she had been found and placed in a
private alcove of sickbay. Boyce had folded her hands over her breast [213] and
closed her eyes. When Spock saw her, it was easy to think for a moment that she
was merely asleep. The illusion lasted only until Spock reached out to touch
her lovely face and felt the coldness of her flesh.
The
doctor had retreated to his office when Spock entered, shutting the door behind
him. Spock dimly realized he was alone and was grateful no one heard the
chest-wrenching sobs that broke from him as he bent over T’Pris’s body. He took
her hand in his and held it while he leaned down to kiss her one last time. A
teardrop fell and dampened her gentle face. Spock released her hand and
straightened his shoulders. He had to use his sleeve to wipe away his tears,
and as he did so his face changed.
Hardened.
A cold
rage and desire for revenge rose in Spock. The woman he had loved was dead, and
her murderer had also killed Spock’s hope that he might find happiness. He felt
he would never know another woman to whom he could give himself so completely.
Later
in his quarters, Spock sat motionless before the ancestral figure from his
family shrine. He should have been meditating, but he found his grief was too
great for his mind to focus on a mantra or the riddle of a Vulcan koan. The
only image that filled his mind was T’Pris—alive, smiling at him, her face and
body flushed with lovemaking, full of the deep and unspeakable joy of mental
and physical bonding that only Vulcans could feel.
Meditation
should have brought him peace, but the anger and need for revenge would not
release its hold on him. Finally, he gave it up, pushed to his feet, and went
to seek out the captain.
[214] Pike sat with
Number One in the briefing room, going over what they knew, which the executive
officer had to admit was not much. “She was murdered in exactly the same way as
Meadows,” Number One said. “With the right hand and with what the Vulcans call lan-dovna
technique—one-handed strangulation.”
“The
Vulcans on board?” Pike asked quickly.
“All of
them were under house arrest, observed to be in their quarters at the time,
sir.”
“Then
who in hell could possibly have done it?”
The
door slid open, and Spock entered. “I beg pardon for the intrusion, Captain.”
“You’ve
been relieved from duty for the time being, Spock,” Pike said. He glanced
across the table at Number One, recalling what she had told him about Spock and
T’Pris’s personal involvement.
“Again,
I beg pardon, sir, but I believe I would be more valuable to you in the
investigation of these murders if I were on duty. In fact, it is my
belief that I should have been pursuing the investigation all along, and
Lieutenant T’Pris should have gone to the planet surface to assist you there.”
He
blames himself for her death, Pike
thought. And I’m not going to let him get away with that. “No, Mr.
Spock. I needed you there, and the lieutenant was perfectly suited to the task
here. No one could have known the murderer was not one of the suspects we had
in hand.”
“I
would not have been such easy prey,” Spock said harshly. “Captain, I wish to
continue this investigation with you.”
[215] “I see no reason
why Lieutenant Spock’s request should not be granted, sir,” Number One put in.
Pike
traded a long look with his executive officer. They both knew this would mean a
great deal to Spock. If he was blaming himself for putting T’Pris in line of
danger, assisting in the search for her murderer would be an expiation for that
guilt. “I agree.” Pike gestured to a seat next to the first officer. “Number
One was just filling in the details for me.”
Quickly,
Number One outlined the steps that had been taken to discover the murderer and
the fact that truth detectors had failed to uncover any lie in the Vulcans’
stories of innocence. “T’Pris noticed that Meadows’s computer had no files or
notes of any kind on the Glory, and he most certainly would have made some. She
thought the murderer had erased any information Meadows had recorded. We found
the same situation in T’Pris’s library-computer link after her death. She had
been pursuing a line of information she had found in the personnel files. She
thought the most viable suspect—if Vulcans were in the clear—would be someone
at least familiar with Vulcan and its martial defense arts. I saw her working
at her computer link. I know she was making notes. When we found her body, I
checked the computer myself. Any files or records she had made were gone,
erased.”
Spock
eagerly leaned toward her. “Tell me what she said, any reference at all to her
line of investigation, her reasoning. Can you recall it, Number One?”
“Of
course.” Number One looked slightly miffed. She had an eidetic memory. “We
spoke of possible [216] suspects, and T’Pris said, ‘I believe humans
have a saying, “Never assume.” It appears to me we have all been guilty of
assuming only a Vulcan could or would use the lan-dovna technique to
murder Meadows. I admit it seems so obvious, but perhaps that is what the
killer meant us to assume. Our traditions and rituals are not secret on this
subject. As Spock pointed out to you, it is a self-defense technique that is
taught. There are many who have studied our philosophy and combat techniques,
though it is seldom that a non-Vulcan has the strength to carry out many of
them. Still, if we allow for the strength, a non-Vulcan could very possibly execute lan-dovna.
I wish to follow a theory that our criminal is not a Vulcan. If we take that
assumption, what other candidates on board do we have?’ Then, when she was
following up on the library-computer link, she said, ‘I ordered up detailed
personnel records on every crew member. Not just the service jackets—personal
history. The kind of thing Starfleet has in depth on every member of the
fleet.’ It was in those records that she seemed to have found something that
was leading her somewhere. She said it was ‘something promising,’ but she
didn’t have all the facts yet. I believe she was following that trail when she
was murdered, and the murderer erased all information she had compiled.”
When
she finished, Spock nodded thoughtfully. “I see.” He paused a moment, then
looked at the captain. “May I see where T’Pris died?”
Orloff
had sealed off the biology lab, but Pike broke the seals without hesitation and
allowed Spock to precede him into the room. It was a small but efficient [217] office adjoining the larger lab area where
specimens were examined and scanned. The computer screen still glowed, but it
showed only a dull, blank face to them as they examined it.
“Are
any other files missing?” Pike asked Number One.
“None
that we can determine. All routine duty reports by the science officer on duty
were logged. The other lab technicians and biologists say there was little to
do on this leg of the mission except pursue theoretical work. Some of T’Pris’s
research is in the computer. But her line of inquiry regarding personnel
records is totally gone.”
“Not
totally, Number One.”
Pike
and Number One looked around at Spock as he seated himself at the computer
console.
“Lieutenant,
I assure you we ran a full scan of all records in the library computer, and
T’Pris’s are not there, except for the biological research in which she had
been engaged.”
“I
agree they have been erased. But not as thoroughly as our murderer would like
to have had them.”
“Explain,”
Pike said.
“I am
an A-5 computer expert, Captain.”
