Star Trek Voyager - Gateways
Book Five Of Seven – No Man’s Land
CHAPTER 1
chakotay sighed heavily. "I hate
to say it, but I'm afraid
it doesn't look good."
Captain
Kathryn Janeway's blue gaze flickered to the face of her first officer. She
didn't answer at once. When at last she spoke, her voice was heavy but
resigned.
"I knew
I could count on you to tell me the truth." Chakotay had only spoken aloud
the suspicion that had been growing in her own gut.
Chakotay
nodded solemnly. His unhappiness was plain on his handsome face. "It
doesn't look good at all."
A smile crept
onto Janeway's lips. "All right, no need to rub it in," she said.
"Well, as they say, nothing ventured, nothing gained."
Grimly, she
stepped forward and drew a cloth
over the
abysmal painting, hiding it from view. "Into the replicator it goes."
"You did
have some interesting usage of color over in the upper right-hand corner,"
said Chakotay.
Her smile was
a full-fledged grin now. "You're backpedaling. No, it was a pretty bad
effort. I guess abstract is not for me."
"It
wasn't for da Vinci, either," offered Chakotay.
"And now
we segue into flat-out flattery," Janeway retorted, her hands on her
hips. "Are you bucking for my job, Commander?"
"When we
get back I might just want a little ship of my own again."
A variety of
emotions rose inside Janeway. First, and most powerful, was joy.
"When" we get back, Chakotay had said. Everyone aboard Voyager was now substituting that hopeful,
happy word for the ambiguous "if." Their brief communication with
Starfleet Command, through the auspices of one Reginald Barclay, had infused
the entire crew with hope. Torres had already informed Janeway that the new
hyperspace technology and the modifications for the com system looked
promising. There was now every reason to substitute "when" for
"if."
But there was
also unhappiness and apprehension commingled in that thought. Tough as things
had been over the last few years, they'd faced it together, she and her crew.
They'd lost some good people— and gained a few others in the forms of the
remaining crew of the Equinox and
the four Borg children. Janeway and Chakotay had grown very close. She hadn't
even dared showed Tuvok the painting; she
couldn't have
dealt with Vulcan art criticism. Janeway could open herself to Chakotay as she
could to no one else. The thought of him leaving her side, even to captain his
own ship, was not one she wished to entertain overlong.
And of
course, there was always the question of what kind of welcome Chakotay,
B'Elanna, and the rest of the former Maquis would receive. The war was over,
but she knew there were enough hawks in Starfleet Command that "forgive
and forget" would likely not be the watchword of the day. From the little
they had been able to gather, the Dominion War had exacted a dear cost. Some
would want their pound of flesh, and with all the other Maquis safely accounted
for, they might want to extract that pound from Chakotay, B'Elanna, and the others.
She'd fight
for them, of course. With every ounce of strength she had in her small body.
"I hope
you get that little ship, if that's what you want," Janeway said softly,
impulsively reaching to squeeze his muscular forearm.
Sensing the
change in her, he smiled gently. "Then again, who wants the hassles of
command? It's easier being first officer."
"Barclay's
changed everything, hasn't he?" She went to the replicator and ordered a
cup of coffee. Turning to look at Chakotay, she inquired with a raised eyebrow
if he wanted anything. He shook his head.
"Discipline
has gone out the proverbial window," Chakotay said. "You've got a
happy crew, but a pretty giddy one."
"Let
them be a little giddy. They've been incredible. They deserve it."
"We all
do."
"How is
our little assimilation experiment going?" Janeway asked, sipping her
coffee.
Chakotay
chuckled. "Seven's doing her best, but she still doesn't think she's the
best person for the job."
"Nonsense.
Who better to help Borg children adapt to the challenge of individuality than a
Borg who's made the journey herself? It is, as Tuvok would say, the logical
choice."
"Logical
doesn't always mean easy."
"I'll
grant you that." Janeway thought about Chakotay's commentary on Seven's
schedule for the children. "Fun" had been allotted one hour, on
Seven's terms—scheduled exactly the way mealtimes, exercise, and lessons had
been. And Neelix's comment about Seven's blunt statement at playtime: "Fun
will now commence."
"I don't
think Seven quite gets the whole fun concept," Janeway sighed.
"Sometimes
I don't think her mentor does either," said Chakotay.
Janeway
narrowed her eyes. "And what's that supposed to mean?"
"Exactly
what it sounds like." Chakotay sat down beside her and regarded her
intently. "When was the last time the captain of Voyager had some real fun?"
"Just
last night," Janeway retorted. "I went to Fair Haven."
Chakotay was
grinning. "Oh, yes," he agreed, "for all of fifteen
minutes."
Caught,
Janeway stalled. "Neelix wanted to see me."
"Neelix's
new coffee substitute could have waited until the morning."
"Ah, but
then I wouldn't have known it wasn't a success, and I'd be drinking that sludge
to wake up instead of this," Janeway countered.
Chakotay
hesitated. "Look. You know and I know that we've been going nonstop. The
last time we visited a planet was hardly an occasion for R-and-R."
Janeway's
stomach clenched at the recollection. On Tarakis, the crew had all been forced
to relive memories that were not their own. Janeway vividly recalled pleading
with Saavedra not to massacre the colonists, but to no avail. Some nights, she
still had dreams about it.
"No,"
she agreed softly, feeling a vestige of the pain brush past her. "It
wasn't."
"Astrometrics
to Captain Janeway."
"Go
ahead, Seven."
"I
suggest that you report to astrometrics immediately. And Commander Chakotay as
well."
They
exchanged glances, and as one rose and headed for astrometrics.
Seven's
beautiful visage was unreadable. It usually was, but the request didn't bode
well. "What have you got for me, Seven?" asked Janeway.
Quickly the
former Borg stepped to her station and deftly manipulated the controls. A star
chart appeared on the large screen.
"This,"
she said. It was all she needed to say.
Janeway's
heart, which had lifted a little after the banter she'd exchanged with
Chakotay, sank again. She was looking at a star chart that might have been
drawn by an artist with an overactive imagination and a bent for the
depressing. There wasn't a single asteroid belt, but a whopping four of them. Over there—and, now that she
looked closer, over there and there too—was evidence of a singularity. A swirl
marked the site of what she was afraid was the event horizon of a black hole.
There were two red giants. Ripples indicated the presence nearly everywhere of
gravity waves.
"I do
hope you're not going to tell me that we have to travel through there,"
Janeway said.
"Unfortunately,
the path we need to take in order to stay on course is this." Seven
touched a control, and a jagged red line appeared. It went straight through the
worst areas. "We could adjust it like so," Seven continued, and
plotted an alternative course. "But that would take three weeks
longer."
"And a
course to avoid this No Man's Land altogether?"
Seven frowned
at the unfamiliar term, but replied, "Seventeen months, six weeks, four
days, and nine hours. I explored all the various options before calling you,
Captain."
"Efficient,"
said Janeway dryly.
Seven
inclined her blond head. "Thank you. I strive to be."
Slowly,
Janeway shook her head as her gaze traveled over the charts. She was not about
to add seventeen months to their journey. Even if they took the middle option
Seven had outlined, the one that
missed the
worst of it, they were going to be in for a very rough few weeks.
With an odd
twinkle in his eye, Chakotay said in a serious voice, "I hate to say it,
but it doesn't look good. It doesn't look good at all."
And no doubt
Seven was left wondering if she would ever understand non-assimilated humans
when Janeway, unable to help herself, burst into laughter.
"We're
calling it No Man's Land," said Janeway as the star chart bristling with
obstacles appeared on the smaller computer monitor in the briefing room.
"That is
an incorrect usage of the term," said Seven, surprising Janeway. "I
have researched the phrase. It was used during Earth's First World War to
describe the ground between two opposing trenches. We are currently facing no
adversary. Therefore, there can be no No Man's Land."
"But we
are facing an adversary, Seven," Janeway corrected her gently. "It's
the same enemy that we've been locked in battle with ever since the Caretaker
snatched us out of our own quadrant. Our adversary is the Delta Quadrant. It's
the light-years that lie between us and reaching our loved ones, between our
home and us. The No Man's Land of World War I was a bad place to be. It had a
great deal of barbed wire, it was full of broken and abandoned military
equipment, and after a battle, there were bodies there too. It was hard to gain
even a meter of ground of No Man's Land, and that little amount was always
dearly bought."
She turned
again to regard the ominous star chart,
took in its visible,
predictable dangers, and wondered for a brief moment about the dangers they
weren't even aware of yet. "No, Seven. I'd say No Man's Land is a perfect
way to describe what we're up against."
Seven pursed
her full lips in a gesture that Janeway had come to recognize meant she didn't
approve, but it didn't matter. No matter what they chose to call this, it was
bad news.
"I don't
want to head into that space until we're performing at peak ability. Status
reports," she requested.
Torres went
first. "We're presently performing a level-one diagnostic. Everything
seems to be all right. Engineering's ready to tackle it, unless the diagnostic
reveals something unexpected."
One by one,
they gave their reports. Paris reported that the helm had been performing more
than adequately, and added that he had just done something he called a
"tune-up" to the Delta Flyer. Tuvok
was prepared to run a series of drills to make sure tactical was up to par.
Harry Kim had nothing to report about ops. The Doctor reported treating only
two minor injuries in the last week.
"One of
which Mr. Paris incurred in what he describes as a minor disagreement with
Seamus in Fair Haven," he added, in a disapproving tone of voice.
"Which
won't happen again," Paris insisted a little too vehemently.
Janeway sat
for a moment, absorbing the information. She hardly dared believe it, but it
seemed as if they were ready to venture forth into No Man's
Land. If that
were so, then why did she feel so strangely reluctant?
She had just
opened her mouth to order that they proceed first thing in the morning, but
Chakotay spoke first.
"There
is one thing, Captain."
"What is
it, Chakotay?"
"There
has been an egregious lack of fun on the part of the captain and the
crew," he said in a completely serious voice. "That could have
severe repercussions if the crew is not in as good a shape to tackle the
challenges of No Man's Land as the ship is."
She raised an
eyebrow. "I see. What do you recommend?"
She could
tell he was fighting to keep from smiling, but largely succeeding. He rose,
went to the screen, and touched it. At once, the image of a planet appeared. It
had blue oceans, brown-and-green landmasses, and swirling white clouds. It
looked so much like Earth that she felt an unexpected pang of homesickness.
"While
Seven of Nine is exemplary in her execution of her duty, she needs to develop
a little imagination."
Seven
bridled. "I am not accustomed to evaluating situations with regard
to—their fun factor."
"My
point exactly. This planet is located directly on our way to No Man's Land.
It's a perfect class-M. No life, other than plant life, although there are microscopic
organisms in the planet's oceans. Someone's many-times-great-grandfather, no
doubt, but for the present moment, we won't have to worry
about the
Prime Directive. There are beaches, mountains, rivers, oceans, rain forests,
deserts—you name it. It sounds like an excellent place for shore leave. We
could then tackle No Man's Land refreshed and renewed." He looked over at
Janeway. "Captain? What do you think?"
Some
decisions, Janeway thought, were just easier than others. "Mr.
Paris," she said, rising and striving to maintain an authoritarian
demeanor, "lay in a direct course for that planet. We could all use some
R-and-R."
For once,
Chakotay didn't have to do any arm-twisting to get his captain to enjoy a bit
of shore leave herself. Janeway was in the second group of people to transport
down. Tom Paris, B'Elanna Torres, and Neelix, along with seven others, had
already gone on ahead. They had reported that the planet's climate was every
bit as nice as Risa's, though, according to Paris, the lack of scores of
beautiful women was keenly felt. Janeway wondered if Torres had overheard that
last comment, and if so, what her retort might have been.
Ensign Lyssa
Campbell, usually a little shy around her captain, positively grinned at
Janeway when she came in lugging her paints, palette, and easel.
"Going
for a few landscapes?"
Janeway
returned the smile. "Absolutely. According to Seven, there are some
exquisite mountain ranges. She also went into great detail about how the
location I have selected will produce an optimal concentration of particles in
the air, resulting in an increased profusion of shorter wavelengths of light."
Lyssa
Campbell regarded her blankly. Taking pity on her, Janeway explained,
"That's Seven's way of saying the sunsets watched from the beach ought to
be particularly colorful."
Campbell
blushed. Janeway winked at her and stepped onto the platform. The plan was for
her to have several hours of uninterrupted painting time—a rare luxury—before
Chakotay transported down with a picnic basket. Janeway knew herself pretty
well, and realized that she sometimes didn't take the time she needed to truly
relax. Well, Chakotay couldn't call her on it after this.
She was still
smiling as she dematerialized.
"The
smell of the sea is the same everywhere," said Tom with a sigh of
contentment. He and B'Elanna had walked hand in hand by the ocean for about an
hour. She had spotted the little cave a short climb up, and now they sat
contentedly watching the huge golden sun set over orange and scarlet waves.
"That's
poetic license," murmured Torres, who, even though she was arguing with
him, still had her eyes closed and was languidly inhaling the aforementioned
ocean scent. "Every planet has different organisms. Therefore, the
smell—"
"Is
always enchanting," said Tom. "Just like you."
She opened
her eyes and smiled up at him. He reached for her, thinking that this would be a
lovely little place for a tryst, when he saw something out of the corner of his
eye.
He turned his
head and frowned. "There's something out there. In the ocean. Look."
She looked
where he pointed. For a moment, he thought his eyes had been playing tricks on
him. But then it surfaced again. It was small, dark, and definitely alive.
"But
that's not possible," said Torres. "This planet doesn't have any life
more developed than amoe-bas."
"That's
definitely a life-form more advanced than an amoeba," said Tom, scrambling
to his feet. "And it looks like it's drowning."
CHAPTER
2
driven by a potent combination of urgency and curiosity, Paris
and Torres hastened down the rock face as quickly as possible. Tom tried to
keep one eye on the struggling creature in the water. They were close enough
now to see that it wasn't a humanoid, but that didn't slow him down one bit.
Paris had a tremendous fondness for both animals and children, as long as he
wasn't responsible for either for any great length of time. The thought of some
innocent animal drowning before he could get to it spurred him on.
"Do you
see it?" The anxious cry came from Neelix, who had been wandering barefoot
along the shore looking for interesting rocks. He had been looking forward to
collecting seashells until Paris had gently reminded him that if there were no
lifeforms, there would be no shells of life-forms on the
beach. Now
the Talaxian raced with surprising speed toward the spot where the creature was
likely to come ashore.
If it came
ashore. Even as Tom watched, the creature went down again.
"Dammit,"
he swore, and jumped the rest of the way to land heavily on the soft, powdery
sand. He and Neelix hit the water at the same time, with B'Elanna only a stride
behind them.
Tom struck
out for the creature. The water was incredibly clear and he could see it now.
It was about half a meter long, its thick, dark fur floating about it like
wings or tendrils. Other than the languid movement of its fur, it was
motionless and was starting to sink toward the bottom. He took a deep breath
and dove for it, kicking as hard as he could. His arms closed about it and he
struck out for the surface.
"Keep
its head above the water," he gasped to Torres, who immediately obliged.
Neelix had almost reached them, but now he turned and headed back to the shore.
He had been so agitated that he hadn't even taken off the jacket of his heavy,
colorful suit. Tom was grateful that he and Torres, anticipating a day at the
beach, had opted for more traditional swimwear.
With one arm
around the animal (God, is it still alive?
Please let it be alive), he struck out for the beach. It seemed so
far away now. The creature in the crook of his arm was still warm, at least,
and as Paris's feet dug into sand and he stumbled ashore, he felt the beast
twitch. It squirmed vigorously, and Paris let out a short, quick laugh.
The animal
leaped from his arm to plop on the sand. There it coughed, vomiting up
seawater, and
trembled
pathetically. It made no attempt to flee. Rather, it looked up quizzically at
the three Voyager crewmen.
"I've
n-notified the captain," said Neelix. He was shivering in his sodden suit.
"Sh-she's on her way."
"What is
it doing here?" asked Torres, voicing the more pressing question rather
than the all-too-common What is it? Chances
were they'd never really know what it was, but maybe they could determine why
it, a developed creature, was on this allegedly uninhabited planet.
Neelix
squatted down. "Poor little thing," he said softly. He extended a
hand. The creature sniffed at it.
Paris
regarded it in more detail. It was small, weighing only a couple of kilos. All
that hair, which had weighed it down in the ocean, probably made it look bigger
than it was.
"It
looks like some kind of canine," he said.
"No big
bad wolf, that's for sure," said Torres, joining Neelix in reaching out a
hand. The creature sniffed her, its dark purple nose quivering, then extended
a black tongue and licked her hand. She laughed, surprised.
"It's
either fearless or has been domesticated," said Neelix.
"Step
away from it," came Janeway's brisk voice.
"Oh,
Captain, it's harmless," said Neelix.
"Not
until my tricorder says so," Janeway replied. She was dressed in an outfit
Paris had never seen her in: a long shirt and baggy pants. It looked very comfortable
and there were lots of colorful splotches of paint on it. And some colorful
splotches of paint on his captain as well, but he thought it better not to
mention it.
So this was Captain Janeway at leisure. It was a good look for her.
She was all
business now as she knelt near the animal and scanned it with the tricorder.
"Canine," she said. Paris threw Torres a told-you-so look. "Carnivore. No signs of disease.
Well nourished and completely healthy."
The creature
lowered its hindquarters. If it weren't for the orange and red fur, the purple
nose, and the slitted eyes, Tom could have sworn it was a dog.
"And
friendly," Janeway admitted, breaking into a smile and petting the
creature's sodden pelt. "The question is, my friend, what are you doing
here, hmm? How is it that you're well nourished on meat when there's nothing
here big enough to catch your eye?"
She
straightened. Neelix picked up the creature and cuddled it. It ducked its head
against his chest, seemingly completely at home in a humanoid's arms.
"This has
got to be somebody's pet," stated Paris. He didn't know how he knew, he
just did.
"I'm
inclined to agree with you, Tom," said Janeway. She tapped her combadge.
"Janeway to Voyager"
"I was
just about to contact you, Captain," came Chakotay's voice. "We
detected a sudden, brief surge of energy. Did you see anything?"
Janeway
glanced at the creature in Neelix's arms. It was shivering and, Paris thought,
not very happy about being soaked to the bone.
"We did
see something, but more on that in a minute. We noticed no surge of energy.
Where was it located?"
"Approximately ninety
meters northeast from
where the
four of—wait a minute, I'm detecting another Me sign. It's right on top of
Neelix!"
"That
was the other thing I was going to tell you about. It's harmless, but it's
raising a lot of questions. Tom, Torres, Neelix—any of you see anything?"
Paris felt
his face grow warm. Until they'd spotted the dog-alien-thing, he'd been far too
engrossed in B'Elanna's warmth and the scent of the sea to have noticed
anything short of a Borg cube. "Negative, Captain."
Neelix also
looked uncomfortable. He'd probably had his eyes glued to the sand, on the
lookout for some interesting rocks. He, too, shook his head.
To his
relief, Janeway seemed as annoyed with herself as she was with them. "I
was concentrating on mixing cadmium red with thalo blue myself."
"I'm not
surprised," said Chakotay. "The energy pulse only registered for a
second or two here. It might not even have been visible to the naked eye."
"Captain,"
said Paris, "we saw the dog drowning in precisely the spot that Chakotay
had indicated. This thing couldn't have evolved naturally on this planet. I'm
certain that the energy pulse has something to do with why it's here."
Janeway
nodded. "I agree with you, Mr. Paris. It could have been a transport of
some kind."
"What
kind of monster would deliberately transport a little dog into the middle of
the ocean?" exclaimed Neelix, cuddling his new friend closer.
"It's
not a dog," Janeway said, "and I suggest that you not get too
attached to it."
"We're
not going to leave it here?" interjected B'Elanna. Tom turned to her,
surprised and pleased.
It wasn't
like B'Elanna to champion puppies. She looked uncomfortable with the outburst.
"I mean, it didn't evolve here. It couldn't survive."
"Yeah,"
put in Tom helpfully.
"Look at
this little face, Captain," urged Neelix, lifting the animal to within
inches of Janeway's nose. "He'll die if we abandon him. He'll starve to
death—a slow, agonizing, heartless, cruel—"
Janeway
lifted a hand in surrender. "All right, you've made your point. What I
want to know is what created that energy pulse. If we can find who did it, then
maybe we could figure out who this fellow belongs to and—"
Paris's blue
eyes widened. They had all turned to face the spot where Chakotay had told them
the pulse had manifested. Right before their eyes, a thin, horizontal line
appeared from nowhere. It grew in length, then shunted downward at a right
angle until there was a large rectangle extending into the sea. It was as if
someone had taken a knife and carved the sky like a jack-o'-lantern, revealing
only darkness beyond.
The dog-thing
wriggled in Neelix's arms and let out a sharp, loud sound that reminded Paris
of a bark.
"It—it
looks like a doorway," said Torres, her voice quavering only slightly.
"Yes,"
breathed Janeway, "but a doorway to where?"
Shore leave
was abruptly terminated. Janeway, who moments before had been utterly absorbed
in her painting, could barely spare the time to put the caps on the tubes of
paint before she hastily ordered
them, along
with herself, directly transported to her quarters. She dressed quickly,
groaning a little as she realized she'd gotten paint in her hair, and quickly
scrubbed it out. Her mind was racing a thousand kilometers a minute.
The bridge
was monitoring the strange door. It was reportedly stable, for the moment. The
energy spike had been like nothing they'd ever seen before. Chakotay's voice
wafted to her ears through her combadge, penetrating her thoughts.
"Our
sensors can't penetrate inside," he was saying as Janeway brushed at her
damp hair.
"I want
a closer look at it."
A sigh.
"I was afraid you'd say that. We can maneuver a probe down—"
"No. I
want to see it for myself."
"That could
be dangerous."
"Understood.
We'll take a probe with us. And if it's safe, I want to go through."
A heavy,
laden pause. "Captain?"
"Chakotay,
it's the only conceivable way the dog could have gotten on that planet. If it's
safe enough for the dog, it's safe enough for us."
"So
you're calling it a dog now too."
Briefly,
Janeway glanced over at the holophoto of her beloved Molly and her once-beloved
Mark. There was still a pang when she looked at this image of them, captured
forever in time, when Molly was young, Janeway was home, and Mark was desperately
in love with her. As she had been with him.
It was Molly
she was looking at now, though, not Mark. She recalled finding her at a pound
on Taurus Ceti IV, saw again the pup's lively enthusiasm, her
spunk, her
spirit. There hadn't been room in her life for a dog at the time, but she'd
made room.
Surprising
herself, Janeway blinked back tears at the memory of housetraining the puppy,
of watching her ungainly ambling wobble mature into the sleek, graceful gait of
a purebred Irish setter. Molly was beautiful, calm, obedient, and loving. She
had so wanted to be present at the birth of Molly's puppies. Molly would be
growing older by this point. Were there white hairs on that long muzzle?
Stiffness in the liquid joints? Even her puppies would be well into their adult
years. Time was harsher on some than others. Janeway forgave herself for the
quick rush of tears, gone as soon as they had arrived.
And now this
little bundle, which was currently quarantined in sickbay, had appeared on the
proverbial doorstep. Was it so wrong to call it a dog? It was of a similar
species, had clearly been domesticated, and had a nature as sweet as Neelix's.
Which was actually saying a hell of a lot.
"Yes,"
she stated. "I'm calling it a dog." Her curiosity was aroused by the
creature and the mysterious doorway through which it had likely arrived.
"Have Lieutenant Paris prepare the Delta
Flyer and fetch our little friend from sickbay. We're going back
down."
Paris met her
in the docking bay a few moments later, carrying the "dog" and a
crate in which to contain it once they boarded the shuttlecraft. It looked
much happier and considerably drier than when Janeway had seen it about a half
hour ago. Its fur was clean and dried and fluffed in a fashion that practically
begged for her to run her fingers through it. She obliged, and found the
creature absolutely
silky to the
touch. It looked at her and blinked its slitted eyes.
"Think
he likes you, Captain."
She smiled at
Tom. "Perceptive animal. Come on." She climbed into the Flyer. Paris emulated her. Janeway
alternately coaxed and shoved the animal into the crate, then stowed it in the
back. It whimpered a little, but stayed put. Janeway moved up to the front and
took the seat behind Paris, letting him do what he was best at—piloting.
The doors
opened, and the Delta Flyer took
off into open space. The two were silent as they made their way to the planet.
Finally Paris spoke up. "Too bad everyone couldn't have had some shore
leave."
"We do
seem to keep running into adventures, don't we?" his captain replied, her
eyes on the readings. "I don't know about you, but much as I enjoy
R-and-R, nothing gets my blood going like a good, old-fashioned, scientific
mystery. And we've got a fine example right here."
They entered
the planet's atmosphere and Tom checked the coordinates. Smoothly, the Flyer made its way through white clouds.
Below them stretched the ocean, blue-green and beautiful and devoid of life
large enough to see. Janeway couldn't help but wonder what creatures would
eventually develop here in this fertile, friendly world.
With a couple
of taps of his fingers, Paris brought the small vessel down low. It almost
skimmed the surface of the waves. Janeway wondered if Paris was doing this to
impress her with his skill. It wasn't necessary; she knew he was the best.
That's why
she'd asked
him to join her, all those years ago back in New Zealand.
It was just
barely visible up ahead now, the strange portal. Janeway sat up straighter, her
heart starting to beat faster. Paris slowed; then they came to a stop. Gently,
Paris maneuvered the Flyer into
the water and the small vessel began to rock with the motion of the waves.
The doors
hissed open and Janeway stood, lightly touching the back of the chair to keep
her balance. Paris was very good indeed; he'd brought them to within a meter of
the door itself. She went to the doors and got as close as she could to the
strange portal.
Janeway
peered inside. Nothing. The blackness was absolute. She tapped her combadge.
"Janeway to Voyager."
"Go
ahead, Captain," said Tuvok.
"We are
activating the probe and are just about to send it through." As she spoke,
she extended a hand. Paris, who had risen to stand beside her, placed the small
orb in her palm. She thumbed it and it came to life. Small blue and green
lights flickered on its metallic surface. Gently, Janeway tossed it in the direction
of the doorway. The momentum propelled it forward, humming.
Janeway held
her breath.
It was within
a third of a meter of the doorway—a few centimeters—
—inside—
Then it was
gone. It vanished as if it had never been.
"We have
lost all traces of the probe," came Tuvok's calm voice, filled with none
of the disappointment that was flooding Janeway's mind.
"So have
we. It disappeared." She closed her eyes and sighed heavily. "Looks
like we have a new passenger. Tom, take us back."
He stared at
her. "That's it?"
She regarded
him coolly. "I can't see anything. Our sensors can't detect anything.
There are no lives at stake here. The probe is utterly gone. I'm not about to
send that animal through there without being certain it's safe. And I'm
certainly not going to order any of my crew through there for no good reason.
Do you understand, Mr. Paris?"
He averted
his gaze. "Yes, ma'am," he said, and entered the controls.
As she sank
back in her chair, Janeway regretted the harsh tone of voice she'd used with
him. In truth, she was angry herself, at being cheated of an adventure. She'd
have loved to go through, see what was on the other side, but there was no way
to justify the risk. Her crew came first. Her scientific curiosity would just
have to go unappeased today.
And in the
meantime, Voyager now had a
mascot.
She forced
herself not to turn back and look with disappointed longing as the portal
vanished into the distance.
CHAPTER 3
"WONDER
IF HE'S HOUSEBROKEN," TOM MUSED, TO
break the
awkward silence as the Delta Flyer headed
back to rendezvous with Voyager.
"If not,
it's a good opportunity for you to take some responsibility," Janeway
replied, recognizing Paris's overture for what it was and more than willing to
put the tense, disappointing moment behind them.
"Me?" Paris turned his head in her direction so
quickly she thought he'd given himself whiplash. "Oh, no."