Pike
smiled wryly, recalling Number One’s briefing on Lieutenant Spock. The best
most officers attain is an A-3 rating, Pike had observed. Precisely,
sir. Number One had made her point with those two words. Their new Vulcan
lieutenant had exceptional qualifications. It was unfortunate they would be
called on to find his loved one’s murderer. “Go on,” Pike said.
“What
most people, including Starfleet officers, do not fully appreciate is that any
thorough investigative [218] probe into
computer records can reveal what may be referred to as footprints, even in the
case of an erased record or one that apparently has been completely destroyed.
The computer memory retains at least the ghost of an imprint of that record.
Therefore, no file is ever totally lost. I need only to follow the trail of
footprints to recreate the records T’Pris was investigating.”
“How
soon can that be done?”
“Ah,”
Spock sighed. “I did not mean to make the task appear easy. It is a process of
reconstruction, of hunting out the faintest of signs and symbols among the many
tracks available in the library computer. It will take a while, captain. I
cannot speculate on the number of hours.”
“Then I
believe you should get started.”
Spock
nodded briskly. “Yes, sir.” He turned to the library-computer link and began
work without another look at the captain and Number One.
Scott
had left the various pieces of the still in the engineering service closet for
more than forty-eight hours. Brien was urging him to get the distillery in
operation again, but Scott was wary of an unexpected sweep of the engineering
section.
“We
have customers to please, Scotty,” Brien pleaded. “They won’t wait forever.”
“They’ll
have to, won’t they?” Scott retorted stubbornly. “Won’t do them a bit of good
if security confiscates it all, will it? Do you know what they’ll do if they
find out who’s the owner of that little piece of piping? They’ll reduce me and
you to ensigns all over again. They’ll put us in charge of the engineering
shift [219] on a scow collecting the bits and pieces of
space junk in Earth orbit. We’ll get a leave maybe in twenty-five years, if
we’re lucky. No, man. Let it alone a while. There’s no one will miss a jug or
two, and as ye said yourself, this is a drop of the stuff worth waitin’ for.”
Caitlin
Barry was conducting a routine inspection of the dilithium crystal in the
central core. While they maintained standard orbit over Areta on impulse power,
the warp engines were cut back to the minimum operating level, and it was a
good time to run all the standard checks. It was midshift, and Bob Brien was
assisting her as they ran through the routine.
She
approached the inspection scope hole which would afford her a view of the
underside of the crystal hanging in its cradle in the core. “Ready?” she asked
over her shoulder.
Brien
acknowledged he was, bringing up the clipboard he carried. Caitlin flipped open
the inspection port and levered the close inspection lens in front of her eyes.
The end of the lens which scoped the underside of the crystal had a series of
mirrors built into it so that the maneuvering of a toggle enabled the viewer to
see all areas of the crystal from this angle. Caitlin put her eye to the lens
and worked the toggle slowly so that the system gave her a series of close-up
views one after the other.
“Hold
it,” Caitlin said suddenly. She froze the lens where it was and magnified the
image. “Got a crack.”
“How
bad?” Brien asked, stylus poised over the clipboard.
“Simple
hairline fracture. Lucky we spotted it now, though. If it had gotten any
bigger, it could have [220] cracked in
midwarp, rupturing the whole crystal.” She looked back at him pointedly. There
was no need to discuss what would happen if the crystal ruptured. The carefully
aimed streams of matter and antimatter would have mingled directly without the
controlling medium of the dilithium between, and the Enterprise would
have been blown to space dust in microseconds. “All right, let’s get it out of
there.”
The
section on duty could handle it, although removal and replacement of a crystal
wasn’t simple. First, all warp functions had to be shut down. Then the damaged
crystal had to be lifted out of its cradle using waldos manipulated by two
people, carefully edged to the loading chute, eased into that, and dropped into
the protective cartridge that would carry it away for disposal. The replacement
crystal had to be lifted into the core, boosted slowly into the catching
manipulators of the waldos, and then gently maneuvered into the main cradle.
Once there, it would be precisely aligned and tested, and finally the warp
engines could be run up again.
Caitlin
supervised the shutdown of the engines and decided to allow the duty team to
remove the crystal under Brien’s supervision. She went to the observation scope
to watch the removal. Opening the scope hole, she casually glanced along the
length of it before applying her eye to the lens. There was a peculiar little
mark on the side of the scope hole which she hadn’t noticed before—circular and
definitely out of place. Frowning, she slid the lens up and out of the way and
reached in to run her fingers over the marred surface. Her nails caught on the
far edge of the circle and lifted a flat lid, revealing the small hole cut into
the metal.
[221] “What in the
world?”
Bob
Brien was too busy supervising the crystal removal team to notice that the
chief engineer had found something odd in the inspection scope hole. He didn’t
see her get a probe and run it down that mysterious opening. The probe end ran
a little way and then reappeared, dangling among the irregular latticework of
pipes that decorated the bulkhead about four feet away. Caitlin studied it
thoughtfully. The still would have been beautifully camouflaged in the
eye-deceiving tangle. When you knew where to look, it was easy to see where it
had been, but she knew she had passed by without seeing it countless times.
Caitlin
was no stranger to the existence of engine-room hooch. She was also aware of
the fact that someone had been diligently brewing up batch after batch on this
voyage—with some detriment to off-duty personnel, according to Boyce and Number
One. She had not been able to figure out where the still had been located—until
this moment. The thing must have been removed during the engine-room search for
the Glory, but where was it now?
Caitlin
retired to her small office off the main engineering section, put her feet up
on her desk, and leaned back to think about it a while. No one had offered the
chief a sample of the contraband alcohol—she seldom drank—but she had heard it
had a dynamic quality. Number One and Dr. Boyce had informed her the day before
that it was potentially dangerous. The engine-room searches had obviously cut
off production, and the culprits were lying low for the moment. If she were
making the hooch, she would [222] want the equipment
nearby so she could resume activity as soon as possible. She brought her boots
down to the deck with an easy jackknife of her knees. A likely place had
occurred to her.
She
asked no one to accompany her. The duty crew was busy with the dilithium
crystal replacement in any event. The first three service closets Caitlin
investigated held no more than the expected tools and supplies. She mentally
noted that the supply shelves were fully stocked and efficiently arranged. Good
housekeeping, she thought approvingly. Service Closet 4 was different. It
contained an additional several pipes, two of them curled and rippling and two
short and straight—definitely nonstandard equipment—and a tool kit that should
not have been there. Caitlin bent and flipped open the kit, revealing a neat
arrangement of tools, pipe fittings, and two small catch jars. The tool kit had
no identifying marks; it was standard Starfleet issue. Whose?
Spock
rubbed his tired eyes, trying to ignore the burning sensation and the heaviness
of his lids. He had been seated in front of the library-computer screen in the
biology lab for almost twenty hours, and fatigue had begun to drag at him,
dulling his mental perception.
T’Pris
had been examining the complete personnel records of all crew members—the lives
of two hundred three people, including family histories that traced three and
even four generations. Many of the crew came from fleet families—service that
dated back to the pioneer days of space exploration and the beginnings of
Starfleet. Others had been drawn into [223]
the service by the romance and adventure promised by the drive to push back the
known boundaries of space. The galaxy was so vast only a small percentage of it
had been mapped and explored; the Milky Way was a treasure house of unknown
worlds and civilizations. Some might prove friendly, some hostile, but all
would be endlessly fascinating.
Spock
was so distracted by weariness and the overwhelming volume of facts the library
computer was sending that he almost missed the clue. He passed it by,
registering it in his subconscious a moment before he realized what he had
seen. He ran back to it. There. So small a fact to be so monumentally
important, but as he looked at it again, Spock knew this was the answer.
Pike
was shocked at Spock’s appearance as the Vulcan entered the briefing room and
stood swaying in fatigue before himself and Number One. His complexion was
incredibly sallow, and huge black hollows resembling bruises smudged the area
under his eyes.
“Captain,”
Spock said wearily. “I believe I know who the murderer is.”
“Excellent,
Mr. Spock.”
“But I
do not know the motive,” Spock went on. “At least, the motive for Meadows’s
murder. I believe T’Pris was killed because she was on the track of the murderer’s
identity. The reasons for the initial crime are unclear to me.”
“But
who is it, Spock?”
Spock
levelly met Pike’s look and sidestepped the question. “Sir, I am about to make
an unusual request. I hope you will grant it.”
[224] Pike glanced at
Number One, frowning slightly. Spock was deliberately keeping the name from
them. “Let’s hear it.”
“I want
to draw the murderer out on my own. I want to elicit a confession and a motive,
and I want every Vulcan on board to be able to hear it, too.”
“Why?”
Pike snapped.
“This
was a Vulcan execution, not only in method but in one of the victims. A Vulcan
committed the murders and stole the Glory.”
Pike
stared accusingly at his first officer. “You and Orloff swore all the Vulcans
had proven their innocence.”
“They
did, sir, positively.”
“Number
One is correct, Captain,” Spock interrupted quietly.
“Then
what are you talking about?”
Spock’s
face hardened, his eyes angrily darkening into implacable coldness. “It would
be more correct to say all known Vulcans were proven innocent. Do I have
your permission to handle this murderer in my own way?”
Pike
didn’t like it. It smelled of personal vengeance, and it seemed totally unlike
the Vulcan second officer who had reported aboard only two weeks ago. Pike had
a feeling the old Spock would have been appalled at the suggestion of his being
an instrument of revenge. The man who faced him now obviously had embraced the
idea and was exceedingly willing to carry it out.
“I’m
sorry, but I have to question your motives on this, Spock.”
[225] “They are
personal, sir. My relationship with Lieutenant T’Pris was ... close. More than
that, one Vulcan has committed crimes that cast dishonor on all Vulcans, but
particularly on those of this ship. I know the identity of the criminal, but
that is not enough. I must know why the crimes were committed. This is a
Vulcan matter, Captain. To let anyone else handle it would be ...
unacceptable.”
“To you
or the others?”
“To all
Vulcan, sir.”
Pike
thought it over, not liking the idea of security not handling the capture, if
Spock was right. Yet Spock had a point if the entire crime—the theft of the
Glory and the two murders—did revolve around Vulcans. How the devil could the
murderer be a Vulcan and not known to them? Still, however it was, Spock
believed he had smelled out the killer and now wanted it to be a Vulcan
capture. Given the high sense of Vulcan honor and Spock’s personal involvement
with T’Pris, Pike could sympathize with the request.
The
captain finally nodded. “Orloff should be present.”
“I will
keep the commander informed. Indeed, I will require his assistance in one or
two arrangements that need to be made. The culprit will be turned over to
security when the time comes.”
“Very
well, Mr. Spock. Make your arrangements.”
Caitlin
Barry called together all the new engineering personnel after she made sure the
dilithium crystal had been properly installed and all tests run to check its
soundness and its alignment. The restarting of the [226] warp engines was under way, and the entire
system would be on line again in a matter of hours. The engineers stood in
front of her at attention in a formal line.
“Ladies
and gentlemen,” she said as she moved down the line. “You’re all aware of the
existence of a still on this ship. You and I both know that while it’s unusual,
there are nonengineering officers who are capable of whipping up a batch of
hooch but not many. You and I both know that one of you is the most
likely moonshiner.” No one looked at her; all eyes were kept straight ahead.
Every face was expressionless. “They tell me the supply that’s been coming out
of this particular still has been of an unusually interesting and intoxicating
nature. Dr. Boyce and I have discovered there’s a reason for that.”
Caitlin
walked over to a long bundle wrapped in a heavy tarp and flipped it open. The
tangle of pipes she had discovered in the service closet tumbled out and landed
clanging on the deck. Caitlin nudged them with her boot. “These pipes were
flooded with a spray of gamma rays. My guess is it happened when the crystal
fracture occurred. It wouldn’t have been obvious just by looking at them, but
these pipes and tubes have all been contaminated, and so has the ... product
that’s been running through them.” She flicked a look along the line of
engineers. The expressions were all as stolid as before, except for one. Scott
was frowning, his eyebrows pinching together in concern. He seemed about to
move forward, and Caitlin quickly went on. “Fortunately, the contamination was
low-level, within acceptable limits, and no permanent [227] damage has been done. All known bottles of
the hooch have been confiscated and destroyed by Dr. Boyce, and the same is
going to happen to these pipes. The inspection scope hole will be repaired this
afternoon. I don’t intend to bring this matter up again, and I don’t want any
more engine-room hooch brewed up. Understand me, that is no more hooch ever,
or there will be some serious penalties laid on the culprit. Is that
clear?”
There
was a soft chorus of “Yes, ma’am” and a nodding of heads all along the line.
Scott swallowed and said, “Other ships have the tradition ...”
“Other
ships, Mr. Scott, are not the Enterprise. There are some traditions that
should be put to rest. This is one of them, and stopping it starts now. Is that
understood?” The acknowledging chorus came again. “All right, then. You’re
dismissed.” They fell out, moving away quickly. Scott hesitated a moment and
then hesitantly approached her.