The as of yet
unnamed "dog," freed from the crate and perhaps sensing that it was
the topic of conversation, ambled forward. Janeway picked it up and placed it
in her lap. "You rescued him, Tom," said Janeway, scratching the
animal behind what ap-
peared to be
ears. "Yes he did, didn't he?" she crooned.
The animal
licked her face.
"Well,
yeah, but that was a humanitarian gesture. Neelix would make a much better
owner than I would."
Janeway
thought of how protective Neelix had been of the creature. Small, lost things
seemed to gravitate to him, didn't they?
"We'll
see if Neelix is willing. As long as one of you steps up to take
responsibility, I don't care who."
"Thought
maybe you might want him," ventured Paris.
Janeway shook
her head. "No. I already have a dog. Several, in fact. This one needs
someone else." Again she scratched the animal, enjoying the incredible
silky feel of his fur against her finger. "What shall we call you, little
fellow?"
"Chakotay
to Janeway."
"Go
ahead, Commander."
"Sorry
the door mystery didn't get solved, but we've got a new one for you to tackle
once you come aboard."
"I can't
wait."
"What
have you got, Commander?" asked Janeway, stepping briskly from the
turbolift onto the bridge.
"Spatial
dislocation energy readings," Chakotay replied, rising from the command
chair and yielding it to his captain. "Similar to what we saw on the
planet, but much more intense."
Janeway sat
down and called up her viewscreen and regarded the readings.
"Opinions?"
"We
can't get very good readings on it," said Chakotay. "It could be
another door. But as you can see, the readings are slightly different and much
stronger."
Once again,
Janeway felt the yearning to step through that door, felt the pang of having
had to deny that yearning. She was a rationalist, not a dreamer, but she had
felt pulled to that door. Choosing not to step through had been one of the
hardest things she'd ever done. And now here was something very close to that,
cropping up again.
"This
can't be a coincidence," she said to herself. "It's too close."
"It's a
considerable distance out of our way," said Chakotay, "but it is a
fascinating phenomenon. And we are explorers, so..."
He didn't
need to complete the sentence. "Agreed. Let's explore. Mr. Paris,"
she said to Tom, who had just entered after having dropped off the unnamed
animal with Neelix, "you won't have time to warm that seat, I'm afraid.
You and Seven take the Delta Flyer and
investigate. Let us know what you think."
Paris raised
an eyebrow and spun around on his heels.
"Who's
keeping the dog?" asked Chakotay.
"Not
sure yet," said Janeway, "but I'm betting on Neelix."
"Wish we
could have gone through," said Paris to Seven as they settled back in
their chairs. It was going to take about an hour to reach their destination.
Paris stretched.
"Explain."
Seven's eyes were on the screen, flick-
ing back and
forth between the computer's graphic display and a staggering line of
equations.
"The
doorway. On the planet. Captain wouldn't let us go through."
"A
logical decision."
"Yeah,
but still. It would have been exciting."
She turned
her cool blue gaze on him for a moment. "Excitement is irrelevant."
Paris shook
his head. "At least we got the dog."
"Pets
are also irrelevant. Especially aboard a starship."
"Bet the
kids will love him."
Seven's full
Ups curved hi a slight frown. "I am certain that the Borg children will
also find this pet irrelevant."
Tom thought
of the cute little fellow licking Janeway's face. "Don't be too
sure."
She turned to
him and accused, "You are making conversation about inane matters. We
should be focusing our attention on the task at hand. Surely that would be...
exciting."
Paris glanced
over at the dizzying list of equations. "Hoo boy, more fun than a barrel
of monkeys."
Seven did not
even bother to ask him to explain that one. With thinly concealed exasperation,
she returned to her task.
Paris sighed
and adjusted the controls from autopilot to manual. At least it would give him
something to do. Seven was gorgeous. Seven was brilliant. Seven was efficient
and accurate and meticulous and logical and all those other precise and
annoying adjectives she liked to use. But when you came right down to it,
when you were
stuck with her in a shuttle for an hour, Seven wasn't much fun.
All of a
sudden, Tom frowned at the readings. Something was happening.
"Captain,"
said Tuvok. "I think you should see this."
Janeway
activated her screen. "My God," she whispered. "Will you look at
that."
The computer
graphics had marked the spatial distortion with a yellow, pulsating circle.
Before her eyes, the shimmering image expanded, then contracted back to its
original size. All around it, small pinpricks of yellow appeared, each one
pulsing and growing until they were all the same size as the original
distortion.
Janeway met
Chakotay's dark gaze. "There are more of them," she said.
"Many
more," said Chakotay.
"Onscreen,"
Janeway ordered.
On the
massive screen that was Voyager's major
window on the cosmos, Tuvok had placed the graphic display. They weren't
looking at the actual distortions, but a computer representation.
"I am
placing the original distortion in the exact center of the screen," said
Tuvok.
As they
watched, one by one, blips appeared, grew, and steadied. At first there were
only five or six, but within a minute, there were dozens.
At that
moment, she heard Tom Paris's voice.
"Delta Flyer to Voyager."
"We're
reading you, Tom," his captain replied. "From here it looks like that
single distortion isn't alone anymore."
"We're
monitoring the situation," Paris answered.
"Captain—other
lost puppies are following us home. Can we keep them?"
Janeway
smiled her warmest smile as the two aliens transported aboard her ship. Tom had
warned her that they were frightened, but probably harmless. They'd had some
incredible story, which Seven had declined to relate, indicating that it would
be best if Janeway heard them out herself.
Her first
impression seemed to confirm that of Paris. The two humanoids who materialized
on the ship literally clung to each other and looked around with wide eyes.
They were
tall, about two and a half meters, and quite powerfully built. Small,
iridescent scales covered what flesh was visible, but they had long black hair
and the female had breasts, indicating that they were mammalian. Their hands
had long, tapered fingers and a peculiar hornlike growth protruding from the
wrists. Slightly elongated mouths reminded her of muzzles, and they had
vestigial, stumpy tails. Janeway was immediately reminded of the Cardassians,
but there was nothing of that species' trademark arrogance about these two, a
male and a female. They clutched each other's hands and their red,
double-pupiled eyes were wide. Their breath came quickly.
"Welcome
aboard my ship," Janeway said as pleasantly as possible. "My
lieutenant tells me that you're lost, just as we are."
As she had
hoped, that got their attention. The female cocked her head. "You are
lost?"
"Yes, we
are. But we're trying to get home. We hope to assist you in that quest too. Are
you hungry?"
They glanced
at each other. Finally, as if it was a source of great shame, the male
admitted, "Our food and water supplies ran out several days ago."
"Then I
should take you to sickbay at once," stated Janeway. "We'll make sure
that you're in good health, and then we'll have lunch together."
The female
looked frightened. "Your... doctor," she said hesitantly. "He
does not perform... experiments?"
Good Lord, no
wonder these people were frightened. Seven and Tom had to have done a bang-up
job to simply convince them to come aboard Voyager.
She stepped forward impulsively, compassion warring with righteous
anger.
"No one
aboard this ship will harm you in any way," she stated. "You are
guests here, not captives. You can return to your vessel any time you wish.
We'd like to help you."
"Why?"
asked the male.
"Because
it's the right thing to do. People have helped us in our search to get home.
It's the least we can do to help others in a similar situation. I would like
you to see our doctor because if you are suffering from malnutrition or dehydration
or any other ailment, he can treat it. If you don't want to see him, I won't
force you."
They
exchanged glances again. Finally, the male nodded. "I am Torar. This is my
mate, Ara. Our people are called the Nemar."
"It's a
pleasure to meet you. Come. Let's go to sickbay and see what the Doctor has to
say. Then I'll be happy to see what we can do to help you."
Janeway tried
to observe unobtrusively as the
three of them
made their way to sickbay. Not only were they exhausted and famished, but there
was a constant air of apprehension about the two Nenlars. They started at every
unfamiliar noise, twisted their heads to follow each person who passed them in
the corridors. By the time they reached sickbay, the two of them and, to some
extent, their host as well, were nervous wrecks.
Janeway
smiled as she caught sight of the little dog, still ensconced in one of the
smaller observation areas. It immediately rose to its feet upon sight of her
and began barking.
The Doctor
frowned. "According to Mr. Neelix, he wants to play."
"I'm
sure he does," said Janeway, smiling and placing her hand on the clear
partition. The dog wriggled ecstatically. "When will you let him?"
"Mr.
Neelix is planning to drop by a little later with the children for a play
session. We'll see how the animal interacts with them. If he can be trusted,
I'll relinquish him into Mr. Neelix's capable hands. In the meantime, I see
you've brought me some other patients." He turned a beaming countenance
upon the Nenlars.
Ara's eyes
had widened so large they threatened to fall out of her skull. At once, Janeway
made the connection they had and hastened to reassure her guests. "This is
a lower species," she said, indicating the dog. "We believe it is a
domesticated animal of some sort. You won't be placed in a holding area."
Ara visibly
relaxed, and Torar smiled shakily. "Of course not," he said with
false heartiness, as if he had never had any doubt.
For all his
arrogance, the Doctor was a perceptive hologram, and his bedside manner had
been steadily improving since his original activation so many years ago.
"Please have a seat on one of the beds," he invited his guests.
They complied
immediately, both on the same bed, which Janeway suspected was not what the
Doctor had intended. Nonetheless, he began to examine Ara. Janeway took the
opportunity to try to engage them in conversation. "Lieutenant Paris says
that you told him and Seven that you were lost. What happened? Where is your
homeworld?"
It ought to
have been an easy, straightforward question. But the Nenlars again exchanged
glances. Finally, Torar spoke.
"We know
what happened, but we do not understand it. And we cannot tell you where our
world is, because we haven't the slightest idea where we are at present."
"Go
on," Janeway urged.
Again, the
hesitation, the looks. It was beginning to set off Janeway's warning bells, but
she would listen first before making judgments.
"Our
planet was ... severely damaged in a war many centuries ago. 'Devastated' would
not be too harsh a word." There was a hint of anger in Torar's voice even
now. "It was a long, painful path to recovery, but we are a determined
people and we finally again discovered a way to reach the stars. We used
faster-than-light travel to search for ways to enrich our world—new crops, new
technology, new ideas. Many intrepid souls left our homeworld altogether, to
scratch out new lives for themselves else-
where. We
like to observe first, then make first contact on our own terms, once we
determine a species is not a threat. We have... an ingrained fear of being
dominated, taken advantage of, again. You can imagine, Captain Janeway, how
unsettling it was when we had no idea where in the universe our little scout
ship was."
Janeway
nodded in sympathy. The Doctor had finished with his preliminary examination
of Ara and turned his attention to Torar. The sudden move of the tricorder in
his direction caused Torar to flinch, albeit briefly.
He recovered
quickly and continued. "When the portal appeared, it did not seem too
dangerous to venture through it."
"Portal?"
exclaimed Janeway, fully alert now. "Describe it."
"It was
like a strange doorway in space," said Ara. "Big enough for our ship
to traverse. We thought we could venture through, see what was on the other
side, and return safely." She hesitated. "We were terribly
wrong."
Janeway's
skin prickled. She'd been right not to go through that doorway with Paris and
the dog. Although it had felt so very wrong at the time___
"The
moment we had passed through, the portal vanished. We couldn't see it; our ship
sensors couldn't detect it. When another one opened up shortly afterward, we
foolishly thought it was the same portal."
"But it
wasn't," said Janeway softly.
"No,"
said Torar. "It led to an entirely different place. Nothing was the same.
No recognizable stars,
nothing. More
and more portals opened up. We began to grow frightened."
"Fear,"
said Ara, "is also ingrained in us. You cannot imagine the discipline
required to subdue it."
From what
they had said about their race being terrorized, Janeway suspected she could.
She made a mental note to have Tuvok talk to these people. Who knew but that he
might be able to teach them some mental disciplines to handle this deep-set,
racial terror.
"We
panicked," said Torar, hanging his head in shame. "We went through
every portal that appeared."
"There
were dozens," said Ara swiftly.
"Hundreds.
We lost count of how many we tried, hoping each one would be the one that led
back to our sector."
"None of
them was."
"Some of
them opened into what we think were other dimensions," said Torar. At
once, Janeway thought of fluidic space. She wondered if they had encountered
Species 8472. "It was terrifying, Captain. Terrifying. When finally we
ended up here— wherever here may be—we realized that, no matter where we were,
we were in normal space again. We calmed down somewhat and refused to be
tempted by any other portals that manifested."
"A very
wise choice," said the Doctor.
"I
agree," said Janeway. "And you've been wandering this sector
since?"
"Yes,"
said Ara. "With portals opening all the time, taunting us. But we didn't
yield, not even when our supplies ran out." She lowered her eyes and spoke
softly. "There are things that are more frightening than the thought of
starving to death
with one's
mate, Captain. And we saw some of those things."
Spontaneously,
Janeway reached out a hand and placed it on Ara's. The Nenlar tensed, but after
a long moment, her slender fingers opened and curled around Janeway's,
accepting the other woman's sympathy. Janeway squeezed gently, and then released
Ara's hand.
"With
your permission, I'd like to send a team over to start effecting repairs and
resupplying your vessel," she said.
This time,
there was no hesitation. "You are kind, Captain," Torar answered at
once. "We are grateful for any help you choose to give us."
Janeway was
pleased. She'd won their trust. "Doctor, what's the diagnosis?" she
asked.
"From
what I can determine, never having encountered this species before," said
the Doctor, "the two seem in fairly good health, considering all they've
undergone. I'd like to rehydrate them and give them some nutritional
supplements before releasing them to Mr. Neelix for a hearty lunch."
The two
nodded. Quickly the Doctor applied a series of hyposprays. Gingerly, the two
touched then-necks after he was done, but they already looked better, more
alert.
Janeway
touched her combadge. "Torres, this is Janeway. Can you prepare a team to
transport over to the Nenlar vessel? I'd like to start repairs as soon as
possible."
"Aye,
Captain," Torres replied.
"Come.
We'll get you some lunch."
The lunch,
while not one of Neelix's better repasts, was devoured hungrily by the Nenlars.
They did not seem familiar with eating utensils and used their long, clever
fingers to place food into their mouths. Nonetheless, not a crumb was dropped
and the entire process was as formal and tidy as many a Starfleet banquet
Janeway had been forced to attend. Manners came in all shapes and sizes, and
Janeway was not about to pass judgment. They did notice the crew eating with
utensils, and Janeway suspected that they'd get around to asking about such
strange and unnecessary implements later.
She learned a
little more about them as she ate her own lunch, which was a ham and Swiss on
rye. She had decided at the last minute to forgo Neelix's yruss-and-broccoli
(by all accounts one of his tastier dishes) and eat something that she normally
ate with her hands, to make her guests feel more at ease. They were shy,
peaceful, and cautious. Ara and Torar revealed that they were actually
considered quite the brave souls on their planet, for daring to embark on
dangerous space missions to explore the sector in search of technologies to
bring back to benefit their world.
It wasn't
until dessert, however, that Janeway learned the name of the race that had so
traumatized the Nenlar centuries earlier. Clutching a warm, just-replicated
chocolate chip cookie in one hand and a large glass of milk in the other, Ara
reminded Janeway of a frightened child as she spoke.
"ludka,"
she said, as if uttering the worst word in the universe. And by her standards,
of course, she
was.
"They came and plundered our world. They took everything that was of any
value on the surface and in the oceans, and ripped open the ground to take
more. When they were done, they bombed every major city to ashes, then left to
do the same to other innocent worlds. We were not even capable of spaceflight
at that time. It took us centuries to recover, centuries more to dare to
venture into the skies, the same place from whence our tormentors had come. But
we did so." She lifted her head and her eyes gleamed with pride. No longer
did she look like a terrified girl, but like a warrior. "We were
brave."
You were indeed, thought Janeway, wondering whether, if the
same thing had happened in Earth's nineteenth century, her own people would
have had that same courage.
She left them
in Neelix's care, and he promised to show them around the ship.
The rest of
the day unfolded as usual. With Ara and Torar's permission, Torres's team had
downloaded the contents of the Nenlar ship's computer. All the information it
contained would be fed into Voyager's computer.
With a little bit of luck, it would yield some clue about the Nenlars' place of
origin, and a way to get them back.
Janeway was
in the midst of a dream in which Molly was a puppy again, wagging her red tail
and chewing happily on a rubber bone, when the crisp voice of the computer
startled her awake.
"What...
oh." She sat up and knuckled sleep out of her eyes. "Repeat message,
computer."
"Download
and examination of the contents of the Nenlar vessel computer is
complete."
Fully alert
now, Janeway asked, "Can you determine the location of the Nenlar
homeworld?"
"Affirmative.
The Nenlar homeworld is the fourth planet from the central star in the Alungis
system, located in Sector 48472, in the Beta Quadrant."
CHAPTER
4
when janeway broke the news a few hours later in a senior
officer staff meeting, everyone started talking at once.
"Beta
Quadrant? Are they near Qo'noS?"
"Could
we retrace the various portals?"
"Are
they stable?"
Janeway
raised her hands for silence. "Their world is nowhere near the Klingon
Empire, even with their documentation there is no way to retrace the precise
number of portals the Nenlars went through, and the portals themselves are
quite far from stable. I entertained those thoughts myself, but the final
outcome of all of this is, the Nenlars are almost as far from home as we are,
and have about as much likelihood of getting back as we do."
She surveyed
her senior officers, and then her eyes
came to rest
on the two Nenlars sitting beside her. "I'm sorry," she said gently.
"What we can do, is—"
"Kim to
Janeway."
Kim was
manning the bridge. Janeway frowned. "Go ahead, Mr. Kim."
"It
seems that the Nenlars weren't the only ones who got tricked by all those
portals. I'm picking up readings of more portals opening and several ships
entering this sector through them."
"Stations,"
said Janeway. The meeting could wait. There was no telling if the crews of all
those ships appearing out of nowhere would be as friendly as the Nenlars.
She strode
onto the bridge and looked at the viewscreen. "You weren't exaggerating,
Mr. Kim," she said softly, with a bit of awe.
Before her
was an amazing spectacle. The background of space and stars was now being
decorated with mysterious portals, some opening and closing almost immediately,
others opening and remaining so. Moving about and sometimes through these gateways
was an amazing variety of ships.
"Mr.
Kim, prepare to send an open message."
"Go
ahead, Captain."
"This is
Captain Kathryn Janeway of the Federation starship Voyager to all ships in the immediate vicinity. It is likely
that you have all recently traveled through some kind of portal in
space." Even as she spoke, three more doorways in space opened. Three more
ships zipped out. This was madness. What the hell was going on? This made no
sense. If the portals were accidental, then the odds of them opening like this
were astronomical. If they weren't,
if someone
had created them, it wasn't logical to have so many opening all at once in the
same place. She shook her head, dismissing any rational argument, and merely
chose to accept what was.
"While I
cannot speak for all of you, I can speak for myself and my ship. We have no
hostile intentions toward any of you. Please do not traverse any of the
gateways unless you are certain of where they will open. There is an excellent
chance that if you do so, you will become more lost than you already are. We
are open for your response."
The minute
she'd uttered the words, poor Harry Kim was bombarded by replies. It sounded
like gibberish as the Universal Translator frantically tried to compensate.
"One at
a time, Mr. Kim," Janeway said.
"Aye,
Captain," replied Kim distractedly, his fingers flying. "Here we go,
in no particular order."
"This is
Leader Sinimar Arkathi, of the Todanian vessel the Relka. We demand to know why you have brought us here."
"Greetings,
Captain Janeway. I am Commander Ellia, of the Salamar vessel the Umul. Do you perhaps have a map of these
vexing portals we could negotiate for?"
"He-hello?
We're the Kuluuk. Please don't hurt us. Who are you, please? Did you bring us
here?"
"Captain
Janeway. I give you respectful greetings, in the honored conventions of my
people. By our custom, here are the names of every crew member aboard my
vessel, beginning with mine. I am Ophar, daughter of Willar, son of..."
And on and on
they came, a dizzying array of
names and
lists of species and vessels. Every one of them had a different tone in
responding to Janeway's original hail. Janeway threw Chakotay a look of amused
exasperation, which he returned with a knowing grin.
Until one
name stopped her cold.
"This is
Commander Kelmar, of the ludka vessel the Nivvika.
We would appreciate any information you have on these portals."
ludka. The
race that had almost wiped out the Nenlar.
Torar and Ara
had been standing behind her and she heard them inhale swiftly. Craning her
neck to look at them, Janeway said, "Don't worry. I won't let them hurt
you."
More titles,
pleas, accusations. More species that they'd never heard of. And finally, one
that they had. For the second time in five minutes, Janeway's heart sped up
with apprehension.
"We have
heard of you, Voyager. I am
Alpha, commander of the Hirogen vessel the Rhev."
Finally,
after almost two hours, the manifestation of the portals and the ships they
disgorged slowed and eventually stopped. Attempting to contact them all
individually during this time would have been an exercise in futility. Janeway
had to wait until the immense flow had slowed to a trickle. Now she sent out a
second message.
"This is
Captain Janeway, again to all vessels in the area. We have heard from sixty-two
different vessels, representing a total of forty-eight different races. Some of
you have sought aid, while others of
you have
threatened aggression. I understand your confusion; we are confused ourselves
as to the nature and purpose, if any, of this phenomenon. With so many
individuals involved, it would be useless to try to conduct any meaningful
exchange via viewscreens. I propose the following: Each vessel sends a single
representative to my ship, Voyager. We
hold a meeting. Share information. Perhaps one of us has a clue that the others
do not. We are all lost here, some to a greater extent than the others. There
would be no purpose in hostilities at this juncture for any of us. Our
facilities can accommodate the number in comfort. Our translation and
transportation devices are more than adequate for what is required."
She paused,
and then continued. "I understand what a leap of faith it will be to some
of you to transport blindly to my vessel with nothing but my word that you will
be safe. To those of you who do not wish to attend, I understand. You won't be
forced to come. But you may lose your only chance to return to your own
system. You have twenty of our minutes to consider the offer, and then I would
appreciate hearing from every vessel. Janeway out."
"Captain,
you can't invite the ludka aboard!" cried Torar.
She turned to
look at him. "I can't not invite their commander and have an open house
for the other sixty-one captains," she said mildly. "Please don't
worry. I will tolerate no violence aboard this vessel. You have my word that
you will come to no harm."
"But—"
Janeway held
up a hand. "It's my understanding
that the
repairs are nearly complete aboard your ship, Torar. If you like, we will
replenish your supplies and you may leave immediately."
"And go
where?" Torar cried.
"My
point exactly. When was the last time you encountered the ludka?"
Ara looked
uncomfortable. "There has been no formal contact for over two hundred
years," she admitted. "We have heard rumors, but we had hoped they
had died out."
Janeway chose
to overlook the vitriol. It wasn't her place to judge. But she was not about to
have this parliament of aliens hamstrung by centuries-old fears. "You have
changed a great deal since the ludka last saw you. Perhaps they have as
well."
"Evil
does not gentle into goodness," spat Torar.
"But people can and do change," Janeway
replied. "If you don't want to give them the benefit of the doubt, that's
your decision. I won't force you to attend this conference. But I won't let
your worries do anything to hamper this opportunity for a meeting of minds.
Now. Do you wish to attend this gathering?"
No answer at
first; then Torar said, "May we sit as far away from the ludka as
possible?"
"Of course,"
said Janeway, relieved that they were even coming at all.
The Nenlars
returned to their vessel to prepare. Janeway sent a final announcement to the
assembled races, specifying the place and time at which the meeting would
occur.
She fussed
with her hair at the mirror, pausing for a moment to regard herself. She had to
admit, she
looked good
in her dress uniform. Janeway had decided to wear it—and require it of all her
officers who would also be attending—to emphasize the importance of the
meeting and to make it as formal as possible. With so many divergent species in
attendance, there were bound to be some bruised egos and perhaps downright
outbursts. By announcing at the outset that this was a formal negotiation among
equals, and treating the meeting with that level of respect, she hoped to nip
any problems in the bud. These people who would shortly be boarding her vessel
might not be ambassadors in an official sense, but there would likely be a
record number of First Contacts made here today.
The chime at
her door startled her out of her reverie. "Come," she called.
Chakotay
entered, looking strikingly handsome in his dress uniform. "Status?"
she asked, turning to face him.
"Cargo
Bay One is presently masquerading as a Federation ceremony hall," he told
her.
"I hope
it can carry off the illusion," she replied as together they strode into
the corridor. "Did all the representatives submit their
requirements?"
"Most of
them. I've never seen such an interesting assembly of seating arrangements in
my life. Those who can't adapt to our atmosphere will be linked via
viewscreens. Fortunately, it's a relatively small number. Some of them have
already started arriving."
"I hate
it when your guests are early," Janeway said. They entered the turbolift.
"Cargo Bay One."
"Neelix
is doing an admirable job of hosting in your absence," Chakotay assured
her.
"Is he
serving food?" The possibilities of inadvertently causing offense with
the wrong kind of comestibles was staggering.
"He's
done his homework," Chakotay said. "And it's all replicated
food."
"Thank
God for small favors," Janeway said. The turbolift came to a halt.
He put a hand
on her arm. "Kathryn," he said quietly, "do you have any plan
of action here I should know about?"
"Not a
damn thing," she replied gaily as they approached the cargo bay.
"I'm playing this all by ear." She squared her shoulders. "Well,
here goes nothing."
The door
hissed open and Janeway noticed two things immediately. One, there was an
incredible volume of conversation, some of it angry-sounding. Two, there were
an amazing number of bodies crammed into the cargo bay, and everyone seemed to be moving quickly,
shoving past his neighbor.
As swift and
silent as a cat, Tuvok appeared beside her out of nowhere. She didn't even
have to ask for a status update before he spoke.
"This is
a highly agitated crowd, Captain. They have not yet demonstrated any physical
violence, however. I have twenty-five security personnel distributed
throughout the room, some of them clothed so as to blend in with the crowd. All
are armed with phasers on stun. We are prepared to erect forcefields if
necessary, and—"
She raised a
hand to stop him. "I'm sure you've got everything completely under
control, Tuvok," she said with a calmness she didn't fully feel. Showtime, she thought.
"Could
everyone please take a seat?" No response. "Computer, adjust volume
of my voice through the translator."
"Volume
adjusted."
"Could
everyone please take a seat?" Janeway's voice was incredibly loud, and had
the desired result. All conversation ceased, and all heads turned to look at
her. She felt a flutter of butterflies in her stomach and forced a smile.
"I'm sure we'd all like to get this started," she said. "It will
be easier if everyone is seated."
More milling
about, but this time, Janeway was relieved to see, to an ultimate purpose. All
the aliens assembled whose anatomy permitted them to sit did so. Janeway
didn't know which ones were the ludka, but she spotted the Nenlars huddled
together against a far wall and guessed that the ludka were in the place farthest
from them. She looked in that direction. Nobody there looked like the monsters
the Nenlars had described. But then again, they probably wouldn't.
She strode
forward with a confidence she did not really feel to the podium at the front of
the hastily redecorated cargo bay.
"First,
let me thank you all for coming. I can only imagine how you are all feeling. It
took a leap of faith for you to attend without knowing what other races might
be here, and I commend you for that courage.
"You
have all received information on my vessel, Voyager,
and know that we, like you, ended up here in what we know as the
Delta Quadrant by accident. We have spent over five years searching for a way
home, but also putting to good use the unique opportunity that being here has
presented us."
She scanned
the crowd and smiled. "You could not possibly have found a more
sympathetic crew than mine. Some of you are from neighboring sectors, in which
case getting home will be relatively easy, once you have your bearings. Others
of you," and she glanced over at the Nenlars, "have come as far as we
have. Your task will be more difficult. But one thing I know in my heart, and
that is if we all work together willingly, and share our knowledge freely, we
will all benefit.
"Our
path leads us into a dangerous area of space. We are determined to traverse it.