“Commander
Barry.”
“Yes,
Mr. Scott?”
“I’ll
have to take out a requisition form for a new tool kit. I think I’ve lost
mine.”
“No
need. I found one in Service Closet 4. You must have misplaced it and forgotten
about it.”
“Oh,
aye. That must’ve been it.”
“It’s
still there. You can get it any time.”
“Thank
you, ma’am.” He started to back away from her, but her voice stopped him.
“You’ll
find some pipe fittings and a couple of small jars have been removed from it.
But they don’t belong in a tool kit, anyway, do they?”
[228] “No, ma’am.”
“I
didn’t think so. Don’t lose that kit again, Mr. Scott.”
“No,
ma’am. Never again.” Scott turned and walked away.
The
crew cabin was a single, smaller than Spock’s but with enough room for one
person to make himself at home. Even in the semidarkness, Spock was aware of
the starkness of the decor. Either the occupant had not yet had time to add the
homey touches that would make the cabin uniquely his own, or he preferred the
plain standard-issue design. Spock guessed this particular crewman felt the
severity of the unadorned cabin was more desirable. Everything of a personal
nature was stowed in drawers and the closet. The room was kept warmer than
most; Spock found it quite comfortable as he sat there waiting.
The
surveillance equipment, tiny and unobtrusive, had been efficiently installed by
engineering. Orloff alone had supervised the security arrangements Spock had
specified, not without argument. Whatever transpired in this room would be
transmitted audio-visually to several points on the ship where Pike and Number
One, Orloff, and all the Vulcans on board would receive it. Spock felt it
necessary that these be his witnesses.
The
cabin door slid open, and a man stepped in. As the portal slid closed behind
him, he reached out to touch a light sensor on the wall. A red-orange glow
warmed the room, revealing Spock. The man jerked around toward him, startled.
“Lieutenant
Spock. What’re you doing here?”
[229] Spock rose and
moved a step forward. “Waiting for you.”
“Is
there something I can do for you?”
“I am
here to discuss the murders of Commander Meadows and Lieutenant T’Pris and the
theft of the Glory.”
“I
think the chief of security would be more helpful to you, Lieutenant.”
Spock
shook his head slowly, studying the man coldly. “He knows very little about
Vulcans. This was a Vulcan crime from start to finish. Both Meadows and T’Pris
were killed with the lan-dovna technique. The object of the crime was
the Glory. Meadows was just a tool to acquiring it, but he had to die because
he would reveal the criminal’s identity. The first suspects were the Vulcans
who had no alibi. We all thought only a Vulcan could possibly have committed
the crime.”
The
other man stared at him, waiting, his face expressionless.
“Then
the murderer made a mistake,” Spock coldly went on. “He used the same method of
execution on Lieutenant T’Pris when all the other Vulcans were under
surveillance and I was on Areta. That was a stupid move, very non-Vulcan, because it exonerated all the known
Vulcan crew. T’Pris may not have concluded the same thing I have—that the
murderer must be a Vulcan who is not known to be one or is not obvious as
one—but she was on the right trail to discover his identity.
“As
soon as I considered all the implications, I realized how that could be,
because I am half human and half Vulcan. My father’s genes dominate, and I [230] am
physically more Vulcan than human. But go ahead a generation or two, breed a
Vulcan-human to a human and then to a human again. Ultimately, the human side
will dominate, in appearance and in all important physical aspects.”
“It
takes one to know one. Is that what you’re saying?”
Spock
ignored the comment. “T’Pris had been going back through the permanent records,
the family histories of every crew member. I was able to reconstruct the trail
of her investigation. You do not understand enough about the library computer
to know that any record can be retrieved by a knowledgeable operator even if it
has been erased. She was close to discovering what I did, that one man aboard
who is seemingly human has a Vulcan heritage. It had to be you, Lieutenant Reed.
You allowed Meadows to take the Glory from the vault, and your
great-grandmother was the daughter of one of the high clans of Vulcan. I do not
understand why the name in the records is given as T’Dess Alar-ken-dasmin. That
is a matriarchal designation of house, a renunciation of her father’s name.”
“Why
should she keep the name of a father who abandoned her after she was raped and
nearly beaten to death by a human adventurer?” Reed snapped harshly. “She was
an innocent, caught alone and savagely violated by an alien pig for his
pleasure. He escaped Vulcan justice, but T’Dess’s family couldn’t bear the
disgrace of what had been done to her. Her father cast her out, to live or die
or make her way on her own. The only one who helped her was her mother. She gave
T’Dess enough money to make [231] passage to Earth.
A fitting banishment, when you think of it.”
Spock
considered it, troubled by the story. “I can understand that. I do not
understand how she was able to become pregnant with—”
“My
grandmother.” Reed grinned sardonically at Spock, enjoying himself for the
moment. “You know, we heard about you, the great genetic accomplishment. The
mating of a Vulcan and a human. You were famous on Vulcan. Created and produced
by almost the finest geneticists in the known galaxy.” He chuckled
nastily. “A Vulcan conceit, Spock. Vulcan arrogance. Just because Vulcans
hadn’t tried it before, they thought it had never been done.
“But it
had been. Privately funded genetics labs on Earth were way ahead of them on
that kind of life engineering—had been for about a hundred years. The human
T’Dess worked for as a servant was wealthy, and old, and had never had a child.
T’Dess was grateful to him for taking her in. She agreed to marry him and bear
the child the geneticists designed. Once my grandmother was born, they had the
techniques down pat. After she married, Great-granddad wanted a grandchild to
sit on his knee before he died. My father was created without half the trouble
and in half the lab time as Grandmother. It’s simple when you know how to do
it, Spock. You were an idea whose time had come on Earth about sixty
years before you were even thought of on Vulcan.”
Spock’s
eyes strayed away from the man, considering the story. “Your family has a
history of good citizenship on Earth. Why did you—” As he brought his head up,
Reed drove at him, right hand stretched [232]
rigidly to deliver the lan-dovna hold to his throat. Spock lurched out
of the way, off balance, but was caught by a glancing neck pinch that caused
him to gray out for a moment. Reed shot past him as he tried to regain his
senses. The door slid open and closed as the murderer fled into the corridor.
Spock
cursed himself for seven kinds of a fool. He had forgotten his opponent was
still part Vulcan, and the Vulcan traits of strength and quickness had
apparently not faded, even though diluted by human blood. He ran for the door,
knowing that Orloff would be activating security to try to head off Reed. He
cursed himself again. The human—or was it Vulcan?—fault of vanity. He had been
so sure he could confront and take the man by himself that he had insisted that
Orloff not make many security precautions. The elevators would be covered, of
course. As he glanced right and left, he saw Reed vanishing around a corner.