I wish to formally extend Voyager's companionship,
protection, and support to any vessel that wishes to accompany us. For those of
you who wish to strike out on your own, I wish you the best of luck. I hope
we'll send you on your way better prepared than you might otherwise have been.
Now, I would like to invite anyone who cares to to come forward and address the
crowd. We'd like to start sharing our knowledge."
There was a
lag while the computer translated her speech into the varied languages. Then,
all of a sudden, a full quarter of the crowd rose and began marching with
purpose toward Janeway.
Inwardly, she
groaned. This was going to be harder than she had thought.
Is it working? One Who Is Leader queried with an anxious
thought.
Let us find out, replied One Who Masters Technology, a
hint of smugness tingeing its thoughts. One Who Is Second and One Who Braves
Strangers leaned forward, peering at their viewscreen.
Among
themselves, they were simply Us and We. Every other intelligent being in the
cosmos was Them and They. Contact was to be avoided when possible, and when it
was not avoidable, they called themselves the Ones Who Will Not Be Named. They
had ears, but no vocal cords. There was much need early on in their evolution
to hear sounds that might warn mem of danger: a falling tree, the roar of a
predator, the strange noises that passed for communication among other beings
not advanced enough to have mastered telepathy. Now, the small holes in their
large heads that served for ears were assaulted by a cacophony of sound.
Their eyes
were dazzled by an array of beings staggering in their differences. The colors,
the noises, the sharp, swift movements—so different from the fluid, graceful
motions of the Ones Who Will Not Be Named—assaulted them. One Who Masters
Technology and One Who Is Second actually cringed back from the images,
fluttering their long fingers in what would, in other species, be a cry of
distress.
Truth be
told, One Who Is Leader wanted to cringe, too. Only One Who Braves Strangers,
who had been trained from birth by others of that skill not to be afraid of
alien species so that in the rare cases that contact was necessary someone
would be willing to do so, seemed at ease. Leader marveled at its control, and
was, as ever, a bit unsettled by it.
If only they
had not ventured through that strange gateway! They would be happily examining
the stars, inspecting uninhabited worlds, traveling in their peaceful,
nurturing silence as they usually did. But they had foolishly gone through, and
they were in this strange place, forced to learn what they could
through the
annoying and frightening jabbering of not just one but dozens of strange beings.
With no
spoken language of their own, it had taken decades of their best minds working
on the problem to evolve a translator that took the chatter of other races and
turned it into the mental waves that the Ones Who Will Not Be Named could understand.
Masters Technology now worked the controls. Finally, it was able to turn off
the intrusive noise. Alien words translated into thoughts bombarded them,
dozens at a time, most of them utterly pointless. Still, it was the only way
the Ones Who Will Not Be Named could hope to learn anything, and Leader renewed
its determination.
CHAPTER
B
seven and a half long, loud, exhausting, and largely futile
hours later, one Captain Kathryn Janeway slouched back toward her quarters
utterly drained.
"Lights,"
she called in a voice made hoarse by screaming to be heard over the din of
sixty-two arguing voices. She stumbled to the bathroom and splashed her face.
To categorize today as "stressful" would have been the
understatement of the decade.
The door
chimed. She sighed and dried her face. "Come," she called.
The door
hissed open and Chakotay entered. "When we reach Earth, I'm going to
recommend that you be appointed an ambassador," he said, amusement warming
his voice.
"No,
thank you," she replied huskily. She went to the replicator. "Vulcan
spice tea. Hot. With a touch of honey."
Throwing
propriety to the wind, she took a sip of tea, placed it down, and then
collapsed on the bed. "That," she said with infinite weariness,
"has got to be the single most exhausting day of my life."
"If it's
any consolation, Tuvok's contacts reported that the overall tone among the
aliens was much calmer after the meeting than beforehand."
"Of
course it was," Janeway said. "Everyone was too tired to argue
anymore."
Chakotay
laughed out loud at that. He sat down next to her on the bed. "You did a
wonderful job today. What you had to face was something that I'll wager even
Ambassador Spock would have found difficult."
"Thanks,"
she said, and meant it. She rolled into a seated position and sipped her tea
again. Normally she was a coffee woman, but Tuvok had recommended the spiced
tea for the sore throat. It was tastier than she imagined and it was definitely
soothing.
"Have we
heard anything back from any of the ships yet?" she asked, staring
pointedly at the padd Chakotay was holding.
"Funny
you should ask. Twelve ships have decided that they want nothing to do with
any of us. Seventeen are opting to find their own ways home, but thanked us
politely for our help. Ten ships have officially agreed to accompany us through
No Man's Land, and the rest we haven't heard from yet."
"Who's
coming?"
Chakotay
again glanced at the padd. "The Nenlars. The Todanians. The ludka," he
said, looking at her.
"That
will be interesting," said Janeway. She listened while Chakotay rattled
off a lengthy list. "The Salamar. The Lamorians. The Kuluuk. The Iyal. The
Yumiri. The
Tllihuh-----" Sometimes she was able to
put names to
faces, but most of them were just a blur of odd syllables.
Until he
said, "The Hirogen."
She swallowed
her mouthful of tea. "I was surprised they would even come to the
meeting. The idea of the hunters sitting quietly while surrounded by prey
seemed too much to ask for. And now they want to join us?" She raised a
skeptical eyebrow. "Perhaps they want a chance to pick us off one by
one."
He looked at
her searchingly. "That doesn't sound like you."
She sighed.
"You're right. It's the exhaustion talking." She put her hand on his
arm. "I shouldn't be making important decisions right now. Let's meet in
the morning."
He nodded
agreement, said good night, and left. She prepared for sleep herself. When she
crawled between the sheets, she fell asleep almost immediately. And when she
dreamed, it was a busy, restless dream of thousands of people all talking at
once, with a terrible danger threatening, and not a one of them listening to
his neighbor.
Janeway awoke
with the germ of an idea, and the more she thought about it, the better it
seemed. The large meeting had, despite the tension, been useful. But what she
needed to do was get to know these
people, if
she was going to be traveling with them. She decided that every night, she
would have an informal dinner with a representative or two from a different
species. They would, she hoped, feel more relaxed and free to speak about their
personal concerns one-on-one without trying to jockey for position in order
to be heard.
They had
already gotten to know the Nenlar. Janeway decided that the next race she would
get to know—and, she resolved, with an open mind— would be the ludka.
So it was
that at 1800, Janeway, Chakotay, and Tuvok stood in the transporter room while
Ensign Campbell beamed up the commander of the Nivvika
and his first officer.
Like the
Nenlar that they had terrorized, according to Ara and Torar, the ludka were
humanoid. They were smaller and much slighter than Janeway had mentally
pictured them. Their skin glistened like mother-of-pearl, and there was not a
hair on their slender forms. Their clothes were loose and brightly colored.
Their bearing was proud, but not arrogant, and they understood the humanoid
gesture of the smile.
To her
surprise, the commander stepped forward with his hand outstretched. "I
have been reviewing the information you sent about your culture, Captain
Janeway. I understand that this handclasp is a form of greeting. Please
instruct me on the finer points, that I may perform it correctly."
Slightly
taken aback, Janeway smiled. "We each clasp opposite hands, like so."
She accompanied the words with gestures. "We squeeze firmly, but not too
;
tightly, and
then we pump the hand up and down a few times."
"Ah.
What is the origin of this handclasp?"
Now Janeway
had to laugh a little. "It was so that in ancient times, enemies could
approach for peace negotiations without fear that the other had a weapon in
his hand."
The commander
looked rueful. "As is so often the case, it was born from suspicion. Nonetheless,
it is a pleasant form of greeting. I am Commander Kel-mar. This is my First
Officer, Second Commander Lei. We are delighted to be aboard your magnificent
vessel."
Janeway
considered herself a pretty good judge of character, and there was nothing
about these two that bespoke a nature that would enjoy the atrocities that the
Nenlar attributed to them.
It was going
to be an interesting dinner.
Neelix had
asked for, and been sent, several recipes native to the ludka. Janeway had
insisted that he replicate the food rather than cooking it himself. To cheer
him up, she had told him that if he wished, he could perform the task of
headwaiter, which seemed to delight him no end. Neelix reveled in getting to
know people, and to have him serve the food would be an excellent way to
include him in these dinners without making him an official guest. Oftentimes,
flies on the wall heard more.
He stood
eagerly awaiting them in Janeway's quarters. "Good evening, Commander,
First Officer. Please, do have a seat."
'This is Mr.
Neelix, our sometime ambassador
and resident
chef," said Janeway. "If the food is to your liking, he gets the
credit."
"And the
blame if it's not," said Chakotay teasingly.
"Ah,
ah," and Neelix waggled a remonstrative finger. "Let's try it first,
shall we?"
They took
their seats. Neelix began serving some kind of purple soup with odd-shaped
lumps. It did, however, smell heavenly.
"Carmor soup!" exclaimed Kelmar with delight.
"I haven't had this in a long time. Carmor
testicles are so difficult to come by."
Janeway froze
with the spoon halfway to her mouth. She hesitated, and then grimly began to
eat. She had to admit it wasn't half bad.
"We have
technology that enables us to replicate any dish for which we know the
recipe," said Chakotay. He seemed to have no problems with carmor testicles in his soup. But now that
she looked closer, the "testicles" looked suspiciously like pasta.
"I'm sure it's not the same as homemade, but we try."
Kelmar did
not reply; his mouth was full.
The fine
start to the dinner only continued. Neelix had two more courses, some synthale
patterned after ludka wine, and a dessert that was so sweet Janeway could
manage only a few mouthfuls. The discussion stayed mainly on safe topics.
Janeway learned about her guests' children and families, how the ludka elected
their officials, their fondness for a peculiar game called ijik, which involved three balls, seven
sticks, and apparently lots of yelling, and the Nivvika's journey up to this point. After dinner, the
captain herself brought a pot of Neelix's best coffee
substitute to
the table and graciously poured for her guests.
'This is one
of our delicacies," she informed them. "It's a mild stimulant. I hope
you enjoy it."
They sipped,
and pronounced it good, though Lei put about six spoonfuls of sugar into his.
Heartened, Janeway decided that it was time to bring up more serious topics.
"As you
no doubt are aware," she began pleasantly, "we have two
representatives here from a race known to your people. They are Ara and Torar,
and they are from Nenlar."
She watched
them closely. Kelmar stiffened. "Yes," he said heavily. "We
know. And let me guess. They have told you tales of atrocities perpetrated on
then" people by mine. They told you stories of plunder and senseless,
vindictive destruction. They told you that we are monsters, and that they have
spent the intervening centuries simply trying to rebuild their world and live a
peaceful life."
"Yes,"
said Chakotay, obviously surprised. "They have."
Here it comes, thought Janeway. The explanations, the excuses, all the
"reasons" for why they did what they did, or maybe just flat-out
denial.
"They
told you the truth about us," Kelmar said bluntly. Janeway raised an
eyebrow. She hadn't been expecting that.
"Our
ancestors were indeed monstrous in their treatment of other worlds. The Nenlar
have company for their grievances against the ludka. We once saw other worlds
as our own, and took what we wanted from them. Alien lives were reckoned no
more pre-
cious than
those of the beasts we bred and slaughtered for our food. The galaxy was
nothing but a countless array of presents for the ludka, and anyone who tried
to stand in our way suffered terribly. If memory serves me correctly—there are
so many races who have suffered at our hands, you must forgive me if I cannot
recall all the details—they were the race that first gave us the annarium." He turned to Lei for
confirmation.
"I think
so, yes," said Lei.
Kelmar turned
back to Janeway. "We took everything that we could use, and then we
bombed the planet. It was a routine procedure in those days. I do not deny our
past, Captain. And I do not wax eloquent about any specious 'lost glory.' Our
ancestors were unevolved brutes. We realize that the path to advancement lies
in peaceful coexistence, not destruction and war. And we have turned our
efforts toward healing the damage that was done so long ago. But," and his
voice was hard, "you need to understand two things, Captain Janeway. I
cannot be held responsible for what someone several centuries ago did. I can
regret those actions, but I will not apologize. / have never authorized wanton
destruction, and therefore / won't bow my head and have stones flung at me for
what some stranger did in the past."
"Fair enough,"
said Janeway.
"And
also, the Nenlar may have been terribly wronged at one point, but they too have
blood on their hands. Many of them are terrorists. They have no uniform
government declaring war, but many individuals have devoted their lives to exacting
some
kind of
retribution for what their ancestors suffered. These terrorists do not fight
openly, but in stealth, in darkness, with a coward's ways and a coward's
weapons. And frankly, in all honesty it is a tiny percentage of the
population. I do not hate the Nenlar, but neither can I call them utterly
innocent. I imagine the Nenlars you spoke with did not mention this."
"No,"
said Tuvok. "They did not."
"I am
not at all surprised." Kelmar sank back and sipped at his coffee.
"Captain, I have no desire to stir up ancient enmity. I will happily
cooperate with any of the ships that choose to join this caravan, including
the Nenlar. But I'm not here to negotiate a peace agreement. If they will leave
us alone, and respect our ways, I can guarantee my crew will behave in the same
manner."
"Given
the circumstances," said Janeway, "that's all anyone could ask
for."
Kelmar
nodded, once. He seemed satisfied. "Now, Mr. Neelix," he said to the
Talaxian, who had been quietly standing by observing, "you said something
about a beverage called Saurian brandy?"
When a
sleepy-looking Ara appeared on the viewscreen in Janeway's private quarters,
the captain of Voyager minced no
words.
"I don't
take kindly to being lied to."
Ara seemed
totally shocked. "Captain, I do not understand. We have not lied to you
about anything." Torar moved into the picture.
"I just
had dinner with Kelmar and Lei, commander and first officer of the ludka
vessel," Jane-
way
continued, watching their reactions closely. As she expected, they seemed
horrified that she would consort with such creatures. She plowed on.
"Kelmar
freely admits to what his people did to yours in the past. And it sounds like
the present ludka governments are sorry for what happened and don't behave like
that any longer. However, he told us something interesting about certain
branches of the Nenlar. He used the word 'terrorist.' Was he lying?"
Torar sighed
heavily. "No," he said. "But they are such a small, wayward
group—Captain, you know how fearful we are. To overcome the fear and turn it
against an old enemy would take something that few of my people have. I would
say it is only one in several hundred thousand, perhaps one in a million. And
we are not a populous people."
Janeway's
heart softened as she looked at them. They were trembling with fear. Or was it
fear of discovery? Perhaps these two were of the admittedly rare few that
could overcome their fear. Her mind raced with dark scenarios.
Finally, she
sighed. She was not about to condemn either race out of hand. How they behaved
on this journey would determine how she regarded them.
"Kelmar
says that as long as you leave him and his people alone, and show them respect,
he will guarantee the same behavior."
The two
Nenlars exchanged glances, but finally Ara nodded. "If he truly holds to
that, then we will happily agree to stay as far away from him and his ship as
we may."
"Very
well, then. Good night." The screen went dark. Janeway rubbed her tired
eyes.
Day Two was
proving to be as exhausting as Day One. And they hadn't even started on No
Man's Land yet. Tomorrow would be the first official leg of the journey,
provided everyone's vessel was ready.
She was not
looking forward to it. She reached out a hand for a padd and thumbed it. She
had requested a meeting with the Hirogen next. The following day, it would be
with a race called the Todanians. A faint memory stirred. She closed her eyes
and concentrated and a hard, angry voice floated back to her: "This is Leader Sinimar Arkathi, of the Todanian
vessel the Relka. We demand to
know why you have brought us here."
No. She
definitely was not looking forward to tomorrow.
Torar stared
at the screen long after it had ceased to show the angry face of Captain
Janeway. Ara finally placed a hand on his shoulder.
"Don't
worry," she soothed her mate. "If she suspected, she would
act."
"Would
she?" asked Torar, leaning back in his chair. "Or would she wait, and
watch, and let us think she believes us to be the cowards we portrayed
ourselves as?"
"It
doesn't matter. We talked about this," said Ara, sliding into the chair
next to him. "We agreed we would not attempt anything. It would be too
obvious. There are too many witnesses."
Torar
growled, deep in his throat. "It took me
years to put
my anger before my fear. Even now, it takes a deliberate effort. We were not
born for hate and fighting. But we have to follow those paths, Ara."
"Of
course we do," she agreed, "but not here, not now. Let us return
home, in one piece. Perhaps by feigning friendship or at the least tolerance we
may learn something to aid us in our battle against the ludka."
He touched
her face. "Do you speak wisdom, or cowardice, Ara? I'm not sure anymore.
I'm not sure of anything, except that to know that the ludka are so close and
not to do anything is eating me up inside."
"I speak
wisdom, beloved. There is a time and place for everything. We can resume our
attacks when we are safely home. For now, be at peace with this."
"I will
try to be at peace," Torar agreed, "for now. But I do not know how
long that peace will last."
Marisha's
lungs heaved as she attempted to exert the required strength to adjust the
engines. The air, as always, was too thin. She wondered how many times this
same scenario had repeated itself. It was a wonder she was not dead. She had
seen so many of her compatriots die here, in the hot, foul-smelling innards of
the ship their masters owned. They lay where they had fallen, their decaying
bodies adding their own terrible stench, until a "sweeper" came every
few days to remove the corpses and expel them into space, much as they might
refuse that no longer concerned them.
Marisha had
come to labor on this vessel five years ago, when she was still very young. She
had grown to adulthood here, and she knew that it was unlikely that she would
ever see anything other than these walls, know anything other than brutal,
harsh conditions.
Others were
meek as timkas. They were born,
they worked, and they died. That was their lot. But Marisha's mother had
escaped once, had seen a world other than this, and had whispered stories of
that other world into her daughter's small, shell-shaped ear. And so Marisha,
unlike nearly every other V'enah she had ever met, hungered for something
more.
It was this
hunger, this fire, that kept her sane. That kept her thinking, alert, outraged
at the life she was being forced to live. At first, she had said nothing to her
fellow slaves. But they had sensed it. Marisha had always been a leader, even
as a child. The other V'enah flocked to her as if trying to warm their cold
souls at her inner flame. After a few years, she began to speak, softly, about
that other world of which her mother had spoken. They listened. And finally,
just recently, Marisha had ventured into speaking of that most elusive of
dreams ... freedom.
Her hand
touched sizzling metal. She uttered a wordless cry and jerked it back, hissing
in pain as she examined the burned flesh. She took a deep breath and willed
herself not to think of the pain. There would be no point. There was no way to
heal it. The Todanians would not waste precious supplies on expendable V'enah.
Except, she
had heard something from the guards about a portal. Of course, she had seen
nothing. None of those laboring in the ship's innards had. But they were not in
Todanian space now, and perhaps the V'enah would be more precious now that the
To-danians could not resupply living labor in the same fashion as they would
food or water.
At precisely
that moment, one of the ugly, hulking guards approached. His lip curled hi a
sneer, but he thrust something at her. Confused, she stared at it. She did not
dare speak.
"Salve,"
the guard grunted. "Put it on and wrap it in the bandage."
When she did
not take it immediately, he growled. He seized her wrist, smeared something
vile-smelling on it, and wrapped the bandage around the injury. He jerked the
ends tight and tied them, eliciting another cry from Marisha.
"Our orders
are to take care of you vermin, now that we're lost," he said with
contempt. Tears welled in Marisha's eyes; not emotional tears, for she was
beyond that, but a simple physical reaction to the pain in her hand.
"Enjoy it while it lasts."
Marisha did
not move as the guard threaded his way through the stunned crowd of V'enah.
When he was out of sight, she rewrapped the bandage so it did not cut viciously
into her flesh. Regardless of the lack of care with which the guard had given
her the treatment, it was working. Already her hand felt better. She could
even see the inflammation start to recede. It was an odd sensation.
For the
briefest of moments, she felt a wave of gratitude. The tears slipped down her
pale purple
cheeks. They
cared. They wanted to treat her well. They—
They were
monsters. The only reason they treated her was because they wanted her alive to
work harder for them. This was no selfless act of compassion. If anything, it
was worse than the usual, thoughtless treatment the Todanians showed their
property.
Marisha
returned to her work with a renewed sense of purpose.
The
opportunity she had dreamed of for so long was approaching.
CHAPTER
6
janeway deplored prejudice. she rejected it with every cell in her body. And yet,
even as Leader Sinimar Arkathi of the Todanian vessel the Relka materialized, she made a
prejudgment about him. She didn't like him.
Of course,
there was his rude "greeting" before she'd met him. And some of the
other species she had met had muttered something about the Todanians. But it
was seeing him stand with an air of utter arrogance on her transporter
platform, staring about as if he owned the ship, that got her hackles up. He
was bipedal, but not exactly humanoid. He reminded her of a frog, with large,
bulging eyes and a thick mouth. But no frog had the rippling muscles and thick
fur that the Todanians had, and no simple beast showed such calculated
hostility in its bearing.
"Captain
Janeway. I am Leader Arkathi. You will show me the rest of your ship."
She bit back
a retort and smiled pleasantly instead. "I'm flattered that you take such
an interest in my ship," she said, forcing her voice to be mild and
pleasant. "But our dinner is waiting. Follow me, please."
It didn't get
better after that. Nothing was to the Todanians' taste. The wine was bitter.
The grubs weren't alive. The soup was thin. The grains were too chewy, the meat
too rare, the dessert too sweet. Arkathi actually spat out the single mouthful
of coffee he took onto the saucer. Janeway supposed she ought to be grateful
he didn't simply spew it onto her, Tuvok, and Chakotay even as she lamented the
waste of good coffee. All her attempts at polite conversation were brushed
aside with blunt replies or stony silence.
She was no
longer a narrow-minded, prejudiced person. She had interacted enough with
Arkathi to make a reasoned judgment based on gathered data.
And she
didn't like him.
She decided
to be as blunt as he. "From the information you sent me," she began,
thinking even as she spoke that it was in truth very little information,
"I understand that you have two species working on your vessel. I'm
curious as to why you chose to bring four Todanians and no V'enah. We ourselves
have a multispecies crew and I enjoy displaying the variety of talents we have
at our disposal when we're interacting with new races."
The request
had been for two, the commander of each ship and one other. Arkathi, of course,
had ig-
noted the
request and brought three hulking companions with him, all of whom seemed to
be eating vast quantities of the food even while complaining about the quality.
Arkathi
stiffened in his seat. The bulging eyes seemed to grow even larger with
indignation. "You insult me, Janeway," he said, insulting her in
return by not using her title.
She kept
calm. "I fail to see how inquiring about more than fifty percent of your
crew is an insult, Arkathi."
"The
V'enah are not crew! They are property!"
Janeway hoped
that the translator had somehow misunderstood the word. "Property? Are you
telling me that the Todanians own the
V'enah?"
"Precisely.
And we have for centuries. They have no business representing my vessel."
"But
they do all the hard labor, don't they?" She knew she was treading on thin
ice, but she didn't care.
"Of
course. That's what they're bred for. Now, on to what we will require of
you." To Janeway's shock he pulled out a small device that was clearly
their version of a padd. "We require assistance in repairing the damage we
incurred on traversing the portal. We were well supplied for our brief mission,
but will of course now require foodstuffs if we are to offer you our company
and protection. We—"
"Stop it
right there." Chakotay's voice was mild, though his words were sharp. His
dark face was darker than usual with anger, though his expression didn't
change. "We are in charge of this mission. We
invited you
to accompany us, not to protect us, or escort us. We are not in your debt in
any way."
"You can
choose to travel with us," Janeway said, "to have the protection and
resources of a caravan available, or not. I can tell you it matters very
little to me." Janeway knew as she spoke that her words were hardly
diplomatic, but she didn't care. There were many others to worry about, not
least her own crew. "But if you choose to come with us, you will regard Voyager as the flagship. You will follow
our route, at our pace, and you will take instructions from me in case of any
trouble. Is that clear?"
For a moment,
she thought he was going to explode. It was a measure of her distaste for
Arkathi that the only problem she saw with that scenario would be getting what
was left out of the carpeting. He swelled up, and inflated two large, bright
red sacs on each side of his throat.
Janeway
waited.
Finally,
Arkathi spoke. "You have made your arrogant position extremely clear,
Captain." He threw down the napkin and rose. His three companions rose
with him. One of them—she remembered his name was Sook—at least had the grace
to look embarrassed. The foursome stalked out, with Sook casting a quick,
backward glance before lifting his head as high as his leader's.
"The
turbolift is on your left," Janeway called after them, men rubbed her
aching head.
"Captain,"
began Tuvok, "if I may—"
"You may
not. I know if that had been a scenario test at the Academy, I'd have failed
miserably. But
frankly, if
the Todanians are going to be such unpleasant traveling companions, I'd just
as soon they struck off on their own."
But she was
to have no such luck. The following day, they received a message, as curt and
to the point as Janeway would have expected: We
will travel with you.
"Damn,"
she said to herself. At once she amended the thought. Think of the V'enah on that ship, she
thought. They've got no choice but to be
here. Perhaps we can serve to enlighten their "masters." At the very
least, we can do what we can to make the journey easier on them by not taxing
the Todanians too much.
The thought
wasn't much comfort.
They are moving forward.
Leader
nodded, acknowledging Second. It had dreaded this, even as it knew such a thing
would eventually occur. Now Leader had to decide. Did the Ones Who Will Not Be
Named follow the caravan, undetected and cautious? Or did they strike out on
their own, avoiding any possible chance of discovery or pollution from this
constant monitoring of the hordes of alien species?
Its instinct
told Leader to flee. Better wandering the stars alone, lost forever, than
trailing these ships and filling their minds with alien madness.
But its
powerful brain said otherwise. One of the ships had been lost for years here,
and was making obvious progress toward its home sector. Perhaps they knew what
they were doing. At the very least, with so many other ships going ahead of
them, the
Ones Who Will
Not Be Named would stand a better chance of avoiding the dangers that they knew
lurked ahead.
Finally,
Leader made its decision.
We will follow.
Captain's log, Stardate 53701.4. I had thought that actually traversing
No Man's Land would be the true challenge, but I am now starting to believe
that we will encounter more difficulties simply getting along with the rest of
this odd caravan. Last night, it was the Todanians. Tonight we have the
Hi-rogen. I hope I am up to the task.
Neelix couldn't
wait. He was fairly quivering with excitement when Seven brought in the four
Borg children to join him and Naomi in the mess hall. Paris was already there,
having taken a shine to the strange little animal. It was currently frolicking
about, sniffing everything and begging for attention.
"I'm
thinking about calling him... Fluffy," Neelix said with paternal pride.
"Flurry?"
Tom looked aghast. "Don't saddle him with that kind of a name."
"What
kind of a name? He's very flurry. It fits."
"Yeah,
if that's the best you can think of. Why not something that really honors the
little guy?" Paris picked him up and Fluffy/Unnamed stuck out a black
tongue to lick his face. "You want a good
name, don't you? Hmm?"
The little
animal barked, its tail wagging furiously. Paris's face lit up.
"That's
it! I've got the name for him! Barkley!"
"After
Reginald Barclay?" Neelix frowned, pondering the choice. "Well, he
did show up soon after our contact with Barclay, and he is an honorary member
of the crew...."
"No, you
don't get it. Bark-ley. As in, a
dog bark." Paris was terribly pleased with himself. 'Terrific name, huh?
It honors our discoverer and it's a great pun!"
Neelix didn't
think it was so great a pun. "Bark-ley" indeed. "Huffy" was
much better, much more suitable. He took the dog from Paris's arms and handed
it to Naomi, whose little face broke into a big grin.
"Which
name do you like best, sweetie?" he asked.
"Aw,
come on, don't put the pressure on the kid," said Paris. At that moment,
the door hissed open and Seven entered with the four Borg children. They
stepped in a few paces, spotted Naomi holding Fluffy/Barkley, and halted.
"Canine,"
Mezoti said. "Carnivore. Irrelevant." She looked up at Seven.
"You brought us here to encounter one of these?"
"Neelix
suggested that you might like to play with this species," said Seven, in a
voice that suggested that she cared as little for the idea as Mezoti did.
"I'd
rather return to my studies," said Icheb.
"Fun is
an integral part of a healthy and well-rounded childhood," said Seven,
grimly. "We shall have fun now."
At a nod from
Neelix, Naomi set Fluffy/Barkley on the floor. At once it scampered toward the
newcomers, then skidded to a halt. It began to bark furiously.
"Perceptive
creature," muttered Paris under his breath.
Rebi looked
at the creature. "Can we go now?"
"Yes,
can we go?" echoed Azan.
"Negative.
We will interact with Species 775."
"His
name is Barkley," said Paris.
"No,
it's Fluffy!" retorted Neelix. "He's a pet—a domesticated creature.
He needs play, and so do you five. Oh, come on, you've got to admit he's
cute."
"Cute is
irrelevant," stated Mezoti.
"Cute,"
said Paris, quite firmly, "is never irrelevant"
"Seven,"
said Icheb, "I anticipate difficulty in interacting in a logical fashion
with Species 775." Barkley/Fluffy continued to bark. Seven sighed, reached
down, and picked him up. The animal quieted at once. She held it out at arm's
length, scrutinizing it
"Soft,
long hair. Appealing large eyes. Enjoyment of touch. The animal is cute."
There was
silence. Neelix was reminded of ambassadors negotiating a peace treaty.
Finally, Mezoti looked up at Seven.
"Seven,
how do we ... play?"
"Like
this," said Naomi helpfully. She sat down on the floor and at once
Fluffy/Barkley bounced happily over toward her. She stroked his head. He
immediately rolled over onto his back.
"See? He
wants you to pet his tummy," said Naomi, proceeding to suit action to
word. One of Barkley/Fluffy's hind legs began to kick frantically.
"Species—Fluffy
is demonstrating that he is submissive to you," said Seven. "He
regards you as a dominant pack leader."
"And Barkley also wants his tummy
scratched," said Tom, stooping down to join Naomi.
For a long
moment, the Borg children stood as if bolted to the deck. Then, finally, Mezoti
sat down awkwardly next to Naomi.
"How
does one handle the creature?" she asked.
Naomi smiled.
"Gently, but with a lot of affection. Like this." She stroked
Fluffy/Barkley's head. Tentatively, Mezoti followed suit, moving her small
hand in a cautious rhythm over the creature's skull.
Rebi was
next, then Azan, and finally, after a look at Seven, Icheb. Barkley/Fluffy was
obviously in doggie heaven, with all these attentive children. Neelix hoped he
wouldn't get so excited he wet the floor. At one point, Fluffy/Barkley bounded
into Mezoti's lap, stood on his hind legs, planted his forelegs on her
shoulder, and furiously licked her face. The girl started for a moment, then
laughed.
Neelix's
heart felt very full. It was the first time he had seen one of these
traumatized children laugh, like a child ought.
"We can
call him Barkley if it's that important to you, Tom," he said, filled with
warm generosity at this moment.
Paris, too,
was gazing at the children with a rapt expression on his face. "No,
Neelix. You're the one taking care of him. We'll call him Fluffy."
"No, no,
I insist. Barkley it is."
Tom looked up
at him. "Fluffy," he said, with an edge to his voice.
Neelix
sighed.
Sinimar
Arkathi sat alone in his quarters. The bottle had been full an hour ago; now
it was almost empty. He picked it up, swirled the light orange contents about,
and wished he had thought to pack another seven crates of the stuff.
Things had
gone badly from the very beginning of this mission. He had gotten the position
of Leader only because of a rift between the Magla Karn and his advisory
council. Arkathi knew he had been chosen not for his skill or experience or
other positive qualities, but because his appointment would irritate the
advisory council. He was, therefore, the commander of a ship on the whim of
one powerful man, and he knew it.
Grimly,
Arkathi poured the last of the liquid into the heavy goblet. He sniffed the
spicy aroma, and took a deep drink. Fire coursed through his system, but it did
not relax him as it used to.
His crew knew
it, too. Even the cursed V'enah had somehow got wind of the fact that the
commander of the Relka was a
choice of spite.
"Kella!"
he called. The door hissed open. A small female V'enah entered. At once, she
dropped to her hands and knees, making herself as small as possible in his
august presence.
"Master,"
she said in a little voice, not looking up. "How can I serve you?"
"More olifir. And then a massage and a
bath."
"As my
master wills," said Kella, again in that soft, whispery voice. She rose to
her feet and disappeared, only to return a moment later With a fresh bottle.
Arkathi drained what was left in the goblet and wordlessly thrust it out for a
refill. With the ex-
pertise of
long practice, Kella, kneeling on the floor, opened the bottle and poured. She
did not, of course, take any herself. Woe be unto the Todanian who dared let a
V'enah taste the richness of olifir.
On a whim, he
decided to test his theory. "What have you heard about me?" he
demanded.
Kella kept
her eyes averted, but could not hide the telltale rush of blood to her cheeks
that colored them a deep purple hue. "I am not certain what my master
means."
"What
are they saying about me? The V'enah. What are they saying about their
captain?"
"The
V'enah are your loyal servants, Master. We would never—"
Arkathi swore
an oath so blistering it startled even Kella, who had heard him swear often.
"That's a lie and we both know it. They talk. I want to know what they
say." Yielding to impulse, he leaned forward and squeezed her chin in his
massive hand. She uttered one soft cry, and then was silent, her gaze stubbornly
lowered.
"What do they say, Kella? The truth, now, or I
shall have you put back in engineering with the others."
It was an
empty threat. Kella was the perfect personal attendant: quiet, obedient,
attractive enough for her species, and very good at untying the knots of stress
that accumulated in his body. He once thought about bedding her. She couldn't
refuse, but he simply couldn't bring himself to think of a V'enah's body lying
next to his.
But Kella
didn't know that. And he never intended her to know just how valuable she was
to him. Let her think he would toss her into the killing room, as
it was
commonly known. It would ensure that obedience he so prized.
"I—they—truly,
Master, I do not have much contact with the others," she stammered.
That much at
least was fact. Still...
"What
little I have heard ... surely, Master, these are rumors only, and unworthy of
passing on to your most noble ears...."
He squeezed
tighter. There would be bruises on that pretty face. But he had to know.
"They
say that you were gifted this assignment. That it was the result of some kind
of conflict. But I know that you earned it, Master!"
He let her
go. If even the V'enah knew this, then everyone on board knew it. Kella got to
her feet and disappeared. He heard water hissing as she drew his bath. She
would scent it with herbs to make it fragrant, lave his body with oils to make
both his skin and fur soft. But his mind was not on the upcoming bath or
massage. It was on how to turn himself into a true leader in the eyes of his
people.
And that way
was to knock the leader of this expedition, one Captain Kathryn Janeway, out
of the top seat
Kella came
out of the room, again dropping to all fours. He could already see the darkness
on her face from the pressure of his fingers. Regrettable, but necessary. He'd
have their doctor remove the bruises in the morning. It would be a gift from a
beneficent master to a loyal slave, and she would be grateful.
He finished
the glass of olifir, staggered to
his feet, and lurched toward the bathing room.
As she bathed
the loathed, bumpy body of the being who owned her, her face aching from his
abuse, Kella wished with all her heart that she had the courage to seize the
bottle of olifir and crack it
against Arkathi's skull.
But she did
not. And so she bathed him, and massaged him, and went to her sleeping mat at
the foot of his bed with pain, fear, and hatred all at war in her two-chambered
heart.
CHAPTER
7
janeway had forgotten just how bio the hirogen were.
These two
were massive specimens of their species. Two and a half meters tall, both of
them, if they were a centimeter. They came in full armor, their small, dark
eyes almost the only part of their bodies visible beneath the blue-black,
spiked shell. Her eyes flickered up to their helmets, searching for the paint
that she knew would signify that they were on the hunt.
There was no
paint. And for that, she was grateful.
She had
spoken only briefly with them, and then only about the specifics of the
mission. She hoped that tonight she would learn more about their behavior, so
peculiar for this race of self-proclaimed hunters. They had made no aggressive
moves what-
soever, and,
as always when people or species acted out of character, that made her
suspicious.
"Welcome
aboard Voyager," she said,
inclining her head in the gesture that she knew showed respect.
There was a
hesitation; then the bigger one nodded. The second, the Beta, followed suit.
They remained silent.
Janeway
raised an eyebrow, then said, "Our meal is waiting. If you will accompany
me."
It was more
difficult than she had expected, turning her back on the two hulking beings,
trusting them to follow as honored guests. Tuvok had wanted to post a security
guard, but Janeway had refused. Thus far, the Hirogen had offered no hostility,
she'd told the Vulcan. She was not going to give them any reason to think
they'd been mistaken.
"As far
as I'm concerned, every ship out there is an ally," she'd stated firmly.
An easy statement to make in the comfort and security of her ready room. Not so
easy to hold to now, with no phaser at her hip and two enormous Hirogen
striding behind her.
The walk to
her quarters from the transporter room, necessitating a brief trip in the
turbolift, which felt crowded though there were only three of them, seemed to
take forever. Her shoulder blades tingled, as if expecting to feel a knife. But
of course, no strike came.
Tuvok,
Neelix, and Chakotay were already in her quarters. They all nodded, as she'd
told them to do. She made the introductions.
"Please
sit down. Make yourselves comfortable."
They did so.
Thus far, they had said nothing. Janeway hoped that once the wine started
flowing more
freely, the
conversation would as well. She amended the thought. She didn't dare hope for
free-flowing conversation; anything other
than "Pass the salt" would do.
"You may
wish to remove your helmets," said Chakotay as Neelix began to pour the
synthetic wine.
Again, they
looked at each other, and wordlessly complied with Chakotay's suggestion. The
faces that the gesture revealed were unattractive to Janeway's personal
aesthetics. The ridges along their faces that differentiated from individual to
individual looked like scabs to her, and their eyes were unsettling.
Janeway
picked up her glass. "It is the custom among our people to salute our
guests. We call this form of salutation a toast Please, lift your
glasses." They did so, in that same stony silence. 'To cooperation
between species. May this be the beginning of a new, better relationship
between our peoples."
She and her
crew began to drink, but the Hirogen put their glasses down. "Something
the matter, gentlemen?"
"Let me
speak plainly," said the Alpha. His voice was harsh and gravelly, almost
mechanical-sounding. "Simply because we have accepted your invitation to
dine aboard your vessel does not mean we are interested in bettering
relationships. We are the hunters. You are, and always will be, prey to
us."
She'd
expected this much, and was oddly relieved by his words. Now, at least, they
were talking, and she'd always preferred open hostility and confrontation to
the lie and the knife in the back.
"Your
words don't really surprise me," she said, "though I must confess I'm
disappointed. Why did you accept? And why are you not offering any threat
to any other
vessel here? This must be terribly exciting to you. You have flying right next
to your ship prey from far distant parts of the galaxy. They would be wonderful
relics. Why are you not hunting us?"
Unobtrusively,
Neelix began serving soup. Janeway noticed there were two different sets of
bowls and was suddenly terribly grateful to the Talaxian. She knew that the
Hirogen dissolved their prey and fed upon them, after recovering then"
gruesome "relics." In the interest of science, they had saved some of
the recipes that the Hirogen had programmed into the replicator when Voyager had been captured and boarded and
her crew forced to play holodeck games of violence. Neelix had obviously
prepared appropriate meals for their guests, but what was in front of her,
judging by the aroma, was nothing more than good old-fashioned split-pea soup.
"Only a
fool tries to hunt when he could be the hunted," said Alpha. He spooned up
some of the soup. "Delicious," he said, sounding a bit surprised.
"Some of
your kind once captured our vessel," began Janeway, but Alpha interrupted.
"I am
aware of that. As I said, we know of you, Captain. And of your holodeck
technology." He stared at her with unreadable brown eyes. "I condemn
such technology. The Alpha may have thought he was helping to preserve our way
of life, but a holodeck simulation is not the same as an actual kill. It can
never be the same."
"Don't
knock it till you've tried it," said Chakotay, spooning up his split-pea
soup.
"I have
no desire to try it," said the Alpha. He continued eating.
They finished
the soup course in silence. Neelix brought out a replicated haunch of some
unidentifiable creature. Janeway wondered what it was supposed to be. It
smelled like lamb to her. As hostess, she stood and began to carve.
"If you
know of the incident," said Tuvok, "then you must be aware that we
are a formidable foe. That conflict ended in a cease-fire."
"Only
because the Alpha and Beta of the vessel were weak and feebleminded," said
the Beta, speak-' ing up for the first time. "You will not find that to be
the case with us."
"Rare or
well done?" Janeway asked with false pleasantness. They did not reply, so
she served up the pieces as she sliced them.
"But you
have said that only a fool hunts when he could be the hunted," said
Chakotay.
"Of
course," said Alpha. "There is a time and place for hunting, and now
is not it. We are outnumbered at least sixty to one, perhaps more, Commander.
Your ship alone could destroy our tiny vessel. We do not know mis area of
space. You are offering to get us through it alive. Only a madman would try to
fight in such circumstances."
"As long
as we're in No Man's Land, then, do we have your word that you will
cooperate?" Janeway's voice was soft, but her eyes were intent upon Alpha
as she asked the question.
"Yes,"
stated Alpha firmly. "No one in this caravan need fear an attack by the
Hirogen. We will even go so far as to offer what expertise and technology we
can for the betterment of the group."
"It may
be discourteous of me to doubt the offer,"
said Tuvok.
"But I cannot help but think that this situation is rife with temptation
for your species."
"I
believe them," said Chakotay, unexpectedly. "You're hunters. You
respect the prey. And you respect your own safety. Without prey, you cannot be
a predator. In the twentieth century on my home planet, hunters were some of
the most active individuals in preserving the species they hunted. During bad
winters, they were out placing down food for the creature they planned to hunt
months later. It's a circle."
"You do
understand," said Alpha, a hint of respect on his ugly visage.
"We will
take your word," said Janeway. "But remember, if you break it, you
will lose any protection this caravan and my ship can offer."
"I hear
you, Captain Janeway," said Alpha. He cut into the meat on his plate. She
had given him a rare slice, and blood dripped from the fork. Alpha took a bite
and nodded his approval.
"This
flesh," he said, "is savory."
"Bridge
to Janeway. We're about to enter."
Janeway's
heart sped up a little more. She was in her ready room, poring through
exhaustive reports from all the various species who were part of this odd
group. She'd asked Chakotay to notify her when they were about to enter the
first dangerous stretch of No Man's Land.
She entered,
and gazed at the screen.
"There
it is," said Chakotay softly.
Janeway didn't
say anything for a moment. They were poised on the brink, now, as they had been
so many times before. They stood ready to enter terri-
tory utterly
unfamiliar to them, beset with dangers known and unknown. She never made the
decision to take her ship into possible danger lightly. But this time, even
more was riding on her decisions. She was, in effect, the commander of a small,
vulnerable, frightened fleet. She had asked these people, liked and disliked,
to trust in her, and they had done so.
"Seven
of Nine to Captain Janeway."
Inwardly,
Janeway groaned as she took her seat. "Go ahead, Seven."
"I
regret to say I have bad news," said Seven.
Janeway
closed her eyes, gathering strength. "And I haven't even finished my
morning coffee yet."
"Shall I
wait until you have done so?"
Janeway
smiled to herself. Sometimes Seven was so literal. "No, go ahead."
"There
is a great deal of the spatial distortion activity occurring within—within No
Man's Land. It is causing repercussions on the various other spatial phenomena
in the area."
"Such
as?" Janeway threw Chakotay a glance. She was beginning to wish she had waited to have that cup of coffee
before hearing this.
"The
trajectory of the comets we charted has been altered. The nebula has shifted to
bearing eight zero mark four point two. The—"
"Point
taken. We'll proceed at half impulse until you've had a chance to map it out
more completely. In the meantime, we'll just have to take it as it comes."
There was no
way Janeway was going to wait any longer. The small fleet she captained was
champing at the bit to get going. Even half impulse would re-
quire that
they pay close attention. It would keep them from getting restless and deciding
to pick fights among themselves.
"Mr.
Kim, open a channel."
"Channel
opened, Captain."
"This is
Captain Kathryn Janeway to all vessels. We are about to proceed into the
dangerous area of space we discussed earlier. Because of the activity of the
portals that brought so many of you here, we will have to remap the area as we
go. Our vessel will proceed at half impulse power. We will automatically relay
all information we receive to all of you the moment we know it. No one will be
kept in the dark. However, no one is to venture out of the prescribed course we
will be following. You are all here voluntarily, and I regard you as equals on
this journey. However, you have all also agreed that Voyager will take the lead. I expect all of you to honor
that agreement. Is everyone ready?"
She waited
while all of them—twenty-nine ships thus far—responded. Finally, she nodded to
herself.
"Then
let us begin. Janeway out. Mr. Paris, half impulse. Take us into No Man's
Land."
"Yes,
ma'am," replied Tom lightly, and touched the controls. Janeway glanced
down at her personal viewscreen. She saw dozens of blips of light of various
sizes, all moving together.
She hoped
they would all make it the same way.
Even though
she knew what to expect, even though she was fully aware that there was nothing
uncanny or magical about these strange gateways, she felt unsettled every time
one of them opened or closed. There had to be a scientific reason for them.
Her crew and
all the others who had chosen to accompany Voyager
on this dangerous trek weren't superstitious primitives. They
simply didn't know the reason for
why these things kept opening and closing. She desperately wished they did, or
at least could predict—
"Hard to
port!" Janeway cried, even as Tuvok began, "Captain ..."
Her eyes had
caught the telltale ripple that preceded the opening of another door, and this
one was far too close for comfort. Paris obeyed, and the ship lurched
violently, barely avoiding flying right into the thing.
"That
one was close," said Tom. His words were unnecessary. Janeway's own heart
was beating rapidly and she trembled from released adrenaline.
"Harry,
channel."
"Open."
"Janeway
to the fleet. Be forewarned, these gateways keep opening without warning. We
narrowly missed flying straight into one. Please have someone on your vessel
monitoring sensors at all times. There is also a visual signal, a ripple—"
"Just
like that one," cried Kim.
Sure enough,
another one was opening right behind them. "Onscreen," Janeway
snapped.
A small
vessel was traveling close to the gateway. It was as if Janeway were watching
the entire thing unfold in slow motion. Even as she shouted, "Bearing
eight-four-six-three mark nine," the little ship, unable to halt in time,
floated through.
The gateway
closed as if it had never been.
"All stop!
Full fleet, all stop!" she cried. Seconds
ticked by.
Who had it been? She tried to remember, but there were so many of them. Yes, it
was the Am-munii. Half the size of humans, quadripedal, using delicate mouths
and tentacles to manipulate their vessel. Humor and an immense acceptance and
love of all other living beings were qualities that were prized among their
people, and they had even given Janeway a gift of a beautiful sphere that was
mined on their planet. She'd put the lovely thing in a place of honor in her
quarters. She had hoped to invite the young Ammunii over to play; she'd heard
that Fluffy, or was it Barkley, was very popular with the children....
"Maybe
they made it somewhere safe," said Paris, his voice awkwardly breaking the
strained silence.
"Maybe,"
said Kim, in as stilted and tight a voice.
Suddenly the
gateway opened again.
The dead ship
floated out.
It was charred,
and broken, and somehow... aged. If she hadn't known better, Janeway would have
put the Ammunii vessel at two, maybe three centuries old. But it had only gone
through half a minute ago.
No one spoke.
Then Kim's station came alive with the voices of frightened people all trying
to speak at once.
Janeway
ignored the babble. "Kun, any life signs on the Ammunii ship?"
A pause.
"No, Captain."
Janeway bit
her lip. She then signaled Kim to silence the sounds of dozens of voices
trying to speak with her at once. "Janeway to the fleet," she said,
and felt as old as the prematurely aged ship when she spoke. "The Ammunii
vessel was too close to a
portal and
was unable to alter course when it manifested. You have all seen the damage.
There are no life signs. I can't explain it, not yet, but I don't want to lose
anyone else. Please keep monitoring space. We will transmit what data we have
as soon as we have it, but that wasn't enough to save the Ammunii. We will
proceed forward in fifteen of our minutes. Standby."
She sank back
into her chair and closed her eyes for a moment.
"It
wasn't your fault," said Chakotay, just loud enough for her to hear.
She opened
her eyes and gazed at him. "Wasn't it? I'm the commander of this
fleet."
"If this
were normal space, I'm sure you'd emerge without a single ship lost," said
Chakotay confidently. "But it isn't. We don't know yet how those things
work. We can't predict when they will manifest. It wasn't your fault," he
repeated.
On one level,
she believed him. But on another level, she knew he was dead wrong.
The minutes
ticked by as the straggling ships caught up to the main fleet. Janeway waited
until the fifteen minutes had passed, then gave the order to proceed. But she
did so with a heart that felt like lead in her chest.
"Do you
now understand?" demanded Arkathi, from the privacy of his quarters.
"No one
can predict these things," began Kelmar. Arkathi glowered at the ugly
visage of the ludka captain. Small, hairless, with glistening skin that reminded
him of the unnatural glow of the V'enah
skin. And
those brightly colored clothes! Still, any ally would be welcome, even an ugly
one.
"But
they certainly made it seem as if they knew what they were doing, didn't
they?" Arkathi persisted. "Almighty Voyager,
we should be the flagship, we know all about the Alpha Quadrant.
Pah! The Ammunii paid a deadly price for their blind trust."
Arkathi
hadn't known which ship had gone through the deadly portal at the time. He had
merely looked it up. He'd done his research since then, though.
"They
were the right choice," Kelmar stubbornly persisted.
"I
understand they're very friendly with your enemies," said Arkathi.
"The Nenlar. They were the first people they found."
Kelmar
stiffened. "We have no love for the Nenlar. They are cowards, even the
bravest of them."
"Cowards
need strong friends," said Arkathi. "Strong friends who can protect
them from their enemies. Suppose Janeway knows exactly how these portals work
and deliberately let the Ammunii wander into it."
Kelmar's face
registered skepticism. "Highly unlikely."
"But
it's possible. Anything is possible. Suppose they are even the ones controlling
the portals? Suppose they are watching, waiting to pick us off one by one? The
only ones who will make it across this so-called No Man's Land will be the ones
that Voyager thinks will make
good friends. You'll see."
"In that
case," said Kelmar dryly, arching an eyebrow, "then I suspect we've
seen the last of you."
The
arrogance! Arkathi stifled the natural rage that surged up in him at the
affront. Instead, he forced himself to chuckle, as if he and this disgusting
humanoid were sharing a private joke.
"Witty
as well as intelligent, I see," he said, while privately thinking nothing
of the sort. "I ask nothing of you now."
"Which
works well," said Kelmar, "as I intend to give you nothing."
"But
keep your eyes open. Watch this Janeway closely. If it turns out they are
trying to delude and betray us, then we would do well to have alliances among
ourselves."
Kelmar did
not reply. "Is this all, Arkathi?"
"All for
now, my friend. Keep your eyes open." He severed the link before his ego
got in the way of his ultimate plans. Out of the corner of his eye, he saw
movement. He whirled quickly and snarled, "What are you doing here?"
Kella gasped
and almost dropped the laden tray she bore. "You called me... asked me to
prepare your meal..." she stammered.
Belatedly, he
remembered she was right He had forgotten. "What took you so long?"
he snarled as she placed the tray down with hands that trembled. He wanted to
ask her how much she had overheard. It was important that no one know that he
was trying to stir up anti-Voyager sentiment.
His plans would be much more effective if each group he spoke to thought they
were the only ones.
"I know
you don't like seeds in your fruits, and these were particularly seedy, so
I—"
"Enough,"
he said, waving her out. She dropped
to her knees
and bowed low before scurrying out as quickly as possible. As he chewed the
juicy fruits, devoid of a single seed, he wondered if it was time to get a new
personal servant and consign Kella to engineering. She had seen quite a bit
Perhaps too much.
CHAPTER
8
captain's log, supplemental. So
many of the ships we have taken
under our wing were never meant for long-range travel. Their equipment needs
constant readjusting and the issue of food is increasingly becoming a topic of
conversation—and, I'm afraid,
strife. There was a violent argument between the Iyal and the Tllihuh this
morning about it. It seems that the two planets had a thriving trade agreement
going, but now that each ship is facing the same hardships, the Iyal are less
reluctant to offer aid. I ended the argument by offering to assist the Tllihuh with
extra rations, but I wonder if I haven't opened a Pandora's box with my good
intentions.
"Bridge
to captain."
Janeway,
ensconced in her ready room stealing a
precious few
minutes of total privacy, sighed.
"Janeway here. Go ahead, Mr. Kim."
"I have
Leader Sinimar Arkathi on a channel. He demands to speak with you."
"I bet I
can guess what this will be about. Put him through." He was, she thought,
literally the last person in the entire universe she wanted to talk to right
now.
Arkathi's
froglike visage filled her screen. "Captain Janeway, I am appalled at
your unfairness."
"Don't
tell me, let me guess. This would be about the rations we gave the
Tllihuh."
"Exactly.
We have several times as many hungry people aboard the Relka. And mere are also the V'enah. They
can't work if they can't stand up."
Anger flooded
Janeway at the words he had chosen. Clearly he only thought of his own race as
"people." The V'enah were something else—something lower. She bit
back her retort. Much as she deplored the institution of slavery, it was not
the time or place to confront Arkathi with her views.
"The
Tllihuh had no food whatsoever, and without our assistance and the use of our
replicators to help them modify their shields and engines, their little ship
wouldn't have been able to keep up."
"Then
let them fall by the wayside!"
Janeway's
blue eyes narrowed. "Nobody falls
by the wayside on my watch, Arkathi. Not even you. It was my understanding that
you had sufficient foodstuffs available to you."
"For an
ordinary mission, yes. But we won't be able to replenish the V'enah. That means
we have to feed them more, treat their injuries, enable them to—"
For a moment,
Janeway's world went red. She held up a commanding hand and leaned forward
intently into her viewscreen. "I certainly hope I misunderstood you,
Leader Arkathi," she said, in a deceptively soft voice. "Do you mean
to tell me that on an ordinary mission, the V'enah typically die? That you
don't normally treat their injuries? What the hell do you do with them, let them lie where they fall and then
just beam the bodies into space at your convenience?"
She'd
intended the last sentence to be a horrendous overstatement, a ludicrous idea
rife with angry sarcasm. But when Arkathi did not reply, Janeway realized with
a frisson of horror that that was, indeed, precisely what the Todanians did.
"Oh my
God," she breathed, suddenly cold. "What kind of monsters—"
"You
asked us to join you, Janeway," hissed Arkathi. The sacs on his throat had
inflated. He rose and, as Janeway was doing, leaned into the viewscreen.
"We agreed. We thought you would help us, take care of us when we needed
it. Protect us. Instead, you insult a way of life that has worked for us for
centuries. You feed others, yet let my people go hungry. The V'enah are as much
a part of mis vessel as the engines, and while you happily replicate parts for
other ships you deny us even medicines."
"Arkathi,
please be silent." Stunned, he opened his mouth. "Listen to me. We
will feed your people if they are hungry, but only if we are allowed to board
your ship, distribute the food to everyone, and
watch them eat. We will treat the injured, provided we can do so on site or
that they beam aboard my ship and agree to have our doctor treat them in
sickbay. I'll
honor my part
of the bargain. I'll help you and your people, all
of them, survive No Man's Land." Again, he tried to interrupt
"No. I don't want to hear another word out of you. From here on in, any
problems you have, you take them up with Commander Tuvok."
Furious, she
switched off the viewscreen. Arkathi's ugly face disappeared. Breathing
heavily, her face flushed, she strode onto the bridge.
"Captain,
Leader Arkathi—" began Kim.