There were no lifts in that direction, but there was a Jefferies tube.
Spock
pulled his communicator, flipping open the lid. “Spock to security. Officer
Reed is escaping Quarters Deck 4 utilizing the interconnecting service tube. I
believe he will be heading for a transporter room. I am in pursuit.” He bolted
after Reed.
A
Jefferies tube ran the length of the ship in several areas, connecting all
decks and serving as a general maintenance corridor for a number of ship
function networks. Shorter tubes in different areas had more specialized uses.
The one Reed had ducked into was a major tube connecting with all deck levels.
Reed had ignored the rungs of the ladder leading down the tube. Spock could see
him far below, using the descent [233]
method of grabbing onto the
sides of the ladder and sliding down, employing the feet as brakes. Even as
Spock watched, Reed reached the level he wanted, stopped, and triggered the
service door into the corridor. Spock did not waste time with the communicator.
He jumped to the ladder and followed Reed down.
Security
Lieutenant Bryce arrived at the door of Transporter Room 3 a step behind Spock.
It was the only transporter room close to the exit of the Jefferies tube on
this deck and the logical choice for Reed’s escape. The door slid open at their
approach, and they charged in to find the chief lying on the deck and the last
vibrant humming of a beam-down fading away. Bryce quickly checked the downed
chief while Spock examined the transporter controls. They would be locked on
the coordinates Reed had chosen. Bryce looked up, nodding at Spock. “Only
unconscious.”
Spock
slapped the intercom on the transporter console. “Spock to Pike.”
“Here,”
Pike answered instantly.
“Reed
has beamed down to the planet surface.”
“Can
you tell where?”
“The
coordinates indicate the Druncara Range, sir.”
“Mutant
territory.”
“I am
beaming down after him, sir.”
“Wait.
I’d better come with you.”
“Captain,
there is no time to waste. I am beaming down alone ... now.”
“Spock,
damn it—”
“Sir,
it is my fault he escaped. I am taking the responsibility of bringing him
back.” He tapped off [234] the intercom before Pike could reply and
hurried toward the transporter platform, speaking over his shoulder to Bryce.
“Activate the transporter as soon as I am on the pad, Lieutenant.”
“Better
take this with you.” Bryce tossed Spock his own phaser pistol. He indicated the
chief still unconscious on the deck. “He took the chief’s phaser with him.”
“Thank
you, Bryce.” Spock was positioned on the pad. “Energize.”
Bryce
carefully moved the energizing levers on the console. The deep-throated hum of
the transporter began, quickly rising to a high whine as the spill of energy
covered Spock’s body, and he was gone.
Pike
burst into the transporter room, saw the empty chamber, and whirled on Bryce.
“You let him go.”
“I
don’t think there was much I could have done to stop him, sir.”
“Beam
me down to those coordinates, Lieutenant.”
“Yes,
sir. If you order it, sir.” Bryce slowly turned to the transporter console.
Pike
hesitated, reconsidering it. Spock had wanted this to be his capture. He had
said several times that it was a Vulcan matter, an affair of honor. Pike
realized it was more than that to Spock. T’Pris’s death weighed on Spock’s
mind. If Number One’s theory was correct, the two were probably lovers. Pike
knew that if he and Janeese had been on the same ship and she had been
murdered, he would have allowed no one to stand in the way of his vengeance. A
human emotion, an understandable one. And Spock was half human—fighting to hide
it but subject to the demands it made on his emotions. Pike looked at Bryce and
shrugged. [235] “Let’s see how Spock handles it. Stay here
until another transporter chief relieves you.”
Boyce
arrived at the transporter room with his medical bag and began to check the
unconscious chief. He looked up at Pike and smiled. “Nothing more than a
physical knockout, Chris. He’ll be all right in a few more minutes.” He bent
over the man to administer further aid, and Pike moved to the intercom on the
transporter console.
“Pike
to Number One.”
“Yes,
sir.”
“Can
you track them on the planet surface?”
“We
can detect the movement of life forms, sir. Unfortunately, the ones we perceive
to be Lieutenant Spock and Lieutenant Reed are fairly close to others. We
believe they may be mutants. If they commingle, we will not be able to tell one
from the other.”
“Stay
on it, Number One. I’ll be on the bridge in two minutes.”
THE AREA SPOCK BEAMED INTO was rocky, lightly feathered
with low-growing brush and a heavier line of trees. He immediately recognized
it as the lower slopes of the Druncara Range. He could not place his position
more exactly than that, but he was certain Reed could not know any more about
the area, either. The desert was behind him; he judged Reed knew better than to
go in that direction. Therefore, the only logical conclusion was that Reed had
climbed up, deeper into the Range. He set off up the slope, his mind churning
over the information he knew, trying to match it up to Reed’s possible motives.
T’Dess
Alar-ken-dasmin was listed in the Starfleet records as having been a house
servant before her marriage. Simply put, she had begun her life on Earth as a
menial. This was an intelligent woman who had been trained to manage a wealthy
household, entertain for a socially prominent husband, and undoubtedly carry on
a separate career of her own. Her [237]
knowledge, her bearing, and
quite probably her beauty would have appealed to old Sanford Lynch. Marriage to
Lynch would have given T’Dess back much of what she was born for, only not on
her own planet. Not in the eyes of the high houses, especially her own. The kahs-wan
taught Vulcans to survive when put to the test, and obviously T’Dess had
done that. Spock could guess the bitterness that had lived in her. T’Dess would
have had the training and the knowledge of history and tradition of all
high-born Vulcan women, and she would have passed it down to her daughter, then
to her grandson and great-grandson. But she also would have passed on the hate
that she lived with.
Spock
had just passed a tumble of boulders when a phaser set on kill blistered the
air beside him. He instantly dived aside, rolled, and came up in the shelter of
the rocks. “Reed!” he shouted.
“Give
it up, Spock. I’ll kill you, too.”
“I
cannot. If it is not me, it will be security beaming down. They will find you,
even if you kill me. You have no hope of escaping.” There was no reply to that,
but Spock’s sharp sense of hearing did not detect any sound of the man moving
away. “Reed?”
“What?”
“Answers.
I need to know.”
“Curiosity
killed the cat, Spock. Ever heard that one?”
“I am
alive, Reed. I want answers. Why did you do it? For your great grandmother’s
honor? Yours? Why?”