Janeway held
up a hand to Kim and addressed Tuvok. "Tuvok. I need that calm, rational
Vulcan manner of yours. I don't want to talk to Arkathi, not now, not in the
foreseeable future. I'd like you to manage nun for me."
Tuvok raised
an eyebrow. "Of course, Captain. Mr. Kim, open the channel."
Janeway
hastened back to the ready room before Tuvok could begin his conversation. She
wasn't altogether surprised when, a few seconds later, Chakotay entered.
"What's
happened now with our beloved Arkathi?" he asked.
The anger had
faded somewhat, but not the righteous outrage. Janeway leaned back in her
chair and sighed. "Same old song. But the treatment of the V'enah is worse
than I imagined. They feed them only enough to keep them going, Chakotay. They
don't 'waste' resources to heal them when they're injured. And when they die,
as of course they must, apparently they just beam the bodies into space and
pick up more. The V'enah are considered to be a disposable resource." The
scorn dripped from her words.
Chakotay said
nothing. A muscle tightened in his jaw, his handsome face reflecting her own
horror. He offered no solution. He knew, as did she, that there really was
none. And she was willing to bet that that thought rankled him every bit as
much as it did her.
"He
requested food and supplies," Janeway continued. "I told him that
we'd bring the food over ourselves, and make sure everybody got to eat it. And
if anyone's injured, they're to beam to our sickbay and the Doctor will tend to
them. I'll be damned if I give them supplies mat they hoard for use only on
Toda-nians. The V'enah have to be treated and fed too."
"Good
idea. I'll put Seven in charge of the away team."
"Seven?
I was thinking that Neelix would be the logical choice."
"Under
other conditions, I'd agree with you," Chakotay said. "But we're
hardly trying to strike up a friendly relationship with the Todanians. It
sounds like to me that you'd rather we concentrate on simply coexisting."
"You've
got that right," said Janeway. She rose and went to the replicator.
"Care for anything?"
"No,
thank you."
"Coffee,
black, hot." She indicated that he should continue while she sipped the
steaming beverage.
"Seven
has perhaps the closest comprehension of anyone aboard this ship of what it's
like to be a slave. Drones are little more than a step up from slaves—or a step
down, depending how you look at it. She's also a very keen observer and could
get us some information about their vessel and its crew, just in case we needed
it."
Janeway
thought about it for a moment. "All right. I'll leave assembling the away
team in your capable hands."
"I'll
get right on it," Chakotay said. He turned to leave and almost collided
with Tuvok.
"Captain,"
Tuvok said, stepping easily out of Chakotay's way, "I thought you might
like to examine my conversation with Sinimar Arkathi."
She wrinkled
her nose. "I wouldn't 'like' to have anything to do with Arkathi,"
she replied, even as she extended her hand for the padd.
"Perhaps
I should rephrase my statement. I thought you would need to know what
transpired during our conversation."
"Better,"
said Janeway, smiling. "Thanks, Tuvok." She heard the door hiss
closed. She took another sip of coffee to brace herself, leaned back in her
chair, and thumbed the controls.
Arkathi's
visage was every bit as ugly in miniature as it was in real life, and his voice
still grated.
"What...
I demand to speak with Janeway!"
Tuvok's calm
voice said, "Captain Janeway has left orders that you are to speak with me
in all future conversations. You may either do so now, or not."
The red sacs
inflated. "Very well." Janeway listened with half an ear to
Arkathi's demands, and Tuvok's reasoned responses. She agreed with her chief of
security on the amounts and types of food and care that would be provided, even
as she thought that all this extra replicating was going to put a strain on the
ship's resources. She'd hate to have to assign her own crew rations while the
Todanians feasted.
Her full
attention was seized a moment later. Arkathi, getting ready to sign off,
seemingly couldn't let the conversation end without a parting shot.
"Your
captain would do well to be more courteous, Commander."
"I have
no reason to disapprove of my captain's behavior," Tuvok replied.
"You
might regret those words."
"Explain."
"Let's
just say that your high-handedness is not winning you many friends among mis
caravan. You and I have clashed openly, but there are others who are brooding
in silence. You ought to watch your back, Tuvok. I'd be careful who I insulted
if I were you."
Part of her
wanted to dismiss this comment as more posturing by an arrogant, petty man.
There was every reason to believe that Arkathi was making this up out of whole
cloth.
But what if
he wasn't? What if he was right? Mentally, she reviewed the various crews who
had agreed to ally with her. The Hirogen, of course, were known enemies. There
was an iciness between the Nenlar and the ludka that could erupt into violence.
They could have been lying, too, both races. Perhaps the Nenlar weren't as
timid as they seemed, and perhaps the ludka had never really abandoned their
desire for conquest
There were
others, too, all of them unknown variables. She'd taken them on faith, and had
asked the same courtesy of them. Everyone was going on trust.
What if that
trust was misplaced?
She didn't
want to go down that path. She was angry and stressed and, at least today,
recognized
when she
needed a break. Returning the remaining portion of the coffee to the
replicator, she strode onto the bridge and clapped a hand on Chakotay's
shoulder.
"Stay
there," she said, preventing him from rising from the captain's chair.
"I'm going to sickbay."
Concern
furrowed his face. "Are you not feeling well?"
"I'm all
right. I just need some TLC therapy."
Now Chakotay
looked puzzled and amused. "I know the Doctor has greatly improved his
bedside manner, but I don't know that I'd go so far as to say he provides
tender, loving care."
"That's
not what it stands for," replied Janeway, grinning openly now. She headed
for the turbolift, turned, and said, "It stands for tender, loving
canine."
Janeway found
Fluffy/Barkley chewing on the Doctor's boot The hologram glanced up at her with
an expression of long-suffering annoyance.
"Good
morning, Captain." He rose and shook the animal loose from his boot.
Barkley/Fluffy, tail wagging, clearly thought this was part of the game and
joyously pounced on the boot again. "Is there something I can do for
you?"
"You can
let me take Fluffy off your hands—or at least your feet—for a while,"
Janeway replied.
His face lit
up. "With pleasure," he said, and stooped to pick up the offending
canine. "I suppose it's my own fault he's here," he said, scowling as
the animal wriggled in his embrace and ecstatically Ucked his face with a black
tongue. "Mr. Neelix wanted him in the mess hall, but I objected. A section
of the ship
where food is
being prepared is no place for an animal. I suggested that Neelix confine
Barkley to his quarters, but he got all upset Said Huffy—Barkley— whatever
we're calling him today—would get lonely, and that since I had forbidden him
from the mess hall, I could jolly well look after him in sickbay."
"And
Neelix was right," stated Janeway, gathering the dog into her arms. A wave
of affection washed over her. It had been so long since she had cradled a small
animal in her arms. It wasn't quite a dog, no, but it was close enough.
Barkley/Fluffy was warm, and affectionate, and Janeway felt a quiet joy steal
over her. Oh, she had missed this, the purity of the interaction between human
and mute beast. She was glad Neelix had protested her leaving Barkley/Fluffy on
the planet. He was right. The animal would have died. And she would not have
had this chance to experience the happy bond between them as she was doing
right now.
"Yes,
you're a good boy, aren't you?" she said to him. He wriggled with
pleasure, and she laughed. Looking up, she laughed again at the expression on
the Doctor's face. "You've never known the joys of pet ownership."
"On the
contrary," said the Doctor. "I've had two sets of boots ruined and
have had to clean up several messes."
"First
thing on the agenda, then," said Janeway, "is to get this little
fellow housebroken."
"Hallelujah,"
said the Doctor, dryly.
"Seriously,"
continued Janeway, strangely anxious to get the Doctor's approval of the
creature, "it's been documented that simply stroking a pet lowers human
blood pressure. Pets are very healthy."
"Then
why aren't they standard issue aboard a starship?" retorted the Doctor.
She gave him
a broad smile. "You know, I've no idea. Maybe it's something we need to
take up with Starfleet Command once we get home." Janeway winked.
"Come on, Flurry. Or Barkley. You've got some tricks to learn."
She allotted
herself twenty minutes to begin teaching Barkley/fluffy some basic obedience
commands. Janeway had trained many dogs over the years, but she was amazed at
how quickly this one picked up the instructions. By the end of twenty minutes,
he had mastered "sit," "stay," "come,"
"down," and "heel."
"What a
good dog!" she enthused, and Fluffy/ Barkley wriggled with pleasure. She
was on her knees, rubbing his belly enthusiastically while his tail thumped the
floor of the holodeck, when her combadge chirped.
"Chakotay
to Janeway."
She sighed. "What
is it, Commander? And please don't tell me it's our friend Arkathi again."
"No,
someone else. I hate to interrupt your tender, loving canine therapy, but I
think you'd better get up to the bridge."
She looked
down at Barkley/fluffy, who had frozen and was staring at her with those
enormous slitted eyes. It was as if he was afraid that if he moved, she
wouldn't resume petting him. Janeway gave his stomach a final rub, then stood
up. Immediately Barkley/Fluffy scrambled into a sitting position, awaiting
her next command.
"Very
well. Let me take my therapist back to sickbay and I'll be right there."
"I don't
understand it myself," Commander Ellia said, twining her first set of paws
together in what was clearly agitation. Her large, fawn-colored ears flapped.
"It's quite embarrassing. You've done so much for our ship, and you
haven't accepted anything in return. We really don't feel we can impose upon
you further, but...." She opened both sets of forelegs in a helpless
gesture. "We have to keep up with you. There's really nothing for it
Perhaps some of our delicacies? We know that you have a replicator and it's not
necessary, but we'd feel better if you take something."
Species like
the Salamar, with the polite, friendly Commander Ellia as their spokesperson,
were what kept Janeway from feeling complete cynicism on this strange mission.
They were a pleasant, advanced species, whose entire social structure centered
around the concept of fairness, balance, and equity. After her dealing with
Arkathi, such a race was almost a dream come true for Janeway. They had been
unwilling to accept, as a gift, the offer of Voyager's
protection and guidance at first. Finally, Janeway had talked them
into it, saying that she was certain there would come a time when a fair trade
would be negotiated. This had mollified Ellia somewhat, and until now, Janeway
had heard nothing more from the Umul.
But now,
Ellia had contacted Janeway and explained that, for some reason, the Umul was being drained of power. If it
continued, they would no longer be able to keep up with the caravan without
being towed.
"I'll
send my chief engineer and a team to take a look for you," Janeway
reassured the alien commander. "And yes, we will take any offers of food
you can provide. It seems that there are many in the caravan who are running
out of supplies, and I'm not sure we can replicate enough food for
everyone."
Ellia
wrinkled her long, flexible, black nose. "I'm relieved to hear that,
Captain. Not of course that there is a food shortage, but that you are finally
willing to accept a trade for your services. Your chief engineer will be a
welcome figure on our ship, believe me. Thank you."
"My
pleasure," said Janeway, and meant it. When the image of Ellia blinked
out, she wondered why everyone couldn't be as pleasant a traveling companion
as Ellia.
"Bridge
to engineering."
"Go
ahead, Captain," came Torres's voice.
"I know
you've got your hands full, but could you spare the time to take a look at the
Salamar ship? They're reporting an unknown power drain."
"You're
kidding."
"I'd
hardly joke about something so serious," said Janeway. "Why? What's
going on?"
"Well,
I've been talking to the chief engineers on some of the other ships, and two of
them have reported a similar problem."
Chakotay, who
had been listening quietly, offered, "That's not good."
It most
certainly wasn't. 'Torres, I want you to do a full level-one diagnostic on the
warp core and the engines. We can only help others if we make sure that we
ourselves aren't in trouble. After that, I want
you to take a
team over to the Umul and see if
you can't figure out what's going on."
"I'll
get right on it, Captain. Torres out."
"One
ship having a mysterious power drain is a problem, but it can be
remedied," said Chakotay. "But three ships, all completely different
in design, but all with the same problem—that can't be a coincidence."
"I'm
certain it's not," said Janeway. "We'll have to find out what these
three disparate ships have in common, besides going through a gateway."
"Maybe
they went through the same gateway," offered Chakotay.
"Or
perhaps," said Janeway, with growing unease, "simply going through a
gateway at all did the trick."
Chakotay
grimaced. "I don't like where that train of thought is heading."
"Neither
do I," said Janeway, "but we've got to investigate all
possibilities."
CHAPTER
S
seven of nine was irked. it was a term she had just learned from
the Doctor a short time ago, and she found it to be an apt one for describing
the nuances of this particular emotion. She was not upset enough to be
irritated, and certainly was not angry. "Vexed," another term to
which the Doctor had introduced her, might also apply. But she thought she'd
continue with "irked."
She was irked
because Chakotay had made it clear that they were not only to offer food and
medical aid to the Todanians and the V'enah, but were also to "keep an eye
out for anything that might be useful." Seven knew that Chakotay's
euphemism translated into "spy." She was to observe and report back.
But Sinimar Arkathi had preempted any reconnaissance she might attempt. He had
isolated Seven and the
Doctor in a
single large room, and told her that he would send in his crew in small groups.
Four guards stood beside the single door, holding weapons and looking menacing.
Seven had already thoroughly examined this room, and it was comparable to a
cargo bay aboard Voyager. She
would learn nothing helpful here.
She decided
to turn her attention to learning what she could about the Todanians and V'enah
instead. They prepared the rations; then Arkathi let his people enter in
groups of ten at a time.
"Please
line up in single file," Seven said. "You may approach the Doctor
first, and then I will give you your meal."
"One
meal?" cried Arkathi. "We have hungry people aboard this ship. I
expected at least a few days' worth of rations. Your captain is a stingy
woman."
Seven turned
to face him. "My captain fears that the Todanians will hoard the food and
supplies," she said bluntly. She saw no reason for politeness or
subterfuge. "She is worried that Todanians will be treated and fed, and
that the V'enah will not. The only way to ensure that all aboard your vessel
receive equal treatment is for us to feed and treat each individual, one at a
time." She turned to a stack of boxes.
Arkathi
stormed over to her. "You can't do this."
She
straightened and looked him directly in the eye. "It is either this way,
or no one aboard this ship will receive food or medical treatment. It is immaterial
to me which. I have duties aboard my ship. What do you wish?"
Janeway had
told Seven that when he became agitated, Arkathi had sacs on either side of
his neck that
inflated and
turned red. She watched, mildly interested in the phenomenon, as they did so
now. Without another word, he stalked out
"Good,"
said the Doctor. "It'll be easier without him hovering." He turned to
the first Todanian, who was shifting uneasily and glancing at the guards, and
smiled broadly. "No need to be worried. I'm just going to scan you to see
if you need medical treatment. I'll treat you here if I can, and if not, then
you get a special trip to Voyager's sickbay."
He scanned
the Todanian. "Mild dehydration," he said, to no one in particular.
He applied a hypo and admonished, "Keep drinking your water, good fellow,"
then turned to the next alien in line.
Seven handed
the Todanian a box. "I understand that your people eat only once in a
twenty-four-hour cycle. This contains sufficient rations for one full day. Sit
out of our way and consume it" She pointed to the far end of the large,
square room.
The Todanian
glared at her. She frowned. "Comply."
Muttering
under his breath, he did so. The next Todanian in line seemed much happier to
be there than either Arkathi or the first to receive treatment.
"You are
kind to help us," he said to the Doctor.
The Doctor
raised an eyebrow. Seven supposed that he, as she was, was surprised by the
polite words and tone of voice.
"You're
welcome," said the Doctor. "I'm sorry it's necessary to treat you like
you are hoarding thieves, but your captain has made behaving otherwise impossible."
The Todanian
seemed to want to say something more, but glanced over at the four guards and
was
silent Seven
handed him his rations. He nodded, hesitated, then walked over to join his
crewmate.
For the most
part, they were sullenly silent, though some appeared to be more personable
than others. No one rivaled his commander for outrage and arrogance, for which
Seven was grateful. The guards were bristlingly attentive at first, then gradually
seemed to grow bored. They lowered their weapons and began to talk among
themselves.
She was not
learning much, and she would have preferred to be at her post in astrometrics.
The caravan was traveling through dangerous territory. Seven knew she would be
of more use back on Voyager. Anyone
could perform the task here.
Finally, they
had gone through the Todanian crew. As the last few left, one of them turned.
"The V'enah will be sent in shortly," he said.
They were
left alone. The Doctor sighed. "Let me guess, Seven. You feel like your
time and unique talents are being wasted on this assignment."
"Correct,"
said Seven.
"So do
I. Anyone could administer these vitamin supplements and rehydration hypos. I
haven't even seen so much as a scratch on any of them. The Toda-nians are
almost obscenely healthy. Some of them," he added archly, "could
stand to skip a few meals."
Seven had had
enough. She touched her combadge. "Seven of Nine to Commander
Chakotay." She didn't want to talk to Janeway. Chakotay was the one who
had somehow decided that she would be right for this mission; Chakotay was the
one she'd complain to.
"This is
Chakotay. How's it going?"
"Inefficiently,"
Seven replied. "They have isolated
us in a cargo
bay and are sending the Todanians in for treatment and food. I request to be
relieved of this assignment."
"Me
too," said the Doctor.
"As does
the Doctor. There's nothing—"
The door
hissed open, the guards straightened, and Seven paused in midsentence, her
attention utterly seized.
Ten figures
entered the room. They did not stride in like the Todanians. They moved
stiffly, their eyes downcast. Some clutched their arms or sides. Others limped,
or were assisted by their companions. Through the skintight, torn, filthy
jumpsuits they wore, Seven could see ribs.
A woman
brought up their rear. At first glance, there was nothing extraordinary about
her. She stumbled in, her eyes on the floor, like all the rest. But for one
instant, while the guards' attention was diverted to others, her head came up
and her eyes met those of Seven evenly. And Seven of Nine, who had seen much
and learned more, felt as though a phaser blast had struck her.
The woman was
tall and almost painfully thin. Her hair was cropped close to her skull. It
looked like she had cut it herself. She was, as were all the V'enah, a peculiar
combination of muscles and wasted flesh. There was no fat to soften the angles
of her face and body, only knotted muscle, sinew, and bone.
Slaves. The
captain had told Seven that the V'enah were slaves of the Todanians. The word
had a companion in Seven's mind: drone. Except these people were cognizant of
everything they were being made to do. There was no pacifier to their
servitude,
no sense of
"serving the collective." They were individuals, were abused as
individuals, suffered as individuals. She did not know if the Todanians were
kind masters, but she could make an educated guess by looking at the gaunt
bodies, the haunted expressions, the scars and injuries on the pale purple
flesh.
A wave of
righteous anger swept through Seven's body as she continued to lock gazes with
the woman. A word popped into her brain, though she did not intentionally
summon it:
Sister.
Seven of Nine
had had no sister, no siblings at all. But she had educated herself on the
matter of family relations, and understood the concept. This woman, though they
had never met before and were not even of the same species, was closer kin to
Seven than the parents she dimly remembered. They were alike in their
suffering, and in their will to be unconquered.
At that
moment, Seven had two impulses. The first was to revert to her Borg
socialization, to impartially classify these people and coolly analyze their
plight. The second one surprised her, for it chased away that deep-seated
reaction and supplanted it with another, more human one: she realized that she
was going to do everything in her power to free these people. She recognized
the thought as illogical, impractical, and possibly insane. But it gripped her
with talons of steel and would not be denied.
"My
God," said the Doctor. "Doctor to Lieutenant Paris. If the captain
can spare you, I need you to report to sickbay immediately. Prepare to receive
several patients for treatment. Possibly emergency."
"Understood,
Doctor. Captain says I'm on my way."
The Doctor's
words broke the spell the woman's purple gaze had cast upon Seven. She inhaled
swiftly and realized that for the last several seconds she hadn't been
breathing. Her heart was racing and she recognized the stinging hi her eyes as
a passionate desire to weep. Remarkable. With deliberation, she placed the
mask of cool competence on her face. Her wailing and empathy would be of no use
to these people. Feeding them and healing their injuries would be.
"All of
you, sit down at once. Lie as still as possible until I have a chance to
ascertain the extent of your injuries," ordered the Doctor.
The V'enah,
almost as one, shrank from the briskness of his tone. As if on cue, the guards
marched up to the small group and closed in around them. One of them raised his
weapon and, before either Seven or the Doctor could react, slammed the butt of
it into a V'enah's shoulder.
"Drop,
vermin! You will obey orders!"
He raised the
weapon again, but this time, Seven was there. She interposed her body between
the guard and the cringing V'enah and, more quickly than the shocked guard
could react, struck his arm and pulled it behind his back. The weapon clattered
to the floor. At once, Seven released the guard.
"You
will cease injuring the V'enah," she ordered. "You will cease
interfering with the job we were sent to do and resume your posts at the
door."
The
unfortunate guard who had borne the brunt of her wrath rubbed his aching arm,
then retrieved his weapon. His companion snarled, "We don't take orders
from you."
"Then
our mission here is completed, and your captain will be ... irked."
Now the guard
looked uncomfortable. They exchanged glances, then, without another word,
stomped back to their original positions. They glowered, but Seven was not
ruffled. She returned her attention to the V'enah. The Doctor was already
treating the one who had been struck, and several of them looked to the one
woman who had so captivated Seven of Nine. She nodded.
"They
are here to help us," she said. Her voice was husky, both gentle and
strong at the same time, pitched just softly enough so that the guards would
not hear. "Do what they tell you to."
At her words,
they nodded and got to the floor. Some of them hissed in pain at the movements.
The Doctor literally tossed the medical tricorder to Seven of Nine while he
gathered his tools. Seven went straight to the woman who seemed to be their
leader and began to scan her.
A purple hand
closed on her arm. "No," said the woman. "There are others who
need your care first."
"You all
need our care," stated Seven, trying to keep her voice from trembling.
"They seem to listen to you. Tell me about them."
"There
is little to tell," said the woman as Seven scanned her. "We are the
V'enah. We are bred to be slaves to the Todanians. We are disposable."
Seven
recognized that the woman was trying to sound submissive, but failing. She
guessed that the woman did not have much interaction with the Todanians
personally, wherever she was stationed. They
would have
crushed that fiery rebellion inside her long before now, or else killed her in
the process.
"What is
your designation?"
"My
what?"
"Your
name."
"It is
of no consequence."
"What is
your name?" Seven repeated.
"Marisha,"
the woman replied. Then, almost shyly, "What is yours?"
"I am
Seven of Nine. It is a Borg designation."
"I do
not know the Borg. Not that we are permitted interaction with other species.
Only the personal slaves do that,"
Seven turned
toward the Doctor. "Minor dermal abrasions. One recent, severe burn on the
hand. It has been tended to, but inefficiently. Several old scars. Dehydration
and malnutrition, which will probably be standard among the V'enah. If you will
hand me the dermal regenerator, I can begin treatment."
The Doctor
did so, exchanging the regenerator for the medical tricorder. He bent down
beside one of the sicker V'enah and ran the tricorder over his body.
"Paris
to the Doctor. I'm in sickbay and ready to handle the patients."
"Excellent,"
said the Doctor. "I'm sending you four right now. I'll stay here and keep
tending the rest. And Mr. Paris?"
"Yeah,
Doc?"
"This is
only the first group."
A pause,
then, "Understood." The Doctor stepped back, and four of the most
seriously injured V'enah dematerialized.
Seven
returned her attention to Marisha. "Extend your hand."
Marisha did
so, bright purple eyes taking in everything. "Dermal regenerator,"
she said. "Dermal meaning skin, regenerator meaning re-create. Is that
correct?"
"Essentially,"
said Seven, running the warm red light over Marisha's swollen, injured hand and
taking a keen pleasure in watching the injury vanish.
Marisha gaped
openly. "This is ... this is amazing!" She touched her formerly
injured hand with the other one. "No more pain, no swelling...."
"This is
the least of our medical treatments," said Seven. "Rest assured that
your people will be well by the time they return to their posts."
"Posts,"
repeated Marisha. "As if we had posts as the Todanians do. We have
sections. We stay in that section until we die. Your treatments are welcome,
Seven of Nine, but they are only temporary. This hand will likely be burned
again by tomorrow."
Seven of Nine
swallowed, but continued treating Marisha. "What is your section?"
she asked, placing the first hypo on Marisha's long, pale purple throat and
pressing gently.
Over the hiss
of the hypo, Marisha replied, "Engineering. We operate the heavy
machinery. It is one of the more dangerous tasks aboard the ship."
Seven nodded
to herself. She had been correct. If it was a dangerous task, it would not be
likely that there would be many Todanians involved. Marisha indeed did not have
much day-to-day contact with her... her owners.
She wished to
continue conversing with Marisha,
but had
finished treating her. Reluctantly, Seven pointed the other woman toward the
large pile of boxed rations. "Each box contains a full day's rations, to
be consumed here, in our presence."
Marisha
studied Seven of Nine intently, then nodded. "I understand," she
said, softly. "You do not think the Todanians will give us the food if you
are not here to watch us eat it."
"Correct."
A sad smile
curved Marisha's full mouth. "You are right. They would save it for
themselves. I thank you." She took one of the boxes and sat down. After
opening it, she stared at the contents.
"Is
something wrong?" asked Seven.
"Nothing,"
said Marisha. "I... I have never seen so much food in my life. I hardly know
where to begin."
Seven raised
an eyebrow, even as she knelt beside another V'enah and administered a hypo for
rehy-dration. "Select a food item and eat it," she offered.
Marisha
laughed. It was deep and warm and rumbling. "I suppose you're
right."
"There
is not that much," said Seven, continuing to treat the other V'enah.
"According to our estimates, that is the standard amount of calories and
nutrients you should be consuming per day."
"We get
about a third of this," said the woman Seven was treating. Seven glanced
down at her. She was pretty, dressed in a flowing, attractive garment with her
long, dark purple hair piled decoratively atop her head. She was nowhere near
as gaunt or haggard-looking as most of her companions. "I get more.
Arkathi gives it to me and I steal what he does not eat off his plate."
"You
serve Arkathi?" asked Seven.
"I am
his personal servant. I am Kella." She bit her lip and looked down.
"I have not seen the others before now. I didn't know how badly... Are
you done?"
"Yes,"
Seven said, looking shrewdly at Kella. The serving girl rose, grabbed a box,
looked over apprehensively at the guards, and headed for a corner where she
could be alone to wolf down the food.
"Seven,"
said the Doctor, motioning her to attend him. She knelt by his side, utilizing
the dermal regenerator on a male V'enah who had severe lacerations on his
back. "Don't tell me, let me guess," he said, glancing up at Marisha,
who had followed Seven. "This gentleman misbehaved."
"I was
wrong," grunted the man. Seven stared at the wounds, barely crusted over
and oozing pus. They vanished beneath the warm, red light. Seven had never felt
so good about medical technology before, not even when she was the recipient
of its wonders. "I disobeyed...."
'Talyk, you
did nothing wrong!" Marisha knelt beside his head and touched his hair
gently. "You had never been in that part of the ship before and you were
following orders. It wasn't your fault you got lost"
'This man was
beaten because he took an incorrect turn in your ship?" Seven asked,
incredulous. Marisha nodded. "Your collective is unhealthy and dangerous.
You should leave it."
"Seven,"
cautioned the Doctor. "That's not our place."
"It is
not our place to stop a vicious injustice?"
Seven
demanded. "Slavery is a cruel, inhumane, and impractical institution. It
should be opposed whenever we encounter it I know you, Doctor, and I know that
you agree with me."
Marisha's
wide eyes were glued on Seven. Her breasts rose and fell with rapid, shallow
breathing.
The Doctor rose.
"Come with me," he said. Still raging inside, Seven complied. When
they were out of earshot of the Todanians, the Doctor hissed, "Of course I
abhor slavery! But that's not the point."
"Standing
up for what is right is not the point?"
"You are
twisting my words. You know exactly what I mean. This is not the time or place
to stage a revolution. We are traveling through a very treacherous part of
space. We have struck up an agreement that is tenuous at best with a species
that still doesn't trust us. Our job is to get everyone, including the Todanians,
safely through No Man's Land. And our immediate job is to provide care and food
for everyone, including the Todanians, aboard this ship. Is that clear?"