There
was a moment’s pause, then Reed’s voice drifted to him, quietly and almost
dreamy, as though Reed were reflecting on it all. “She didn’t hate Vulcan, [238] you see, only the family that had abandoned
her. In those days, Vulcan women were taught the same martial arts as men, not
the way they’re coddled now.” He snorted derisively. “T’Pris was soft, and she
died.”
“You
bastard,” Spock hissed. He held himself from leaping toward Reed’s hiding place
only by great effort of will.
“As it
happens, Spock, that’s one charge I don’t answer to. All my ancestors were
legally married. I’m one-eighth Vulcan, completely Vulcan in my training and
loyalty, but T’Dess’s clan would never accept me as family.”
“Your
human blood never made you a criminal. What drove you to steal the Glory? To
murder?”
There
was a long silence, and then Reed’s voice came down to him coldly,
sardonically. “It’s so simple, Spock. It’s the Glory and my great-grandmother’s
house and their so-called honor.”
Spock
shook his head, nonplussed. “I do not understand the connection.”
“You
and your precious computers and all their information. Don’t they have the
information that my great-grandmother’s patriarchal clan was the Archenida?”
Spock’s face changed with a sudden understanding, and it was almost as though
Reed could see him. “Yes, the so-called protectors of the Glory.”
“Again,
I do not understand your reference. The so-called protectors?”
“You
don’t know, do you, Spock? No one does, and that’s why I did it. The
Archenida’s proud clan [239] heritage as the
keepers and defenders of the Glory is a lie. T’Dess knew the secret, and each
of her descendants has been told the truth about the Archenida and the Glory.”
“We
found them on Areta. The last keeper of the stone was of clan Archenida, laying
down his life to protect it.”
“Really?
That’s what they’d like to have all Vulcan believe. The fine and loyal
protectors of the Glory were afraid to allow it to be exposed to the public.
Someone might have designs on it. So they paraded a beautifully duplicated
glass replica in all those ceremonials and show-the-flag missions. That was the
stone that was lost, Spock. They still have the real gemstone on Vulcan, but
they can never admit it. All their bravery in protecting the Glory, the loss
they suffered when the ship and the Glory went missing—all that was bound up in
a lie, Spock. A lie they could never reveal. They are the thieves of the
Glory; they hold it still. But T’Dess knew the secret as a daughter of the
house. She passed it on to her daughter and grandson and to me. She’s still
alive, you know.”
Spock
began inching his way around the huge tumble of boulders. If he could keep Reed
talking, he might be able to distract him from the fact that Spock was circling
around, trying to get behind him. “So when we found the Glory, you saw it as a
golden opportunity for revenge.”
“Meadows
was easy. I told you that. He wanted to examine the Glory and was willing to
lie to do it. I didn’t know how I would get my hands on the stone before that,
but he handed me the perfect [240] opportunity. He took the Glory; he even signed for it.
The security vault post is isolated, a dull duty, never checked by a superior
officer. As soon as the corridors were clear, I followed Meadows to the lab
where he was working on analyzing the stone. He already had the beginning tests
in the library computer. He thought I was coming to reclaim the Glory, and I
was, but not the way he thought. It was a simple thing to kill him. I took the
Glory and erased the computer files he’d been working on. I put the stone in a
safe place. You never found it, did you? T’Pris became a problem, though. She
was onto the personnel files, and I couldn’t let her find me out.”
Spock
had circled the boulders and homed in on Reed’s voice. The man was hidden among
the trees just beyond the boulders. Reed’s last words infuriated Spock, but he
drew himself back from the edge of an anger that could have driven him into a
stupid move.
Slowly.
He must move slowly.
Reed
was still speaking as Spock eased himself forward into the area between the
rocks and the trees. There was a small amount of low brush, and Spock crept
forward carefully on his hands and knees into it.
“Do you
understand it now, Spock? Does your Vulcan honor comprehend how much it means
to me to bring T’Dess Alar-ken-dasmin back to Vulcan with our revenge? House
Archenida must acknowledge what I’ve done to save their vaunted honor. They
must acknowledge that I am T’Dess’s great-grandson and a true Vulcan. It
would be ashv’cezh.”
Spock
had never felt the touch of the Vulcan concept of ashv’cezh, translated
as “revenge worse [241] than
death.” Reed’s act, no matter how criminal, would expose the lies House
Archenida had spun for centuries, and T’Dess would have her humiliation and
abandonment avenged in the most psychologically vicious manner that could be
imposed on Vulcans. It was brilliant.
Spock
had made his way to a position at right angles to Reed. He couldn’t speak, or
he would give away where he was. His silence might provoke Reed, possibly cause
the man to move out of cover where Spock could see him.
Suddenly,
there was a rustle in the trees where Reed had taken cover. Reed called out in
surprise and then fear. A movement behind him brought Spock around to face a
group of mutants. One of them made to grab him and then pulled back at the
sight of his Vulcan features. He put the phaser back on his belt and made a
gesture of peace toward them as Panlow had taught them, and the mutants moved
aside for him. Spock straightened up and stepped out of the brush. Looking
toward the trees, he saw another group of mutants had disarmed Reed and were
wrestling him into a cleared area. Spock moved forward, raising a hand toward
the mutants, and called out in the Aretian tongue.
“Stop!
If you are Panlow’s people, you know me. Stay away from this man. He is a
fugitive, and he is mine!”
The
mutants paused, snapping looks between Reed and Spock. The one in the lead, a
giant whose spine twisted into a hunched sideways position, waved a hand. “You
have him.” The mutants pushed Reed toward Spock.
[242] Reed stared around
wildly. “I’m an outcast, too. You know what that means. Help me. Help me!” His
tone was clear, but his appeal in English fell on uncomprehending ears.
The
mutants backed away, leaving Spock and Reed to face each other. Their meaning
was also clear; it was not their quarrel. Whatever was between the normal and
the mutant Spock was not their concern. Reed tried to lunge for the phaser one
of the mutants held loosely in his hand, but Spock took a run and dived at him,
bringing the security man crashing to the ground. Reed attempted to get a hand
up to Spock’s neck, but Spock twisted away and brought his knee up into Reed’s
gut. Not fancy, not even Vulcan, but it worked. Reed writhed in pain, allowing
Spock to get to his feet. Reed still retained enough Vulcan strength to shake
off the blow and stagger to his feet as Spock came at him again. Spock knew he
was fighting without discipline, allowing rage over T’Pris’s death to command
him, but all he wanted was to punish Reed. He reached for Reed’s neck with his
right hand, intending to apply the lan-dovna hold. Reed batted his hand
away, grabbed Spock’s arm, and threw him.