"Perfectly,"
she said, and she saw him flinch at the iciness of her tone.
"You are
free to make a detailed report to Captain Janeway. And we both know she'll
listen to what you have to say with a sympathetic ear. Maybe when this is all
over, we can help the V'enah with more than medical treatment and rations, but
for now, we have to remain calm. Don't fan the fires, Seven. Not now, not
yet."
They returned
to the V'enah. Seven did not trust herself to speak and turned away from
Marisha, ostensibly to aid the Doctor. But despite her feigned
nonchalance,
Seven was acutely aware of the other woman's presence, of the glowering,
hostile presence of the only temporarily cowed guards, of the timid,
well-treated Kella cowering alone in the corner, and of the unjustness of the
wounded whom they were treating; healing, only to be injured again.
CHAPTER 1O
torres was in heaven. well, as close to heaven as she was going
to get in this lifetime, anyway.
Neelix, bless
him, had come up with a brilliant idea. They had been only three days into the
territory called No Man's Land and things were already starting to get bad.
They lost that first ship, the Ammunii, just a couple of hours in, and that had
brought everything to a screeching halt. Another meeting was held, and the
fleet finally began to move on. They were stopped again almost immediately by
the unexpected violence of the first official obstacle, an asteroid belt
composed of asteroids so comparatively tiny and crowded together so densely
that some of the smaller vessels whose shields weren't as powerful as Voyager's would be at risk.
Torres was
itching to move more quickly, to put
this
treacherous area of space and its tensions behind them, but Janeway had stated
quite firmly that they could move no faster than the slowest vessels. And some
of those vessels were damn slow. What was worse, more and more of them seemed
to be experiencing the peculiar power drain. Torres was getting frustrated at
having to continue working on a puzzle she got no closer to solving.
Torres knew
in her gut that this couldn't continue. So when Neelix had made his brilliant
suggestion, she wanted to throw her arms around his stocky frame and kiss him.
"Why
don't we have an exchange program?" he had said his chipper voice.
"We could have some individuals from these other ships visit Voyager and learn about our technology and
cultures, and we could visit them. I'd love to have someone to swap recipes
with. I can't wait to share my secrets for making the perfect leola-root stew!" He had actually
rubbed his hands together in anticipation.
B'Elanna met
Tom's eyes, and saw her own excitement reflected there. At the same time, they
said, "Ask the captain."
He had asked,
she had (according to Neelix) agreed before he had even finished articulating
the idea, and things were being put in motion even as Torres lay beneath a
console, tinkering with a faulty connection. Apparently, the crews of the other
vessels were as screamingly bored as she was.
Yesterday was
the first exchange. Since the plan had been Neelix's idea, his request had been
the first granted. Six aliens, none of whom was familiar and all of whom were
unfailingly polite, had congre-
gated in the
mess hall to learn the mysteries of leola-root
stew, coffee substitutes, and yruss-and-broccoli. It seemed as though everyone
on board the ship needed a snack at one point during the day. Torres herself,
claiming a desire for some fresh fruit, had wandered in and had barely restrained
herself from laughing with delight.
Neelix looked
ecstatic, clad from head to toe in full chef's regalia. Staring at him
solemnly, almost wor-shipfully, were the six aliens. Three were humanoid, two
were bipedal but resembled birds and lizards more than humans, and one was a
small sphere that hovered by itself and occasionally extended a digit or two to
assist with the preparation of a chocolate souffle. Ironically, despite the
notorious difficulty of preparing a souffle from scratch and how poor his
cooking sometimes was, Neelix was always very good at this, and it never failed
to impress. Even as Torres watched, munching on an apple, Neelix drew the treat
out of the oven to a soft chorus of oohs and aahs.
She grinned
now at the memory, finished her task, and scooted out from under the console.
"Another hour and they'll be here," she said enthusiastically to
Yorik.
He favored
her with a brief glance, then returned to his padd. "We have been prepared
for them since 0700 hours," he said calmly. "There is nothing to
worry about."
"I'm not
worried, I'm excited," said Torres. "It's something to break the
tension. And it could be fun."
"I am
experiencing neither tension nor excitement, Lieutenant, as you well know. And
fun is irrelevant."
"Now
you're starting to sound like Seven," chided Torres. "You have to
admit, it will be a fascinating experience to have so many diverse races the
Federation has never before encountered on this ship, in engineering."
He paused and
considered the question seriously. "It will indeed be educational,"
he finally said.
Torres rolled
her eyes. Vulcans.
"Vulcans,"
sighed Janeway. Tuvok raised an eyebrow at her exasperation. "Why didn't
you mention this before?"
"I was
not aware of it before," said Tuvok, as if it was the most logical thing
in the world, which of course it was. "It was only this morning that the
Doctor informed me of Mr. Neelix's food-poisoning incident."
Janeway had
just returned from the Doctor. It had not been a pleasant encounter.
Apparently, chocolate was quite toxic to one of the races who had sampled the
souffle and the alien had almost died. They had sent a note to the Doctor, not
Janeway, and it was almost apologetic in tone. When Janeway read it, despite
the seriousness of me situation, she'd practically laughed out loud. The
Lamorians were most embarrassed, but they felt it necessary to report that one
of their number had taken a bit ill, well, almost died, truth be told, from
something in Mr. Neelix's delicious, exquisite souffle, and they felt that it
was incumbent on them to alert the Doctor to this fact, just in case some other
alien might have reacted similarly and might need treatment, though the
souffle
was most
wonderful and Mr. Neelix was obviously a man greatly skilled at his craft and
...
"Captain,
I'm simply mortified," said Neelix, and it was obvious from his expression
that he was not exaggerating. "I sent a list to all the ships with the
chemical composition of all the foods we'd be eating, and no one said a
thing!"
"Apparently
in Lamorian society, it is the host's duty to never serve anything
harmful," said the Doctor. "Though how one is expected to do that
when an alien's body chemistry is unfamiliar I'm sure I don't know. As far as
they were concerned, it was a terrible social blunder on our part and they
didn't want to cause us to lose face."
"I'd
rather lose face than be inadvertently responsible for a lost life," said
Janeway. "Let's hope they'll be a little more forthcoming in the
future."
And now,
Tuvok was standing in front of her insisting that they cancel the exchange
program. "It was a misunderstanding about food, Tuvok," said Janeway.
"It's unlikely to happen again. Everyone here knows the common language of
engineering or piloting—"
"Commander
Chakotay has offered to have a ritual ceremony," said Tuvok stubbornly.
"Suppose someone has a moral objection to an object utilized in the
ritual? Suppose Mr. Paris's friendly game of pool results in an injury?"
"Careful,
kid, you'll poke your eye out," muttered Paris from the conn.
"Tuvok,
those are culture clashes that happen every day," began Janeway, but Tuvok
wouldn't let it go.
"There
is also the very real risk of injury to mem-
bers of our
own crew aboard the alien vessels. I was uneasy with this idea to begin with,
but I understand ' the necessity for keeping morale high while traversing a
dangerous stretch of space, especially in the company of so many alien ships.
However, after the chocolate incident, it is my considered opinion that we
should terminate these programs at once."
"You're
an excellent security chief, Tuvok," Janeway said sincerely. "But
I'm the captain, and it is my considered
opinion that the good to be obtained from these exchanges far outweighs any
risk. This is an unprecedented opportunity to learn so much from so many races
in this comparatively short time, and I won't miss it. We'll proceed as
planned."
If Vulcans
could glower, Tuvok would have done so. Instead, he contented himself with a
raised eyebrow and returned to his post. He'd known her long enough to know
when argument was useless.
Word spreads
fast on a starship, and it wasn't long before everyone knew about the Chocolate
Incident, as it came to be called. Torres heard about it right before the doors
hissed open and an amazing collection of aliens poured into engineering. She
was certain mat at any minute her combadge was going to spring to life with
Janeway's voice ordering an immediate termination of the exchange program, or
else Tuvok and his security guards were going to burst in. Consequently, with
this weighing heavily on her mind, she didn't have as wonderful a time as she
had hoped. Nonetheless, by the time she'd escorted the group of seventeen
around engineering, had them try out a few things themselves, and
learned about
two entirely new ways of traversing space at faster-than-light speed, she was
still having a pretty darned good time.
It was about
then when one of the aliens bumped, struck, or otherwise accidentally managed
to rupture a plasma conduit.
"Who was
it?" Tom asked later, over chicken sandwiches and tomato soup.
"I never
did find out in the ensuing chaos," said Torres, biting savagely into the
sandwich. "Apparently the Kuluuk are extremely timid. A good scare can
literally kill them."
"I'd say
that a plasma conduit venting gas in an enclosed space is a good scare,"
said Tom.
"You're
telling me. Not only did we have to completely evacuate engineering, we had to
rush the Kuluuk to sickbay, their little green, furry faces all tight with
terror and their paws waving in the air—" She shuddered. "You wonder
how a species that vulnerable ever made it into space."
"So how
did they?"
Torres
shrugged. "I didn't pay that much attention to their bios. Something about
how they were the darlings of some incredibly tolerant empire who protected
them, sent them on non-dangerous missions for the good of the empire. Can't
blame that empire; they're cute little guys and very sweet-natured. Fortunately,
only two of their hearts had stopped, and the Doc was able to give them a sedative
that prevented them from going into a fatal shock. But it was close,
Tom."
"So,
we've got the Chocolate Incident and the
Warp Core
Near Catastrophe. Can't wait to see what will happen tomorrow."
"What's
tomorrow?" Torres spooned up a mouthful of soup.
"Piloting,"
said Tom. "My turn to have an incident."
Neelix had
stopped by to pour them each more coffee substitute. "I'd avoid another
incident if I were you," he said. "Mr. Vulcan is on the warpath. He's
just looking for a reason to cancel this exchange program." The Talaxian
sighed heavily. "I certainly did my share to jeopardize it."
"You've
got company," Torres offered reassuringly. "Don't blow it for
everyone else, Tom."
"Oh,
thanks. No pressure at all, is there?"
"Obstacle
number two," said Janeway, more to herself than Seven as they stood
together in astrometrics.
"Correct,"
said Seven, "out of approximately thirty-three, based on my present
calculations. That is not including the continued manifestations of the
gateways."
Janeway
hadn't needed to hear that "We'll take them one at a time." She
stepped forward, tapped the controls, and read the information. "Hmm.
Sounds like the Mutara Nebula. Just what we need with thirty-two ships in
tow."
"I am
not familiar with the Mutara Nebula."
"No, you
wouldn't be." Janeway gazed at the screen. There, the nebula was just an
icon of yellow swirls. In reality, it would be something much more beautiful,
mysterious—and dangerous. "Back in the twenty-third century, Admiral James
T. Kirk utilized the Mutara Nebula, one similar to this, but much
smaller, in
which to hide from the pursuer Khan Noonien Singh."
Seven
frowned. "From what I have learned of Admiral Kirk, he would not have
favored hiding as a tactic."
"He
would if it enabled him to get the jump on his adversary, which it did. For us,
though, it's nothing but an enormous headache. This class of nebula wreaks
havoc with the sensors. We won't be able to see past a few thousand meters, we
won't have shields or sensors or probably even standard lighting. Let's see if
we can't just go around it."
"Inadvisable.
The area is several million kilometers in diameter. Also, we would be
encountering the residue of the asteroid belt—"
"—which
already cost us at least one vessel," Janeway finished. She sighed,
heavily. "We can do it, but it's not going to be easy."
"I do
not believe we expected any part of this journey to be easy," Seven
reminded her.
"No, but
anything in the vicinity of slightly-less-than-almost-impossible would be quite
welcome along about now."
"Only
seventeen ships gave us sufficient details about their vessels for us to
determine if they can make it through safely," Torres grumbled at the senior
staff meeting a half hour later. "The rest still don't trust us enough."
"That's
regrettable," said Janeway, "but it's not altogether surprising.
It's an extremely unusual situation for all of us, and if the shoe was on the
other foot I'm not sure I'd give up important information
like that too
readily. We'll just have to give them the information we have about the nebula
and trust them to make the judgment. In the meantime, here's what we've
got."
She thumbed a
control and various statistics appeared on the screen. "There are a
couple of ships who might be technologically superior to Voyager. As Lieutenant Torres has said, we
don't know for certain. There are several ships that we know are comparable to
ours, and more than that which are inferior. These would be the smaller,
scout-type ships, by and large. The Nenlar vessel, for example. We know that
once we enter the nebula, all our bells and whistles won't make that much
difference. It's Voyager's bulk
and the experience of her crew that is going to be key. Since we're leading
this rather odd mission, we go through first."
She paused,
and looked at her officers. "Anyone ever traversed one of these
before?" No one replied. "Me either. But from what I understand,
we'll be flying blind. We'll have to go on impulse power for certain. We'll
have no sensors, no shields, no visual except for very short distances, and
it'll be erratic at that We might have a tractor beam, but it's iffy and it
would degrade the farther away the towed object is from the ship."
"I'm not
personally familiar with this type of nebula," said Chakotay, "but
from what I remember of the Badlands, I'm betting it's likely that it won't be
a straight shot through, either."
"Correct,"
said Seven. "Preliminary research and sensor findings indicate that there
are a variety of eddies and other phenomena within the nebula. It is
impossible to
chart a path through without actually experiencing it. It is also highly likely
that these eddies and rifts would be subject to extreme fluctuation."
"So
here's my plan," said Janeway. "Voyager
goes through first. The sensors won't work, we're fairly certain of
that. But it's likely we'll have some visual, though it'll be poor. How are
your eyes, Mr. Paris?"
"Been
eating my carrots, ma'am," Paris replied.
She smiled.
"Good. Because visual is going to be all we've got. We'll talk to the
captains of each ship and have them give me their best guess as to how far
they'll be able to see. Some won't be able to see at all. What we'll do is,
every few hundred kilometers, more often if need be, we'll drop a probe
modified to serve as a beacon. Torres tells me it should work. I understand
there are certain frequencies that can penetrate this nebula. We'll just have
to experiment until we find it. We'll leave the beacons at regular intervals,
more often around dangerous areas; then we'll have the ships go through one at
a time."
"I would
recommend having a predetermined order," said Tuvok. "And having each
ship depart at a precise time. We must proceed carefully and slowly. If even
one ship misses a buoy, or for any reason fails to navigate the course
properly, or succumbs to the power drain several ships are still experiencing,
we will have to perform a rescue mission."
"Which
will be like trying to find a needle in a haystack," said Kim morosely.
"We'll
do everything we can to avoid that, of course," said Janeway, "but I
want it understood that
that's a
possibility. No ship will be left behind, no matter what it takes."
About two
hours later, Janeway rubbed her temple. Tension headache. Again. The Doctor
would be quite vexed with her.
It had
sounded so easy, so logical, with her own staff in the briefing room. It made
perfect sense. But now that she was having to discuss it with each race, one by
one, all with their own opinions and problems, she was beginning to think it
would all have been so much easier had she simply gone around the nebula.
The Lamorians
had a religious problem. Nebulas were holy places to them. They never entered
them; it was where their gods dwelt Janeway had sent Chakotay over to their
ship to discuss it with them. If anyone, could convince them that their gods would
rather they pay them a visit than die lost in space, it was he. She hadn't
heard from him, but she hoped for the best.
The Nenlars
had objected to what, to them, amounted to "being alone in a dark room
with our deadliest enemies." The ludka had scornfully replied that if they
had any designs on the Nenlars, they'd have blasted their pathetic little ship
out of space long before now.
The Iyal were
more than willing, but only if they could lead. The Tllihuh also were amenable,
but they wanted to be able to determine the order. The Hirogen had agreed,
almost too quickly. Janeway didn't want to look a gift horse in the mouth, but
their quick acquiescence was bothering her. The Yumiri would go, but only
after some elaborate ritual involving honoring every crewman's ancestors to the
tenth degree.
Janeway suggested that they hop right on it.
And on and on
it went. Two ships flatly refused and departed. Janeway couldn't honestly say
she was sorry to see them go. The fewer voices there were raised in protest of
every decision she made, the easier it was.
Some of the
aliens had genuine complaints. One group's technology was so far behind that
the ionized gases of the nebula would stop it dead in its tracks. It wouldn't
be able to move at all under its own power. Fortunately, another ship agreed to
tow the smaller one, without any additional encouragement from Janeway at all.
Still others would be completely blinded and also require a tractor beam from
a larger, benevolent vessel.
At one point,
her combadge chirped. "Chakotay to bridge."
"Janeway
here. Go ahead."
"The
Lamorians have agreed to enter the nebula— on one condition."
"They've
got it."
"That I
stay on their ship for the duration of the trip."
Damn, Janeway thought. "For what
reason?"
"I
appear to have made quite an impression on them. They seem to think that I have
some kind of pull with their gods."
"Well, I
knew you had clout, Chakotay, but I never dreamed," said Janeway, fighting
back a smile.
"You
just remember that, Captain." She could hear the warmth of humor in his
own voice. "Seri-
ously, they
would be comforted if I joined them in a ritual that would continue through the
entire length of the journey."
"I don't
like the idea of you being away from Voyager
at such a critical time," Janeway said.
"Neither
do I, but I like even less the idea of the Lamorians staying behind."
So did his
captain. She thought about it, then sighed. "Very well."
"I'll be
returning for some supplies and my medicine bundle."
"We'll
talk then. Janeway out." No sooner had she finished than Kim said,
"It's the Todanians. Leader Arkathi has some suggestions for you."
I'll bet he does, Janeway thought. She closed
her eyes, gathering strength.
Finally,
after fifteen and a half hours of Janeway coaxing, cajoling, ordering, bullying,
compromising, and otherwise doing everything she could, the remaining thirty
ships in the caravan agreed to go through the nebula.
Voyager would do so without some of her crew.
Chakotay, of course, would be conducting a religious ceremony aboard the
Lamorian ship. Two other ships had expressed such terror at negotiating blindly
through the nebula that Janeway had sent her second- and third-shift conn
officers to their vessels. Interestingly enough, the Kuluuk, who might have
been expected to request aid, and who indeed had been offered it, had refused.
They seemed embarrassed by the incident in engineering, and wanted to navigate
the nebula on their own.
Paris, of
course, was going nowhere. She needed his expertise. Torres had sent Yorik and
Carey to two more ships, figuring that their engineering expertise would help
them handle any problems that might come up. Janeway realized that while Voyager would probably come through this
nebula with no trouble, some of these other ships on which her crew would be
temporarily serving might not fare as well. But it was the best way to ensure
that everyone made it through safely.
Finally, the
time arrived. She settled down in her command chair, purposefully ignoring the
empty chair to her left For a moment, she treated herself to the luxury of
simply admiring the nebula's beauty: swirls of soft blue and purple, twining
mists of color, enlivened by the occasional flash. Deceptively attractive.
"Engage,"
she said. "One-half impulse."
"Aye,
Captain," Paris said, with more than his usual formality.
Slowly, the
ship glided forward. For a moment, nothing happened, and they could see on the
screen the lovely colors closing softly about their ship.
The lights
began to flash erratically, then went out. Janeway didn't have to order the
emergency lights. The bloodred lights came on automatically, bathing everyone
and everything in an eerie crimson glow. "Status."
'Tactical is
down," said Tuvok.
"Intership
operations sporadic, but continuing for the moment," said Kim.
"Shields are down. Sensors are inoperative."
"Helm
responding," said Paris.
"Astrometrics
will not be of use, Captain," came Seven's voice.
The image of
swirling blue and purple on the screen flickered. They would lose visual soon.
"Tuvok,
launch the first buoy," Janeway ordered.
"Launching."
They all watched in silence as the small, circular probe hurtled out, spun,
then stopped. "Engineering, engage frequency."
Janeway
didn't quite hold her breath, but she breathed shallowly. This would be the
determining factor. If she was wrong, if there was no frequency that could be
heard through the swirls of ion gases, then the idea would not be feasible.
They'd have to either find some other way to get all these ships safely
through, or else abandon the plan and take the lengthy, dangerous trip around
the nebula.
And there it
was. A soft hum, barely audible, but there. "Paris, back us away.
Slowly."
He did so.
The crisp, clear image on the screen grew fuzzy and was broken up by black and
white, screeching static. Finally, they could see nothing but static on the
screen. The sound increased, but through it all, Janeway could still hear the
reassuring hum of the probe.
"Distance?"
she asked.
'Twenty
kilometers," Kim counted. "A hundred. Two hundred. Five
hundred."
"It's
still audible, even to the naked human ear," said Paris.
"One
thousand," Kim continued. "Two thousand." Now it was becoming
increasingly hard to hear the frequency of the probe. "Three
thousand."
"And
there it goes," said Paris. "We've lost the signal lock."
"I can't
hear it anymore, either," said Janeway. The sound was lost in the static.
"I
can," said Tuvok. Janeway glanced over at him, suppressing a smile. She'd
not make so obvious a joke at his expense.
"Let's
opt for fifteen hundred," said Janeway. "Not all ears may be as sharp
as Commander Tuvok's." Nor will all the
technology be up to Voyager' s
level, she thought. "All right, Tom. Let's keep going."
CHAPTER 11
chakotay watted on the bridge with ophar, daughter of
Willar, son of Tymu, and her crew. The only reason there was a floor and walls
was because a ship of necessity had to have such things. Various consoles were
located literally everywhere, on the floor, as on Voyager, on the walls, on the ceiling. The Lamorians had
very kindly adjusted their gravity to accommodate him, though, had the positive
outcome of the situation depended on it, Chakotay would have been willing to
wait the entire time in zero g.
The Lamorians
were small, hovering spheres with retractable tentacles. They were also
excruciatingly polite and filled with a love and respect for ritual that
bordered on the obsessive. They were the ones who had almost lost a
crewman—crewthing?—to Neelix's chocolate souffl6. Chakotay found himself
growing quite
fond of them. Though they were extremely rigid among themselves about their
rituals, they understood that not every species behaved the same way and were
quite tolerant of the dozen or so faux pas he'd managed to make already.
They were the
twenty-first ship to go through. Janeway had kept the ships that were playing
host to her crewmen far down on the list, so that they could offer their advice
to as many as possible before the ships to which they were temporarily assigned
passed through the nebula.
The
viewscreen took up almost all the space on the floor (of course, to the
Lamorians, "floor" was a variable concept). Chakotay found it a bit
disturbing to be walking on a window, but he now sat down and watched with the
others as ship after ship lined up.
First to go
through after Voyager would be
the Nenlar ship. It would be a good test. It was a smaller vessel, and not
nearly as well equipped to navigate the nebula as Voyager. The Nenlars would be close enough to Voyager to call for help should they find
any problems. He watched as the little ship disappeared into the swirling
mists of blue and purple.
Next were the
Iyal, then the Tllihuh, then... which one was that? It was getting so hard to
keep track of all these different ships. He marveled that Janeway did it so
easily. Though she had played down her accomplishments, Chakotay knew that she
was performing as well as any formal ambassador could have.
Suddenly
Chakotay frowned. Four—no, five—no, eight—ships were breaking rank. They moved
upward, jumping their place in line.
"May I
use your communications systems?" asked Chakotay.
Ophar flicked
a tentacle and a red light went on in the ceiling. 'This is Commander Chakotay,
first officer of Voyager. I'm
presently assigned to the La-morian vessel. What's going on? Return to your
positions in the line at once."
A crackle,
and then the ominous visage of the Hirogen Alpha appeared, filling the entire
floor of the Lamorian ship.
"Commander
Chakotay," he said, scornfully. "This is ridiculous. Our ship is
practically the last one to venture through."
"That
was so you could assist any vessel that you found in trouble. You said you'd be
willing to help."
The Alpha
waved a hand in a gesture of impatience. "Several ships have already gone
through. We are tired of waiting—tired of constantly taking a backseat to
prey." Abruptly the conversation was terminated as the Rhev zipped past six other ships and
disappeared into the nebula.
Chakotay
recognized the ludka vessel and. swore under his breath. The assembled
Lamorians emitted a high-pitched whistle of offense, but he couldn't take the
time to soothe their riled emotions now.
"Chakotay
to Nivvika. Cease your
advance." Even as he spoke, he saw the Relka
dip and dive past the waiting ships. Trust Sinimar Arkathi to buck
the rules. The ludka ship did not answer, and a second later it was gone.
"Make
them stop!" bleated Ophar. "They are not following the rules! They
are creating disorder!"
"You're
telling me," muttered Chakotay. "Please,
everyone,
this nebula is dangerous. You need to go one at a time and follow the buoys.
There is a chance that without this order someone will get lost or there will
be a collision, or..."
He let his
voice trail off. It was hopeless. There were now a couple of dozen ships that
had abandoned their places in line and were rushing forward, crowding one
another in their haste to leap into the nebula. He supposed he should count himself
lucky that no one had opened fire on his neighbor. There was no way to let Voyager know of the chaos; the ion gases
that interfered with communication while in the nebula made that impossible
while they were separated by its swirls. Finally, after about fifteen minutes,
things settled down. Those who had wanted to forge ahead and ignore the order
that Janeway had spent hours hashing out with everyone involved had done so and
were gone. The ships that remained behind, only a handful or so, closed up the
gaps in then- lines and waited for his command.
"Chakotay
to Kuluuk vessel Eru."
The face of
Tarna, leader of the Kuluuk, filled the viewscreen. "Responding,
Commander." Tarna's paws were fluttering about, now touching its round
face, now patting the arms of the chair. Its face was changing from its normal
cherry-red hue to green. A bad sign.
"You've
distributed the tranquilizer our doctor manufactured for you?" Chakotay
asked.
"Yes,"
replied Tarna. "But all those ships rushing past—terrifying!"
"They
weren't going to hurt you," Chakotay
soothed.
"They were just impatient to get going. They were more rude than
hostile."
The Kuluuk
leader blinked solemnly. "Rudeness is hostility."
Chakotay
laughed. "Can't argue that one. Still, you're up next. Are you ready to
go?"
Tarna took a
deep, shuddering breath. The green started to fade. "I think so."
'Take as long
as you like. Follow the buoys."
Suddenly the
leader's face turned green. "What if Captain Janeway forgot to set the
buoys?"
"Impossible."
"What if
we can't find them? If we get lost? If the power drain happens again? If
we—"
"You'll
be fine. There will be ships ahead of you and ships behind you. They will all
be willing to help you if you run into any trouble. And if for some reason you
do get lost, I promise Voyager will
return to you."
They reminded
him of teddy bears, though there was not much physical resemblance. It was the
large eyes and the trusting expression combined with fear, Chakotay supposed.
Finally Tarna nodded.
"We will
go through now," it said in a voice that quavered.
"You are
very brave," said Chakotay, and he meant it.
The enormous
visage of the Kuluuk commander disappeared. Chakotay watched with satisfaction
as the Eru slowly edged toward
the nebula, paused for a moment, then went inside.
One more ship
moved forward, entered the nebula. "We're next," said Chakotay.
Ophar chirped a
command and
the ship made its way to the edge of the nebula.
"I alone
will pilot the vessel," said Ophar. "Chakotay, son of Kolopak, it is
time for you to begin. The rest of my crew will join you."
Chakotay
nodded. Ophar floated upward. Eight tentacles emerged from her round body and
reached to manipulate the controls. She would be fine by herself. Following the
buoys would be child's play for this vessel. Chakotay was more concerned about
smaller, less technologically advanced ships. They were the ones more likely to
miss the buoys, or get caught up in the eddies of the nebula. Still, there was
a duty he had to perform, and despite the gnawing doubts at the back of his
mind, he was looking forward to it.
Five minutes
later, he was seated in a huge, domed room. It was entirely composed of clear
material, so he felt as though he were floating in space. It was a bit
unsettling. He hurried to sit, to feel the solidness of matter beneath his
buttocks and thighs.
There were
hundreds of them, some up near what passed for the ceiling, some clinging to
the "walls," others nestled right beside him. Obeying the impulse,
and knowing he would be immediately forgiven if he transgressed, Chakotay
reached to touch one of them. Its skin was smooth and cool, like that of the
dolphins he had touched back on Earth. It did not shy away. Rather it snuggled
closer to him and made a soft, sweet, cooing noise. Who would have thought it?
With all their precise decorum, touching, perhaps the most intimate of
contacts, was not only accepted, but welcomed.
Carefully,
Chakotay spread out his medicine bun-
dle. It had
been a long time since he had last done so. He picked up each item and
identified it for the -intently listening Lamorians.
"A
blackbird's wing," he said. "A stone from the river. The akoonah, a way to enter an altered state
safely, without dangerous drugs. Although today, we do not wish to enter that
state, but to be aware, alert, ready to honor the gods of the Lamorians."
He had
perfect timing. At that precise moment, the soft swirls of blue and purple
closed hi around them. The Lamorians made soft, sighing noises, and, as one,
all retracted their tentacles and became simply hovering orbs.
"We are
in the presence of the gods," breathed the orb Chakotay had been stroking.
"We are surrounded by the divine."
"Let us
ask for then: blessings in guiding us safely through their realm," said
Chakotay, with the utmost solemnity, and began.
We should wait until they are all gone, thought One Who Is Second.
The chance of them detecting us is strong if
we enter alongside them.
One Who
Masters Technology gave the mental equivalent of a snort of derision. Their sensors will be rendered useless, it
sent. You heard the One Who Is Janeway.
There is only a limited visual range for the other vessels. We could pass right
by them and not be detected. We could do that now, if we wanted to.
But there is no point in tempting fate, cautioned One Who Braves
Strangers. Even it, experienced as it was with interacting with other species,
did not
like to
invite such contact. And if they were detected, all would be lost.
One Who Is
Leader sat and "listened" quietly. It would reserve judgment until
all thoughts were aired. Privately, it had its own opinion, but among his
people, a good Leader was one who did what the majority wanted as often as it
could.
And if, Masters Technology, Second continued, their sensors are so impaired by the ion gases of
this nebula, what will happen to ours? Who is to say that once we enter that
nebula, we will not become suddenly visible to them?
Masters
Technology's thoughts were almost fragrant with scorn. It won't happen. The ion gas does not affect things
in that manner. The worst that could happen would be that we, too, would have
to be navigating blindly. And if that is so, then—
Then we could collide with another ship! Leader winced at
the intensity of Second's thoughts. We could
become forever lost!
What would you have us do? Masters Technology shot back. If we wait until they are all through, the buoys
might be gone. Our chances of getting lost would significantly increase. And
what if the caravan has gone by the time we make it through? We might not be
able to pick up their trail again. And then we would be on our own. Is that
your desire, Second?
Enough, sent Leader calmly. / have received all input, acknowledged all views. I
believe Masters Technology is correct. We should shadow a ship on the caravan.
With respect, Leader, thought Second, although there was little
respect in the flavor of his thoughts,
you have seen the chaos that occurred earlier, when they all crowded
one another in their primitive eagerness to cross the nebula. I might have
agreed had they all not deviated from One Who Is Janeway's instructions, but
now, their actions are unpredictable. They are dangerous.
Second, I have made my decision. We will proceed. Masters Technology,
shadow a ship that has displayed calmness in this confusion. Pick a large,
technologically advanced vessel.
A ship with advanced technology is more likely to detect us, cautioned Braves
Strangers.
True, acknowledged Leader. But it is also less likely to become lost, and its
size will enable us to track it more easily.
Masters
Technology pulled up several ships on the viewscreen. One Who Is Janeway assigned her One Who Is Second to
this vessel here, it sent, indicating a large ship. It is just about to enter the nebula. It fits your
criteria, Leader, plus it has one of the humans on it.
An excellent choice, approved Leader. Let us become its shadow.
Slowly,
carefully, leaving as much space as possible between their vessel and those of
the strangers, they maneuvered into position slightly above and behind the
designated vessel.
It took Voyager four hours, sometimes dropping to
quarter impulse, to negotiate their way through the nebula. It was trickier
than they had expected, and more than once they got mired in an unexpected
eddy.
"Just
call me Hansel," said Paris, as they dropped the twelfth buoy.
"Let's
hope our bread crumbs stay in place," said Janeway, feigning a humor she
did not feel. She knew they would get through all right. But what about the
little ships? The short-range vessels, the ones with less advanced technology?
That was where cooperation between the vessels that composed this
cobbled-together fleet was of the utmost importance. If they all looked out for
one another, then they all would get through.
Then she
thought of the anger of Sinimar Arkathi, of the terror the Nenlar had for the
ludka, of the faces of the now-dead Ammunii, and despair knifed through her.
Dear God, who am I kidding? she thought. If we get through this without a war in miniature, we'll be lucky.
Another two
hours and fourteen buoys later, and the ion bombardment began to decrease.
"We're
coming out of it," said Kim.
"About
time," said Paris.
"We have
left a total of twenty-six buoys," Tuvok said. "That should leave an
easily navigable trail."
"Let's
hope you're right," said Janeway. "Now all we do is sit and wait. The
Nenlars should be appearing at any moment."
But they
didn't.
Voyager waited. And waited.
CHAPTER 12
the nenlars had been right behind them. they had been close
enough to have signaled for aid if they were on the verge of getting lost in
the nebula swirls. Yet Voyager had
heard nothing.
When the
two-man vessel finally emerged,'seeming even tinier than Janeway had
remembered it, she let out a sigh of relief.
"Voyager to Torar and Ara. You two gave us a bit of
a scare."
"We had
some scares ourselves, Captain," came Torar's voice. It was laden with
tension. "We lost you shortly after the third buoy."
Janeway
nodded to herself. That had been one of the trickier ones to negotiate.
"But you found the path back," she said reassuringly. "Well
done. Let's hope those who followed you did as good a job."
About twenty
minutes later, the Iyal came through. They had not had the problems the Nenlars
had had; in fact, they had had no problems at all. Janeway wasn't surprised.
The Iyal vessel was comparable to Voyager.
One by one,
at approximately half-hour intervals, ships emerged. Janeway was just beginning
to permit herself to think they'd make it through this with no problems when
the next half-hour interval turned into an hour. Then an hour and a half. Then
two hours.
Paris turned
to face his captain from his seat at the conn. "With your permission,
Captain," he said, "Ensign Kim and I could take the Delta Flyer and begin searching for the
lost ships."
Her eyes on
the screen, Janeway shook her head. "Not yet, Mr. Paris. Let's give them a
little more time." If only there were
some way to communicate with Chakotay, on the other side of the nebula, she
thought He'd be able to tell her if there was anything to worry about It could
simply be that the next ship in line was having trouble. That inexplicable
energy drain could have struck yet another vessel, and since Janeway had
insisted that they proceed in strict order, one ship with problems could delay
the whole process.
She had
almost convinced herself that that was the case when all of a sudden several
ships seemed to explode from the nebula all at once. Heading the pack was the
Hirogen ship, but hard on their heels were the ludka and the Todanian ships.
More came out flying so closely they almost touched. Janeway spotted fresh
damage on more than one vessel and cursed softly. As she had feared, not going
in order
had led more
than a few vessels to collide in the density of the nebula.
Before, she
had hailed each ship, and received a calm answer in reply. Now, several ships
tried to hail her at once.
"Captain
Janeway! The Yumiri ship deliberately crashed into our—"
"Captain,
I insist you reprimand the Hirogen. They—"
"We
tried to follow the buoys, but they were—"
By now, poor
Kim was used to this, and managed to isolate the messages. First was the
Salamar. Janeway was surprised at such agitation from Ellia, normally so
balanced and rational. When Kim got her image onscreen, her ears were
completely flat against her sleek head.
"It was
deliberate!" Ellia repeated. "We insist mat we be compensated for the
damage to our ship. Surely you can see it!"
Janeway
could. While she spoke, she signaled to Kim to get the Yumiri captain. "I
do see it, Commander, but I'm certain it was an accident With that many ships
going through all at once"—and even as she spoke, about fifteen more ships
emerged—"this was bound to happen. I've got the Yumiri captain and I'll
patch him through to you. Janeway out" She jerked her head in Harry's
direction. "Next Mr. Kim."
"The
buoys were scattered." It was the deep voice of the Hirogen Alpha. As he
materialized on the screen, Janeway could see the contempt on his ugly face.
"There were several places where mere were no buoys at all and we had to
use our own best judgment. Fortunately," and his voice dripped scorn,
"it
was
sufficient. Your plan is in shambles, Captain Janeway."
Janeway
narrowed her blue eyes, but didn't bother to rise. She wouldn't give him the
satisfaction. "I have a hunch that your vessel was one of the first to
break formation, Alpha. And by doing so, you jeopardized the entire process.
Of course the buoys got scattered. Some three dozen ships coming through all at
once? No one could have expected anything else. I've already seen damage to
several vessels. Fortunately, so far, it looks like everyone's managed to limp
out on their own after you and those who emulated you ruined the plan. Janeway
out."
"Captain,"
said Tuvok, "we are not at all certain that the Hirogen were the first to
break formation."
"Call it
a gut feeling, Tuvok, but I'm betting that Chakotay will confirm it If they
weren't the first, I am at least dead certain they were right behind the first.
It's not in the Hirogen nature to take commands from prey, especially if they
disagree."
"Captain,"
said Kim, "I've got Arkathi waiting. He claims that the ludka harassed
them in the nebula, even tried to board."
"Let
Arkathi wait until everyone else is accounted for," said Janeway. Time
enough to deal with her major annoyance when she knew for certain they wouldn't
have to perform any rescue missions.
She felt a
surge of relief when all the vessels with her crew aboard came through all
right, and an extra jolt of pleasure when she saw the Lamorian ship.
"Chakotay
to Janeway," came the familiar voice. "I see you have already guessed
that several ships failed to follow instructions." His face appeared on
the
viewscreen. Several dozen of the spherical Lamorians hovered around him.
"Indeed,"
said Janeway dryly. "We're lucky that we haven't lost anyone so far."
She stepped down toward the viewscreen. "Settle a bet between me and
Tuvok," she continued, fighting a smile. "Was it the Hirogen who got
fed up with waiting first?"
"You
win, Captain. It certainly was. But Arkathi and the ludka weren't far
behind." He frowned. "We're still missing a few, aren't we?"
Janeway
nodded. "The aforementioned ludka and the Kuluuk, among others. By the
way, how did our little green friends fare?"
"For
them, with great courage," Chakotay said with respect. "I think if
they ever do return home, they're going to bring a new spirit of adventure and
bravery to their people."
"Let's
hope their emperor can see the value in that," said Janeway.
As she spoke,
the ludka vessel cleared the nebula. At once, Kelmar's voice came through loud
and clear at Kim's station.
"Captain
Janeway, I wish to formally report an attack by the Nenlar upon our
vessel."
"Kelmar,
you're not the first to assume that an accidental brushing in the thick of
that nebula constituted an attack," said Janeway. "We've already had
several—"
"I know
what we saw, Captain! I demand that you hold an inquiry into this
immediately!"
"You'll
have to take your place in line," said Janeway wearily. All this sniping,
argument, unco-operation. Why was it necessary? The Nenlar and
the ludka
aside, most of these races didn't even know one another. Why was everyone so
quick to assume the worst?
"Captain,
I—"
"Your
complaint will be heard, Kelmar, but not until everyone is present and
accounted for. We're still waiting for a few stragglers. That tops my list.
Janeway out"
"I'm
beginning to hope that we will have to take the Flyer into the nebula in search of stragglers," said
Paris. "It would be better than trying to wade through all this
finger-pointing."
"I'll
always prefer verbal violence over actual violence, Mr. Paris," said
Janeway, "but your point is well taken. Actively doing good beats
listening to squabbling any day."
Hours passed.
Six more ships straggled out, but there was no sign of the Kuluuk. Finally,
Janeway sighed. She turned to Chakotay, who had beamed aboard from the Lamorian
vessel.
"You saw
them last," she said. "What do you think?"
"They
were frightened, of course," Chakotay replied, "but I didn't think
there'd be all that much in there to really alarm them. They were prepared for
perhaps drifting off course, or missing the buoys, and I told them help would
be available from anyone in the caravan. They had administered the
tranquil-izer the Doctor had given them. I think if they haven't found their
way out by now they may be in real trouble. Tarna did mention that his was one
of the vessels that had been having a problem with power drains."
"Agreed.
Mr. Paris, you and Mr. Kim are up. Take the Flyer
and retrace the route." She knew that there was a very real
chance that the small vessel might get lost, but Kim and Paris were two of the
best. The Kuluuk needed to be rescued, and the Flyer,
manned by these two, was their best hope.
"Yes,
ma'am," said Paris. He and Kim headed quickly for the turbolift.
Godspeed, Janeway thought, but did not say.
For all his
jaunty attitude, Paris wasn't overly keen about venturing back into the nebula.
It was a very real risk they were taking, and though he was confident in his
and Kim's skills, he was still a little nervous as the swirling haze of blue
and purple closed in about them.
"It's
probably nothing," said Kim. "Knowing the ludka, they got scared and
passed out"
"I wish
there had been some other way to get them through this."
"You
heard Commander Chakotay. He said they were feeling up to the challenge."
For a long
time, they flew slowly through the colorful whorls. They passed the first three
probes, which were in their appointed places.
"Where's
the fourth?" Kim asked.
"Gone,"
said Paris. And so was the fifth, and the sixth, and the seventh. The eighth
was still there, but wildly off course. Paris swore under his breath. "No
wonder people were so edgy when they finally made it through. This looks like
we were incredibly sloppy."
"We
weren't," protested Kim.
"Of
course we weren't. We know that. But if you
were a ship
following us, what would you be thinking along about now?"
Kim opened
his mouth to reply, paused, then said, smiling a little, "That we were
incredibly sloppy."
At that
moment, the static on the viewscreen cleared suddenly. Paris had to veer hard
to port to avoid flying directly into the Kuluuk ship.
There it was,
hanging at an awkward angle, dead in space. Paris swore softly. Well, at least
it wasn't an enormous vessel. At best, the Flyer's
tractor beam could manage it alone. If the tractor beam didn't have
to extend for a long distance, it should work all right. At worst, he could
find them again, leading Voyager straight
to the ship.
Paris brought
the vessel close to the Eru's bridge.
The closer they could get to the communications systems, the more likely they'd
be to hear any distress calls.
"Delta Flyer to the Eru.
Come in, Era."
Static
screeched, then silence. Tom frowned. He was flying right above the ship. Even
in the nebula, with this kind of proximity to the bridge, he ought to be
hearing something.
He tried
again, but was again met only with static, then silence.
"This
isn't good," said Harry.
"Can you
clean up the channel?"
"That's
what I'm trying to do," Harry replied, his fingers flying over the
controls. He shook his dark head. "Sorry. It's as clear as we're going to
get it, Tom. They simply aren't responding."
"The
captain was afraid of this," said Paris. "Those Kuluuk. Navigating
this thing probably
scared them
senseless. I bet they're cowering in a corner somewhere and—"
He froze in
midsentence. B'Elanna's words in the mess hall floated back to him: Apparently the Kuluuk are extremely timid. A good
scare can literally kill them.
"Oh,
no," he breathed. "Harry, can we scan for life-forms?"
"Only
within a twenty-meter radius. You think something's happened?"
"I hope
not." He waited impatiently while Kun tried to reconfigure the sensors.
Finally, Kim shook his dark head.
"No
luck."
Paris swore.
"Any way we can transport to that ship?"
"Not
while we're in the nebula," said Kim. "Why?"
"We've
got to board it. I think there's something wrong. You've heard the phrase 'scared
to death'? Well, with the Kuluuk, that's a very real possibility."
"You're
kidding." Tom looked at him. "You're not kidding. I knew they were
timid, but—okay." He leaned back in his chair, thinking. A second later,
he bolted upright. "The pattern enhancers. If we can attach ourselves to
the ship, we might be able to transport the enhancers one at a time into it.
We can activate them from here and it might be enough to transport one of us
safely."
"That'd
be me," said Paris, already rising and getting out three of the tripod
enhancers. Thank goodness they were standard equipment on every shuttle.
'Tom, if
there's any danger, I'm more expendable than Voyager's
best pilot. Especially now, with this convoy to lead."
"Don't
even try it, Harry. You're much better at this transport reconfiguration mumbo
jumbo than I am, and besides, I'm heading this mission, remember?"
Kim didn't
start working on the transporter immediately. "It's very risky."
"Then
you'd better make sure I come home in one piece. I'd hate to think of what
B'Elanna would do to you if you lost me." He winked. Reluctantly, Harry
turned back to the transporter.
"Okay,
let's give it a whirl," said Kim. He touched a padd and the familiar hum
of the transporter filled the shuttle. The first pattern enhancer shimmered and
began to fade out. It reappeared, faded, reappeared, and finally faded for a
final time. Kim repeated the transport twice more, honing the frequency each
time.
"Well,"
said Tom, "that was not the most reassuring thing I've ever seen. How are
they doing?"
"They've
materialized aboard the Kuluuk ship. They appear to be stable. Cross your
fingers while I activate them." Paris waited, tense, then Kim said,
"They're on." He turned to look at Paris. "We've got a
transporter energy spike. You're good to go." He hesitated, then said,
"Good luck, Tom."
"You
watch that thing and make sure I don't end up as scattered molecules, all
right?" Paris said with a humor he didn't feel.
Kim managed a
wan smile. "Can't lose Captain Proton."
"Damn
right. Okay, let's do it."
Paris
materialized in a large, brightly lit room decorated with colorful
furnishings. He guessed it was some kind of meeting room, though it was empty
at the moment. He glanced at the little red chairs and blue tables, and felt
for a moment like Gulliver among the Lilliputians, or a guest at one of the tea
parties Naomi Wildman used to host when she was younger.
"Paris
to Kim. Can you hear me?"
"You're
breaking ... static ... can hear you." Kim's voice was barely audible amid
the screech of static, but it was there.
"Okay,
you're breaking up too. I'll be back here in a half hour if not sooner. Paris
out."
He took a
deep breath and stepped into the corridor. "Hello," he called,
hoping that the translator on his combadge was working. 'This is Ensign Paris
from Voyager. We found your ship.
Are you all right?"
Silence was
the only answer. Paris swallowed hard. He had a very bad feeling about this. He
tried to activate his tricorder, but the readings were erratic. Just in case
the lights went out on him without warning, he turned on his wristlight.
"Hello
to the Kuluuk. This is Tom Paris from Voyager.
Can anybody hear me?"
No one
answered. Grimly, he pressed on, walking alone through the small corridors,
having to duck his head to enter room after room.
It was on the
bridge where he found the bodies.
They lay dead
at their posts, their small, furry forms sprawled as if they had suddenly
fallen asleep and tumbled from their colorful chairs. Paris's throat
constricted.
"Ah,
damn it to hell," he muttered, sorrow welling inside him. Just to make
sure, he went from body to body, gently feeling for a pulse with the utmost respect.
They were cold and stiffening. He didn't know enough about their physiology to
hazard a guess as to when they had died. It didn't matter. It was obvious with
this species what had happened.
A good scare can literally kill them.
What had been
that fatal fright? Entering the nebula in the first place? Or had they
summoned up the courage to do that, trusting enough to follow Voyager's lead? Had their multiple hearts
failed them when they drifted out of range of the buoys? Or had a ship passed
dangerously close? They would never know for certain.
Sighing,
Paris rose. There was no need to check further for survivors. Surely the crew
staffing the bridge would be the most courageous Kuluuk on the ship. If they
succumbed to terror, Paris knew in his heart that the rest of the crew had died
of fright as well.
He was
turning to leave when something caught his eye. He wasn't sure what, and turned
his head to look again. Something was out of the ordinary. Well, yeah, everyone's dead, his conscious
mind told his more perceptive inner mind. But that wasn't it.
Slowly, Paris
walked around the bridge again, looking at but not touching the small corpses.
He paused when he came to the captain, and stared at him anew.
That was it.
Tarna wasn't
slumped naturally in his chair, or even in a huddled ball at the foot of it. He
was rigid
and his head
was at an odd angle. Kneeling in front of the body, Paris looked closer to
confirm his suspicion. His neck had been broken, and obviously not by a fall.
Someone had
murdered the Kuluuk captain.
Immediately
Paris rose and drew his phaser. That someone could still be on board the ship,
hiding, awaiting his chance, certain that he could remain undetected thanks
to the ions disrupting the sensors.
It was
possible, but not likely. Paris made his way quickly back to the transport
site, senses keenly alert for any sound. More likely, he thought as he hastened
down the corridors, the killer had come as an ally and then brutally murdered
Tarna. Even for staunch Kuluuk, the sight of such treachery probably would
have been enough to kill them. The killer then could rampage through the ship,
on a coward's mission. Simply screaming at the Kuluuk, already afraid about
going into the nebula at all, would probably have been enough. Brandishing a
weapon, or killing the captain on his own bridge—well, Kuluuk genetics would
accomplish results a mass murderer would be proud of. And the bastard wouldn't
have had to touch more than a single person to do it.
Anger was
growing inside him. Paris began to wish the killer would make an appearance.
He'd never heard of anything so lily-livered in his whole life. What kind of
monster would do such a thing? And for God's sake, why?
One thought
alone comforted nun as he transported back to the Delta Flyer, and that was what
Captain
Janeway was going to do with the murderer once she got her hands on him. He
only hoped he'd get to watch.
As Paris had
expected, Janeway reacted with an emotion that made "furious" look
like "mildly annoyed."
When they had
emerged from the nebula, knowing that anyone would be able to hear him, he had
sent a message saying only that the Kuluuk ship would be unable to get out
under its own power and would need a tow. Once aboard ship, Paris and Kim had
spoken with their captain in private. Now Paris felt a keen sense of pleasure
at watching her eyes flash with righteous rage and the color rise in her
cheeks. He wanted badly to hear a loud, angry rant, but when she spoke her
voice was cold and her words precise.
"Did you
find anything to indicate who might have done it?"
"Only
that it had to be someone that the Kuluuk trusted, and that they were strong
enough to break the captain's neck," Paris answered. "It was obviously
not an accident."
"Almost
any species in the caravan could do that," said Kim.
"And
we've been doing our damnedest to promote trust among the various
species," said Janeway. "We encouraged communication. To think of
those gentle little beings, thinking that someone was coming to help
them...." With a visible effort, she forced her emotions down. 'Tell no
one what happened until we know for certain. No one, do you understand?"
They nodded.
"Dismissed.
Send in Commanders Tuvok and Chakotay. And gentlemen—"
She now
smiled calmly, and there was no more hint of outrage on her attractive features.
"Don't give this game away. I want you to wear your best poker
faces."
"Yes,
ma'am," said Paris. But even as he left, he wondered how good his best
poker face was going to be when it was called upon to hide pain, outrage, and a
sickening sense of injustice.
CHAPTER 13
silence lay heavily upon the ones who will not Be Named. It was
not the silence of unspoken words, for that was never experienced on their
ships. It was the silence of unformed thoughts. No one had any idea what to do
with the dreadful knowledge they harbored.
What do we do? asked Masters Technology at length.
Leader did
not answer right away. It stared out the enormous viewscreen and watched as the
ship called Voyager appeared out
of the nebula. It towed the dead ship.
We need to tell them, thought Braves Strangers. Its thoughts
were laced with the certainty of the righteous.
That's fine for someone who is familiar with Strangers to say, replied Second,
harshly. And if we were not in such a
perilous position ourselves, I
might be inclined to agree with you. But here, now? How are we to know
that they would believe us? We have been following them, keeping ourselves
hidden. From what I understand about most species, that would make them
inclined to suspect us, not to trust us. We cannot risk revealing ourselves for
Strangers!
They were the most innocent of all Strangers I have ever encountered. Braves Strangers
fired back. Its thoughts were almost painful to receive, so laden with emotion
were they. Gentle beings with no hatred
toward others. So gentle they could not handle being in a place where they were
not loved and protected.
Too fragile, thought Second. They could not endure. If they had not been killed, they would have
died anyway at some point.
That is not the point, said Leader, its thoughts hard and
certain. The point is, they offered harm
toward none. They trusted, and for that trust, they were brutally slain. We
saw. We watched it happen, and did not intervene. We bear a certain amount of
guilt for that as much as the killers do. I—I now regret that decision.
What? Second was shocked. Leader, you did absolutely the right thing in not
interfering with the natural course of conflict between these species. We have
nothing to do with that. We should have
nothing to do with that.
It was wrong, and it is wrong now to keep our silence. Yet for the
safety of you, my crew, I shall continue to do so. Masters Technology, can you
tell us anything more about the power drain?
Masters
Technology thought unhappy thoughts. Finally it sent, / am as ignorant as the Voyager engineer, or any of the others. But one thing I feel
cer-
tain of, and that is that it is caused by the gateway. Whether it
occurred the moment we went through, or is being caused by the other gateways,
that much I believe.
Leader turned
again to regard the mass of ships, all halted, all waiting for orders. One of
those ships housed only corpses and those investigating the crime. Another
vessel housed the killers of the Kuluuk. The Ones Who Will Not Be Named knew
everything about every ship. They knew who could be trusted, who could not, who
planned treachery, and who was the next target. Leader ached inside with the
guilt it carried. It was not an unfamiliar sensation, but associating it with
aliens was new indeed. Could it be that they really were as worthy, in their
own strange and unfathomable fashions, as the Ones Who Will Not Be Named? Could
it be that each one of their lives mattered as much to their kin and colleagues
as those of Leader's crew did to it?
It had not
shielded its thoughts. It sensed Masters Technology's worry, Second's
indignation, Braves Strangers's approval.
This One Who Is Janeway is wise, Leader sent at last. It is entirely possible that she will determine who
the killer is on her own, without aid from us. For the moment, we will wait.
And watch.
And try to solve the problem of our drained energy, added Masters
Technology.
"Report,"
said Janeway. No one had transported to the Kuluuk vessel, and no one would
until they had safely towed it into open space. It had been tricky enough once,
with Paris making his grim discovery.
She wouldn't
risk it again. And in the meantime, she would listen to discover what, if
anything, Torres had learned about the mysterious power drain that was beginning
to cripple more and more vessels.
B'Elanna
looked exhausted. She rubbed her eyes as she spoke. "I wish I had something to report. Everything seems
to be functioning within normal parameters."
"On the
Salamar ship as well?"
Torres nodded
wearily. "I worked side by side with their engineers. Unless there's
something they're not telling me, which I think is pretty unlikely, then I
can't figure it out. Their ship will power up fine, but within a few hours it's
as if it's one of Tom's holographic jalopies—"
"Hey, my
cars are not jalopies!" interjected Paris.
"—and
it's just run out of gas," Torres continued as if Paris hadn't spoken. By
way of apology, she placed her hand on his for a brief moment and squeezed.
"It's the strangest thing I've ever seen. Then, once they've been dead for
a while, they'll suddenly start up again. But each time, the power resurge
lasts for a shorter time. Captain, I'll admit it—I have no clue as to what's
going on."
Janeway knew
what the admission cost her chief engineer and didn't belabor it Torres was
capable, experienced, intelligent, and imaginative. If she couldn't figure it
out, she doubted that anyone else could.
"And the
same thing is happening with both ships?"
"It's
identical."
Janeway
leaned back in her chair, considering. "It has to have something to do
with the gateways."
"But
how? And why now? And why some ships and not others, and some ships more than
others?" Janeway got the impression that Torres could keep coming up with
questions all day, if she were allowed to.
"Well,"
Janeway said with a slight smile, "it certainly gives you something to do
while we're all stuck here, doesn't it?"
"Bridge
to Janeway," came Kim's voice.
"Go
ahead," she replied.
"We've
cleared the nebula." A pause. "I've tried hailing the Kuluuk vessel,
but there is no response. Their communications systems must have been damaged."