Spock
doubled his knees to his chest as Reed pounced on him and kicked the man away
to the right. Reed scrambled in the dirt, and Spock fell on top of him again,
reaching this time for a neck pinch. Reed wriggled away by twisting under him
and with a great effort wound up atop Spock. The two had been evenly matched
until now, but Reed was gasping, his strength starting to fail. Spock’s hand
shot for Reed’s throat as the man heaved for air. The lan-dovna hold
would cut [243] off
Reed’s breath forever. Suddenly, Spock found his mind flashing on an image of
T’Pris—gentle, patient, wise ...
And
unable to understand why her death would be celebrated with hate.
Spock’s
honor would be lost if he murdered Reed in cold blood. Spock’s hand closed on
the join of Reed’s shoulder; and as he administered the neck pinch, Reed
collapsed in a limp heap under him. Spock stayed there a moment, hovering over
the body of his enemy, pulling his emotions in under a tight rein. Dimly, he
became aware of an odd noise and looked up. The mutants were hopping up and
down in some kind of celebration dance and grunting. From the twisted smiles on
their faces, Spock came to the conclusion that they thought he had done the
right thing. The mutant holding the phaser came forward and held it out to him,
grinning in approval.
Spock
took it, nodding his thanks. Then he reached for his communicator, flicked open
the grid, and grated, “Spock to Enterprise.”
“Enterprise.
This is Pike.”
“I have
him, Captain. There will be two to beam up, as soon as I see some friends of
ours out of the area.”
“I
beg your pardon?”
“I will
explain later, sir.”
Pike
waited in the security office as Spock half hauled the still weak Reed before
him. Reed pulled himself erect and managed a proud stance before Pike and
Orloff.
“You’ve
done well, Mr. Spock,” Pike said. “I [244]
believe Commander Orloff can handle the security detail from here.”
Reed
spat on the deck and stared at them arrogantly. “I’ve beaten you all, anyway.
When you find it—if you find it—you’ll find the Glory is all I’ve said it was.
A fake. A disgrace to the Archenida clan. And that’s what I set out to do, to
prove their honor and their legend is a lie.”
“We have
found it, Reed,” Pike said flatly.
Reed
and Spock both stared at Pike. Reed blurted out first. “What?”
“It was
in the ‘very safe place’ you thought would be ideal to hide it. After Number
One reported the complete sweep of the ship had found nothing, I wondered where
someone on board might hide it so no one would think of looking there. I’ve
read Poe, too, Reed. The obvious
place to hide it is the place out in plain view—or, in this case, the one place
no one would think to look. We found it in the security vault where you had
replaced it in a different container.”
Reed
struggled with that a moment, his pride staggering under the apparent ease with
which the captain had countered him. “Well, it doesn’t matter that you found
it. I’ve still shown up the conceit and the lies of the Archenida. I’ve shown
that the heroic legend that surrounds them and the Glory was a prevarication
from beginning to end.”
Pike
gestured to Orloff. “Commander, would you bring the stone here.” The security
chief moved forward with the huge emerald in his hands, and Spock looked down
into the deep green stone that had caused so much havoc and death. “Spock,
please call [245] up the report on the analysis of the Glory
that we had the geology lab run while you and Reed were on Areta.”
Spock
glanced sharply at Pike, then turned to the library-computer terminal on
Orloff’s desk. “Computer, show the analysis on Vulcan’s Glory.”
The
screen on the gooseneck mount immediately began to flash up information. Spock
scanned it as rapidly as it winked on the screen, and then he turned to Reed.
“Audio analysis,” he snapped. The library computer’s female voice began to
intone the carbon and mineral properties of the stone. Spock began to smile at
Reed, not a pleasant smile at all. “You hear that, Reed? Do you understand the
analysis? It is an emerald—not glass. The Glory is real. It was lost as
the legend said. The only liar was T’Dess. She poisoned you all with her hate.
If you had done nothing—if you had simply been a member of the Enterprise crew
which had found and restored the Glory to Vulcan—you would have been a hero.
You and she might have returned to Vulcan and been given the warm welcome you
desired. But you listened to her lies, listened to her hate, and you have lost
everything.”
Reed’s
face buckled in anguish and frustration, but Spock wasn’t looking at him. He
was staring straight ahead and thinking, And so have I. So have I.
The Enterprise
was en route from Areta to Vulcan. Pike had turned the bridge over to
Number One and retired to his cabin, where he paced irritably while Phil Boyce
reclined lazily in a form-molded chair and [246]
sipped at a snifter of Saurian brandy—the only liquor he currently trusted.
“Two key scientists dead, one security guard in the brig charged with their
murders, all in the space of ten days. I thought this would be just another
mission.”
“Those
are the minuses,” Boyce said easily. “Consider the pluses, Chris. The situation
on Areta is even better than was originally projected. The fate of the He-shii
and her crew was discovered. Vulcan’s Glory was found and is being
returned. Your new second officer proved to be reliable, resourceful, and
talented. His intelligence goes without saying ...”
“All
right, agreed,” Pike said. “But I can’t help but think that we’ve lost
something in Spock through all of this. I grant he doesn’t have many reasons to
smile right now, but he’s colder, harder, more silent than before. More formal,
if you can imagine.”
“I
noticed. Does it bother you, Chris?”
“I
don’t know.” He corrected himself almost instantly. “Yes, it does. I liked the
man I met two weeks ago. I’m not so sure about this change in him.”
“Life
changes us all, sometimes a lot more quickly than we’d like, but we don’t often
get to choose.” Boyce sipped his brandy and then said calculatingly, “Then
there’s Number One.”
Pike
stopped pacing and swung around to stare at the doctor. “Number One? What has
she got to do with this?”
“She’s
cool, often formal. You regard her as a good officer.”
“Of
course. The finest.”
“You
like her.”
[247] “Absolutely. The
most professional first officer I’ve ever—”
“How
about as a woman?”
“She’s—”
Pike shrugged. “Perfect.”
“Most
men say they’re looking for a perfect woman.”
“Phil,
what are you up to?”
The
doctor shrugged his shoulders innocently and took another sip of the brandy.
“Nothing. Just pointing out some of the local attractions to someone who’s
been, mmm, scouting more exotic locales for quite some time now.”
Pike
studied the older man, frowning. Boyce looked up at him with a slight smile.
“Leave before this last one, you came back raving about Janeese Carlisle.
Holophotos, everything. You couldn’t stop talking about her. I even heard about
the ring you gave her. Not a real engagement, but the next thing to it. This
time back, not a word. Gloom and depression. It doesn’t take too much thought
for an old veteran to figure out you and Janeese decided to call it quits.”
“She
did.”
“It
happens, Chris. And you changed some because of it, the same way Spock has
changed since he lost T’Pris. Part of the lumps we take as human beings. T’Pris
died—that’s hard to accept for someone so young. What happened to you is a
little more common. Someone we care deeply about just doesn’t care as much
about us. We feel we’re less the man or woman we thought we were. That isn’t
so. Sometimes things just don’t work out the way we want. Those are the chances
we all take. I have. You have. And you [248]
know what, Chris? We’ll keep on taking them. It’s human nature.”
Pike
was silent for a moment, thinking it over. Then he looked up at Boyce. “You
were talking about Number One.”
“Was I?
Well, she’s an interesting woman.”
“Yes,”
Pike said thoughtfully.
“And
she’s perfect.”
The
entire senior command of the Enterprise paid their respects to T’Pris’s
family at the estate where her body had been borne to lie in state. Pike,
Number One, Boyce, Caitlin Barry, and the other officers, all in dress
uniforms, passed quietly before Sirak and T’Dar to murmur condolences for the
loss of their daughter. Spock stood apart, as a representative of his father’s
house, not as an Enterprise officer. The other Vulcan crew members were
ranked behind him, respectful delegates of their own houses, paying homage to a
colleague.
The
ship’s officers were greeted and thanked by T’Pris’s family and then led to the
large circle among the trees that formed the estate’s shrine. The ancestral
figures that decorated it traced the clan’s history to its beginnings. The
geometric sculptures in the center of the sand-floored shrine were carved from
native Vulcan jade that glowed a rich teal blue in the lowering sun. A
catafalque rested before them.
The
ceremonial drum beat slowly, accompanied only by the lonely sound of a Vulcan
flute to lead in the six men who carried T’Pris’s casket. They solemnly lowered
it to rest on the catafalque. The other [249]
Vulcans followed it in and arranged themselves around the edges of the shrine’s
circle. Sirak strode to the central platform and bowed to the four cardinal
directions. Then he faced the casket and bowed to it.
“T’Pris,
beloved child, you gave us great joy in your living. You graced us with your
beauty, with your spirit, with your love. Your time with us was not long, and
we have no more of you than what is here.” He gestured sorrowfully toward the
casket. “Yet we celebrate the memories of you that will stay in our hearts,
alive and vibrant as you always were. As long as each of us lives, so long
shall you remain alive. And to each succeeding generation, as each of us knew
T’Pris, we vow to pass on our memory of her, so there is no dying but only a
renewal of love each time her name is spoken and her story is told.”
Sirak
again bowed to the casket and then to the four directions. Quietly, then, he
led the way out of the circle, each person moving past the casket and laying a
hand on it briefly in passing. The ceremonial drummer pounded out the slow
thrumming beat of the dirge interwoven with the poignant sound of the flute as
they passed by.
Spock
was the last to move. As he reached out to touch the deep black polished wood
of the casket, he shuddered and had to pause, head down, to control the deep
sorrow that shook him. “T’Pris,” he whispered softly. “T’Pris, I vow I will
never forget.” I gave myself to you freely, he thought. We chose each
other. There will never be another like you in my heart.
“Lieutenant
Spock,” Sirak said quietly as he moved to his side. “Are you indisposed?”
[250] “No,” Spock said,
straightening. “I am only moved by the loss of a colleague ... and a friend.
The greater loss is yours. My family sends its deepest regrets.”
“We are
honored,” Sirak replied formally, “that the son of Sarek of the House of Surak
found merit in our daughter.”
“More
than merit, sir,” Spock said. “T’Pris was ... an exceptional woman.
Exceptional.” He nodded to Sirak and held up his hand in the Vulcan salute.
“Live long and prosper.”
Sirak
gave the traditional reply. “Peace and long life.”
Spock
nodded, but he felt there would be no peace for him, and that even if he did
have a long life, it would be made lonely by the lack of T’Pris’s love in it.
He
turned away and followed his fellow officers, who were some distance ahead of
him. He went slowly, the salute ringing in his ears.
Number
One sat in the command chair, musing over the ceremony that signified T’Pris’s
departure from life. It had been gentle and dignified, as T’Pris had been.
Number One thought she would not mind a Vulcan ceremony to commemorate her own
memory when her turn came.
She
glanced over at Spock, quietly working at the library computer. Since T’Pris’s
death, he had become more silent and conversely more abrupt when he did speak.
Vulcans supposedly had no emotions. She wondered whether that wasn’t as big a
subterfuge as Reed’s great-grandmother had spun, a lie taken on for protection.
She’d probably never know, but she did know Spock was hurting. Her ruminations
were [251] interrupted by Pike’s brisk arrival from the lift. She automatically vacated
the command chair and moved to her station at the helm as he stepped down into
the well of the bridge.
“Number
One, take us out of orbit and set a course for Starbase 12. I’ve just received
a message from Starfleet that the ambassadorial party from Delta Indus II was
dropped off there by a passenger vessel that developed warp problems. We’ve
been ordered to transport them on to their home planet.”
“Aye,
sir,” Number One snapped as she worked her fingers lightly over her console.
“Breaking out of standard orbit.”
Beside
her, Lieutenant Andela tapped coordinates into the navigation console and
intoned, “Laying in a course for Starbase 12.”
“Warp
factor four.”
“Aye,
sir.”
“Oh,
and Number One ...”
“Sir?”
She turned to look at him questioningly, her long black hair swinging forward
to catch on her shoulder and frame her face.
“See me
for dinner tonight. Nineteen hundred in my quarters all right with you?”
She
stared at him blankly. “Dinner?”
“Ah,
yes. Business,” Pike said. “We have to discuss the ship’s operations. You’ll
have the mission log up to date by then, won’t you?”
“It’s
up to date now, sir.”
“Of
course. Well, we’ll discuss it.”
“Aye,
sir. Dinner. Nineteen hundred. Your quarters.”
She
turned back to her console, puzzled. He’s never [252] done that before. On
the other hand, the first time for anything was always interesting. She ran her
eyes over her board and then up at the viewscreen, where the fathomless black
of space sparkled with faraway stars. “We are out of orbit, on course for
Starbase 12. Warp factor four.”
She hit
the warp control, and the Enterprise leaped forward—toward the stars and
a new mission.
(OCT, 2003)—Scanned, proofed, and formatted by Bibliophile.