He did a good job of keeping his voice neutral, but Janeway and Paris, the
only other two who knew what bleakness the vessel housed, stiffened a little.
Their eyes met briefly before Paris glanced away.
Janeway
didn't like ordering a man to lie to his wife, or a loyal ensign to lie to his
senior officers. She debated telling everyone right now, but decided against
it. The fewer people who knew, at the moment, the better.
"Thank
you, Mr. Kun. Keep trying. If we continue to get no response, we'll transport a
team over to assist them in the repairs." God, she hated this. 'Torres,
keep at it. I want an update as soon as you know anything."
Torres rose.
"Aye, Captain."
"Dismissed."
She waited until most of them had filed out of the room, then, as if in an
afterthought, said, "Oh—Tuvok, Chakotay, Doctor—a moment more of your
time?"
Obediently
they turned and waited. When the
door hissed
closed, Janeway nodded for them to resume their seats.
"We've
got a bad situation," she said without preamble. "Everyone aboard
the Kuluuk vessel is dead."
A soft sound
escaped Chakotay. "I truly believed they could handle it," he said,
grief in his voice.
"They
could," said Janeway, her gaze flickering between her first officer and
her security officer. "Someone saw to it that they didn't make it. Paris
reported that the captain's neck had been deliberately broken. There were no
other signs of injuries and the broken neck could easily have been overlooked.
I'm betting that the killer counted on
it being overlooked, in fact. Whoever did it wanted us to believe the Kuluuk
simply died of fright."
Chakotay
swore under his breath. Even Tuvok sat up straighter, his dark eyes narrowing
ever so slightly in what passed for Vulcan outrage.
The Doctor
had no such compunctions. "That's barbaric!" he exclaimed. "Who
would do such a thing to such a gentle people?"
"We
don't know—yet. Paris didn't have the chance to conduct a thorough
investigation," Janeway continued. "Nor should he have, not alone
and with a killer perhaps still on board. This is your job, Tuvok. I want you
to go over every inch of that place and find me the killer, or killers, and
their motivations. Until you have some answers, I want none of you to say
anything. Tuvok, as I said, you'll lead the investigation. I'd like for you to
keep it to yourself, but if you need assistance, I know you know who to bring
in from your staff. Chakotay, you're the point man on this. I don't want to be
seen as being overly
concerned,
and everyone knows that you had a particular interest in the Kuluuk. Doctor,
you of course will be required to perform a few autopsies."
They all
nodded somberly. "Dismissed." As they rose to leave, Janeway leaned
back in her own chair and took a deep breath. Not a single step on this peculiar
journey had been easy, and now, it had turned into a nightmare. She rose and
returned to the bridge, fashioning the lies to deflect the interest of the
other ships even as she had to order them to stay put, and trying—and
failing—not to visualize a ship full of small, furry corpses.
Clad in an
enviro-suit that would completely eliminate the possibility that his body might
contaminate any evidence he might discover, Tuvok materialized directly on the
bridge of the Kuluuk vessel. He was not shocked at the sight; he had known to
expect it. Nor was he grieved, or appalled. Such emotions would be unseemly for
a Vulcan and for a security chief alike. But he did experience a moment of regret
for the senseless loss of life, and a determination to bring the killers to
justice.
He touched
his combadge and activated his tricorder. 'Tuvok to Chakotay." Chakotay
had gone to the transporter room so they could communicate privately. "I
am presently on the bridge. My tricorder is detecting no signs of life. Mr.
Paris did not exaggerate the scope of the incident."
"I'm
glad it's you there and not me," came Chakotay's voice.
Tuvok stepped
over to the captain and scanned in the visual image of the corpse, making
certain the
tricorder
recorded the image of the head hanging at such an unnatural angle.
"Captain Tarna's neck does appear as to have been intentionally
broken."
"I'm locking
on to him," said Chakotay. "He'll go directly to sickbay. The
Doctor's waiting."
Tuvok watched
impassively as the body dematerialized. "I will now begin an extensive
sweep of the entire vessel. From time to time, I will contact you. Tell the
Doctor to expect more bodies. We will need to autopsy more than one to confirm
exactly what transpired here."
"Acknowledged.
I'll retire to my quarters. Chakotay out."
Tuvok had
debated bringing along other security personnel, but in the end had decided
against it. There would be less of a chance of contaminating the evidence with
only a single person, and besides, he knew he could do the job more thoroughly,
if not more quickly. He knew his captain was uncomfortable with maintaining
the facade and regretted that he
could proceed no faster than he was doing. But more than a quick solution, he
knew, Janeway wanted the right solution. If she was going to make accusations,
they had best be accurate.
It took him a
full half hour to sweep just the bridge. The ship was small, but not that
small, and he knew he had several hours' worth of work ahead of him. A few
things he could surmise already, but as a famous fictional human detective had
once said, it was a mistake to theorize without all the data.
With a
patience that none but the children of Vulcan could fully appreciate, he went
down every corridor, entered every room, and thoroughly analyzed
it with his
tricorder. Tuvok followed a precise pattern, to minimize his impact on the
scene. Hours passed. Once he had completed the task, he contacted Chakotay,
had his tricorder transported to Voyager so
that analysis could begin at once, and had another tricorder transported to
him.
With this new
tricorder, Tuvok began a fresh investigation: downloading every piece of information
the Kuluuk computer contained. This, too, took time, but once the task had been
completed, his job here would be done. For the moment.
"Ah,
Captain," said the Doctor, smiling as she entered. "I've got
something to show you. I've been thinking about our earlier conversation."
"Which
one?" asked Janeway wearily. "The one about the mistreated slaves or
about the murdered Kuluuk?"
His broad
smile faltered. "Neither of those tragic conversations, actually. An
earlier, more pleasant one regarding pets and their beneficent effect upon
human health. You spoke so eloquently that I decided to give it a try."
Despite the
strain of the situation, Janeway found herself smiling. "You're playing
with Fluffy? Er, Barkley?"
"Heavens
no," said the Doctor. "I have designed a far more suitable
holographic pet." With a flourish, he indicated his desk. There, in a
small bowl, swam a goldfish.
She felt
laughter inside her and tried to quell it. "A
fish?"
"His
name is Bubbles," said the Doctor, proudly.
Janeway
couldn't help it. She laughed out loud. The Doctor glared.
"I'm
sorry, Doctor," she said, recovering herself. "I do recall hearing
that watching fish swim was relaxing. But you can't hold them, or have them
curl up at your feet, or stroke them."
"I'm
certain Bubbles and I will have a long, positive, healthy master and pet
relationship," said the Doctor, somewhat indignantly.
"I'm
certain you will," she allowed. "But that's not why you called me
down here, is it?"
He softened,
saddened. "No, it isn't. Come take a look." She followed him over to
where four Kuluuk bodies lay on the beds. "Three of these succumbed to
cardiac arrest, triggered by a rush of chemicals aroused by extreme
stimulation. In other words, their multiple hearts couldn't handle the level of
terror they were experiencing."
In this day
and age, of course, the gruesome autopsies of the past, of Y incisions and
cracking of rib cages and weighing of organs, were as outdated as a horse and
buggy. Computer analysis told them everything they needed to know. So Janeway
wasn't looking at shaved, gutted corpses, but at bodies held in stasis. She
didn't even have to deal with the smell of decomposition.
But that
didn't ease the pain, or the anger.
"The
fourth?" she asked, gently prodding the Doctor to continue.
"The
fourth, their captain, was, as our observant Mr. Paris guessed, murdered. The
neck was broken."
"Any
weapons used?"
"None.
Whoever did this had the strength to sim-
ply seize the
head and turn it sharply enough to snap the neck."
Despite
herself, Janeway winced, ever so slightly. "Any sign of a struggle?"
"None at
all. If it weren't for this one victim, I would be forced to come to the
conclusion that the Kuluuk all died of natural causes."
"That
confirms what Paris reported. I'll bet Tuvok's investigation will reveal more
of the same. Something happened to the Em. Maybe
one of those strange power drains. They asked for help, as we told them they
should. Someone the Kuluuk trusted boarded the Eru,
broke Tarna's neck, and killed the others by frightening them to
death." She sighed, rubbed her eyes, and shook her head. "Thank you,
Doctor. I'll have Chakotay dematerialize the bodies and hold them in a pattern
buffer. You may reopen sickbay for business."
As she strode
toward the door, she caught sight of Fluffy/Barkley in his designated area.
When their eyes met, the little animal wriggled all over. He was intelligent
enough to know he could not cross the forcefield the Doctor had erected to keep
him confined—she was certain he'd tried once or twice—but skidded right up to
it.
She was
seized with a longing to pick him up and cuddle him, bury her face in that
long, soft fur. But now wasn't the time. As she left, she wondered how the
Doctor and Bubbles would fare. Fish might be fun, but there was nothing like
touch to convey affection.
In Chakotay's
quarters, the first officer and Tuvok silently went over the data that Tuvok
had gathered.
There were
fibers, flecks of skin, hairs, all kinds of things that could point to an
intruder. But when Chakotay brought this up, Tuvok replied flatly, "You
will recall Mr. Neelix's plans for an exchange program."
Chakotay
stared at him, knowing what was coming. "Don't tell me."
"The
Kuluuk had made some remarkable scientific discoveries despite the handicap of
their physically fragile systems. Four days ago, representatives from
seventeen other ships were invited to visit their vessel. According to Ensign
Cray, once the Kuluuk had overcome their terror, they were generous, open
hosts."
Chakotay
leaned back in his chair and sighed. "Which means, no doubt, that they let
seventeen aliens visit all parts of their ship. Including the bridge, where
their captain would later be murdered."
"Precisely."
Tuvok arched a brow. "When I objected to Neelix's plan, I had no idea
that had I been able to halt it, I could have saved myself so much trouble
later on."
"So the
fact that we have evidence that seventeen non-Kuluuk life-forms were on that
bridge—"
"Means
very little."
"There's
got to be a list of who was there that day for the exchange," said
Chakotay. "If, say, no ludka were ever invited aboard that ship, and we
found evidence that an ludka had been on it, that would clinch it."
"You are
an idealist, Commander."
"That
glass could be half full,
Tuvok," Chakotay replied. But as time crawled by, he was beginning to
doubt his own
words. There seemed to be nothing that—
"Hold on
a minute," he said. He was lying on his bed with the tricorder. "How
many Kuluuk did the computer say were on that ship?"
"Two
hundred and forty-seven," said Tuvok.
For a moment,
Chakotay didn't speak. Curious at the other man's silence, Tuvok turned to
regard him. "You swept every part of the ship with the tricorder,
right?" asked Chakotay, almost rhetorically.
"Of
course."
Chakotay
looked up from the tricorder and met Tuvok's gaze. "You found only two
hundred and forty-six bodies. Someone's gone missing."
CHAPTER 14
captain's we, supplemental. there is no help for it. While I would have
preferred to wait until Lieutenant Commander Tuvok had definitively identified
the murderer—or murderers—I can postpone notifying the other vessels no
longer. There is a slim chance that if the missing Kuluuk is a hostage aboard
one of the other ships, it may still be alive. Though it might jeopardize the
mission, I must take that risk.
But I'm not planning on telling them everything. Not yet, anyway.
There's still a chance that our killer might be lulled into a false sense of
security and give himself away.
She'd
notified her own crew first, of course. Everyone was appalled. Janeway did hear
some murmurings of resentment at being kept in the dark
for so long,
but for the most part, her crew understood.
It was time.
She took a deep breath, and began. 'To all ships in the caravan, this is
Captain Janeway. I regret that I have some tragic news to report. When we went
to the aid of the Kuluuk vessel, which had been temporarily lost in the nebula
through which we have just traveled, we discovered that all aboard were dead.
While this is sad news, it is not as unexpected as it might be with another
species. All of you know how timid the Kuluuk were, and how lethal that fear
could be to them under traumatic circumstances. However, according to their
computer, one crew member is missing. We are wondering if perhaps a visit was
extended. If you know the whereabouts of this missing Kuluuk, please notify me
at once. We are going to continue to download information from the ship and
will decide what to do with the vessel itself later. Janeway out."
She felt
Chakotay watching her. He nodded. "Whoever did this wanted us to think
that the Kuluuk had died of fright. You want him to continue thinking that we
didn't know it was deliberate."
Janeway
nodded. "I trust Tuvok to find the answer for us. In the meantime, let's
give whoever did this enough rope to hang themselves with." It was one
thing to kill an opponent in battle, or in order to protect other lives. She
herself had killed under such circumstances and imagined she would probably do
so again. She supposed she could even understand killing for personal gain,
though she deplored such actions. But massacring the innocent, gentle Kuluuk?
That took a monster, or a madman. And the
thought that
she was traveling with such only lit a fire under her to find and restrain such
a creature from doing something like this ever again.
Had he been
human, Tuvok would have started to feel sick of the Kuluuk ship. But of course,
he was not, so of course, he did not.
But he knew
that had he been human, he would.
He had
analyzed every centimeter of the Eru once
before; now he planned to do so again. One thing his working with Chakotay had
brought up was the fact that the Kuluuk stores had been seriously depleted.
There was no food left, and as the Kuluuk ship had not been designed for
long-range missions, it had no replicator technology installed. Other things,
too, had been used up. And yet the Kuluuk had never asked for assistance, never
indicated that their supplies were even close to running low. Curious.
Another thing
he and Chakotay had learned was who had been part of the exchange program. He
glanced now at the list: Ensign Cray, from Voyager.
Lei, an ludka from the Nivvika. Ara,
the Nenlar female. The Beta from the Hirogen vessel. Sinimar Arkathi. Ophar,
from the Lamorians, as well as many others. It would have made the glass half
full, as Chakotay would have put it, if they had been able to download any
records during the time that the ship was in the nebula. But of course, no
records had been made, as the systems were not functioning.
Tuvok had an
additional mission now—to make certain that there were indeed only two hundred
and forty-six bodies on the ship. He had made a thorough sweep, hoping to find
living beings. Now, he would
need to
investigate every corner, to find where a dying Kuluuk might have crawled.
Despite Captain Janeway's comment to the other ships, he did not think there
was a strong likelihood that the killer would have taken a Kuluuk body back to
bis own ship. It would be the most incriminating evidence imaginable. It was
much more likely that he, Tuvok, had simply overlooked a body, much as he
disliked having to admit it.
The hours
crawled by as Tuvok continued the search. Chakotay checked in from time to
time, inquiring how things were progressing. Tuvok thought that the human was
growing irritated with the Vulcan's terse replies. But what else was he to do,
when there was quite literally nothing to report?
Beside each
body, Tuvok set up a stasis field. It was a quintessentially Vulcan thing to
do. On a spiritual level, it was right to honor the dead, and on a practical
level, the field prevented the bodies from the unpleasant effects of
decomposition. Repeatedly, he had to ask Chakotay to beam over more field generators.
There were so many dead. Even to a Vulcan, master of his emotions, the loss was
to be mourned.
Finally,
after several hours, he noticed a brief fluctuation on the tricorder. He
frowned, thinking the equipment was malfunctioning. He stepped forward, and
all was well. He took a step backward, and the fluctuation, which lasted only a
fraction of a second, occurred again.
Tuvok looked
down at his feet. He was standing in the corridor. Kneeling, he touched the
floor. It seemed to have no openings. He checked the side walls, and they, too,
were quite solid.
He looked up
and pointed his tricorder at the ceiling. Again, the fluctuation. The Kuluuk
were much shorter than humanoids and it was easy for Tuvok to reach up and feel
the ceiling. His delicate, questing fingers found what he was looking for: two
small buttons. When he pressed them simultaneously, a section of the ceiling
slid back.
What he saw
caused even the disciplined Vulcan to react with a touch of revulsion.
It was, of
course, the missing Kuluuk. It hovered, held in place by a stasis field of
unknown origin that kept it in place and also prevented the telltale smell of
decomposition from escaping.
There was no
way anyone could have imagined that this Kuluuk had died of fright. The corpse
was nothing more than a mass of soft tissue. Its entire skeleton had been
deftly removed.
There was
only one species that Tuvok knew of who routinely kept body parts of other
species they had killed.
"Tuvok
to Chakotay," he said. "I have found the missing body. And I believe
I can hazard a guess as to the identity of its killer."
"The
Hirogen?" echoed Chakotay. "But that doesn't seem—"
"Logical?"
said Tuvok, raising an eyebrow. "I could not agree with you more,
Commander. And yet, the evidence is there."
Janeway sat
frowning in her chair. The three were in her ready room, and she couldn't tear
her eyes from the ghoulish spectacle of the small, furry Kuluuk body with no
bones. She had little reason to
like the
Hirogen, after what one small group had done to her and her crew. She had no
real reason to trust them. After all, as she had said earlier to this Alpha, it
was a perfect opportunity for the Hirogen to add unique relics to their
collections.
"The only
reason we have not to believe it was the Hirogen is that their commander has
given me his word that they wouldn't try anything like this," she said.
"Otherwise, it's got their methods written all over it." Trying not
to shudder, she placed down the padd with the image of the deboned Kuluuk on
it. They had decided not to beam the body aboard, in the interests of not
tampering further with the crime scene. Besides, there was little point in
autopsying a body with no skeleton.
"We've
got more than that," said Chakotay. "Think about the structure of
Hirogen society. Think about the honor that's attached to their relics. What
less impressive prey could there be for hunters who take such pride in their
predatory prowess than a creature that keels over dead of fright? How could
taking a relic from such prey confer any honor on its killer? And then trying
to hide the crime, make it look like no killing had taken place at all. This
doesn't ring true."
Janeway
nodded. This had occurred to her as well.
"Also,"
continued Chakotay, "they positively boast of their kills. I don't think
they'd make a false truce. They're too contemptuous to use trickery. If they
wanted to kill us, they'd have tried openly." He shook his head.
"This is not the way of the hunter, Captain. It's the way of the
coward."
She didn't
answer at once. Finally, she said, "I'm inclined to agree with you. It's
obvious that the killer
hoped we
wouldn't notice that a murder had taken place at all. He—or she—wanted us to
think the Kuluuk had died of natural causes. Just in case we were too smart to
buy it, the killer had a backup plan: Place evidence that pointed to a specific
species." She moved her arms in an exaggerated manner, accentuating her
sarcasm. "Why, everyone knows the Hirogen are evil. Can't be trusted. They
love to take trophies. No one is safe from them." Resuming her normal
mien, she continued, "Except whoever did this doesn't know the Hirogen as
well as we do. They'd target a species that would fight back—give them a challenge.
They'd never try to cover up the killing. It's the cornerstone of their
culture."
"What do
you wish us to do now, Captain?" asked Tuvok.
Janeway
didn't answer at once. What, indeed? All avenues would lead to strife, and few
to answers. Even then she didn't know which one would be one of those few.
"I'm
having trouble allaying suspicions as it is," she said. "There's
nothing to stop any of the other species from scanning or beaming aboard the
Kuluuk ship and finding things out for themselves. I've emphasized an openness
with this group, a willingness to share food, supplies... information. If I
keep ducking frank questions, it will only worsen the tension."
"If you
tell the other ships that an entire crew contingent was murdered, and that all
the circumstantial evidence points to the Hirogen, that certainly isn't going
to decrease tension," said Chakotay.
"But it
will increase confidence in Captain Janeway's policy of openness," Tuvok
pointed out.
"And,
unless there is some kind of conspiracy, there is probably only one species
responsible for the deaths. The others would be anxious to clear their names,
and quite possibly may offer more advanced technology for examining the
ship."
"It's a
lose-lose situation," Janeway said. "But the Kuluuk lost more than we
ever will. We have to do everything possible to find their killers. All right.
We've eliminated the Hirogen, even though the evidence points to them, because
such a killing would be completely out of character with everything we know
about them. Who else? Who had motivation? What could possibly be gained by
slaughtering those people?"
"Someone
could have wanted to frame the Hirogen. That might have been the entire
purpose of the massacre. Certainly enough species have reason to hate
them," said Chakotay.
Janeway shook
her head. "That was my first thought, too. But if that had been the
motive, there would have been no attempt to fool us into thinking that the
Kuluuk had died of fright. The Hirogen angle was a backup, in case we saw
through the first cover-up."
Tuvok raised
an eyebrow and shifted in his seat. Immediately alert to even this subtle hint
of discomfiture, Janeway asked, "What is it, Tuvok?"
"I am
chagrined to admit that this had slipped my mind," said Tuvok, his voice
harder than usual. "When I discovered the body, that took
precedence."
"Of
course," said Janeway, "but what is it you remember now?"
"The
Kuluuk stores had been depleted. There was
no food
remaining at all, yet they had no access to a replicator."
"But
they were one of the few who never asked for help," said Janeway, seeing
where Tuvok was going with this. "Chakotay, you had the most contact with
them. What do you mink? Was there some kind of deep-set pride that would have
prevented them from asking for assistance when they were completely out of
food?"
Chakotay
shook his head. "Not at all. In fact, from what I knew about them, running
low on supplies would have been something else that would have frightened them.
They would have been embarrassed to ask for a handout, but fear was such a
primal part of their makeup that they couldn't not
ask if they were afraid. It's how they've survived. Their empire has
always taken care of them."
"So I'm
guessing that one of two things happened. Either they asked someone else for
assistance, who transported into their ship and then killed them, or the
killer was the one in need of assistance. He simply massacred the Kuluuk and
helped himself to their stores."
"The
Kuluuk were frightened enough about entering the nebula," said Chakotay.
His face was sad as he recalled the last time he'd talked with the Kuluuk.
"Getting through it safely would have been their top priority, as it was
for everyone."
"Everyone
except the killer," said Janeway, anger in her voice.
"They
wouldn't be interested in a risky transport for supplies. That could easily
have waited until they emerged on the other side."
"So.
What do we have so far?" She took a sip of coffee. "We have seventeen
representatives of non-Ku-luuk species who had been aboard that ship less than
twenty-four hours before the massacre. One or perhaps more than one of those
returned while the Kuluuk were in the nebula, perhaps offering assistance.
This person or persons broke Tarna's neck and frightened the rest to death.
He, she, or they then gutted a corpse and stashed the body where it wouldn't be
found at once, but could be found with diligent searching. This action was to
point suspicion at the Hirogen, a race known for killing and taking trophies.
Then, the killer or killers absconded with all the supplies they could take. Do
I have it about right, gentlemen?"
They nodded.
"We can
narrow the list of suspects down to the seventeen species who participated in
the exchange program," said Tuvok. "We can eliminate the Hirogen for
the reasons we've already discussed as well as any species that has adequate
supplies."
"Unless
the supplies were taken as yet another red herring," said Janeway. "A
way to point suspicion toward someone other than the Hirogen."
"You're
weaving a pretty tangled web, Captain," said Chakotay.
"Someone
else wove it first," said Janeway. "Well, there's no point in
prolonging this further. I'm going to call a meeting aboard Voyager and make the announcement
then."
It was worse
than Janeway had imagined. She had tried to do it as Tuvok would have, by
giving a logical, unemotional presentation of the
facts in the
order in which they had been uncovered. She didn't even make it past "We
were able to confirm that Captain Tarna's neck had been deliberately
broken" when there was an uproar that drowned out the rest of her words.
"Murderers!"
cried Torar, leaping up and pointing at a startled Kelmar. "It's got their
cowardly stench all over it! It's not enough for you to attack my people and
countless others, oh no, you've got to go and slay an entire ship of peaceful
people who—"
"It's
the Todanians!" someone else yelled, also rising to point a digit at an
agitated and obviously offended Todanian representative, Akelm. "You see
how little they regard other species' lives—they have slaves on their own
ship!"
"The
Willani were the last ones into the nebula after the Kuluuk," shouted
Ellia. "They had the opportunity."
"What
about the—"
"Silence!"
cried Janeway. "No one is leaving this room until I have a chance to
explain the entire situation!"
For several
moments, it appeared as if the angry and highly stressed representatives of
their various species were willing to accept staying in the room if it meant
they could continue to argue and point fingers at one another. Janeway
watched, feeling helpless. If the shouting matches escalated into fights, she
could do something about it. But now, she had to get them quiet. They were not
under her command, not really. They were all equals in this situation. They had
to cooperate.
Finally, her
repeated pleas for
silence were
granted.
Hoarse from shouting for the last ten minutes, she continued in a rough voice.
"I want
everyone to be seated and be quiet until I have finished this," she said.
"I am prepared to enforce that. Anyone who interrupts will be escorted
out of this room. Is that clear?"
She saw nods,
tentacle extensions, and claw snap-pings, and heard reluctant murmurs of
agreement.
"Very
good. Now, as I said, the captain of the Kuluuk was intentionally killed. It
appears as though the others were terrorized to death. It's obvious that we
were meant to think this whole thing was a tragic accident. Failing that, the
killers left us clues to point to a particular species. I do not believe these
clues to be true, but rather deliberately planted."
"Captain."
It was an interruption, but a calm one. Janeway gazed, surprised, at the
Hirogen Alpha. "Which species was made to look like the killer?"
"I'd
rather not say at this point," said Janeway. Which was, apparently, the
wrong thing to say. Chaos again erupted. Only when the security teams Tuvok had
set up stepped into the center of the room and placed hands on the screaming
aliens did even a hint of quiet return.
"Captain!"
It was Ophar, hovering near the ceiling. "Captain, we have a right to
know if there is a killer among us. You cannot withhold evidence. We must be
able to defend ourselves. Who knows who will be the next target?"
Ophar's
words, spoken calmly, pierced Janeway. She glanced uneasily at the Hirogen
Alpha, then made her decision.
"I know
you're all afraid," she said, as gently as
she could.
"This is a frightening situation. But panic and rousing the mob mentality
is not the answer. If any of you will let my teams board your vessel and
examine it, it will exonerate you. We will be able to whittle down the suspects
one by one."
"What
about you, Captain?" Akelm said icily. "Will you permit a group of my
crew to board Voyager, to scour
its innards, and pronounce you safe?"
"Or my
crew," said Kelmar. "We've no real reason to trust you, Captain. Any
more than we have reason to trust anyone else." He glared at Ara and
Torar, who glared right back.
"You
agreed to accept Voyager's leadership,"
began Janeway, wearily.
"And
look where it got the Kuluuk," said Kelmar. Janeway was stung. "They
trusted you to protect them. They put aside their fears and followed you into
the nebula. They trusted someone you said they could trust, and now they are
dead. You say the killers planted evidence to deflect suspicion. One of my crew
was one of the seventeen aboard mat ill-fated vessel. How do I know that you
won't do the same to my ship? Make it look as though the ludka are the
heartless killers?"
"ludka are heartless killers!" shrieked Ara.
"Or my
ship," said Ellia, surprising and paining Janeway. "We have a trade
agreement, Captain, nothing more. While we've been pleased to be part of this
compact, I do not think it is in the best interests of my crew and my ship to
let anyone, even someone from Voyager, board
and search my vessel."
Janeway had
opened her mouth to respond, when
her combadge
chirped. "Chakotay to Janeway and Tuvok. We've just detected an
unauthorized transport from the Todanian vessel to the Kuluuk ship."
Janeway
closed her eyes briefly. All hell was about to break loose, and there wasn't
anything she could do to prevent it. They'd left the deboned body on the ship,
and it was only a matter of minutes before its horrors would be discovered.
She locked gazes with Tuvok, all the way at the back of the room, and he
nodded. Moving quickly and smoothly, he and his team moved toward the Hirogen
entourage. They drew their phasers.
"Chakotay,
get a lock on the Hirogen," Janeway ordered.
No sooner had
she uttered the words than Akelm, who had been listening to one of his men,
cried aloud. "The Hirogen!" he yelled, turning to point at them.
"It was the Hirogen who killed the Kuluuk! We went aboard the ship and saw
the body. It had no skeleton! The Hirogen took a relic!"
Janeway
watched in horror as dozens of aliens, most of them decent, civilized people,
began to shriek in anger. They moved toward the Hirogen in a vast, furious
wave. Tuvok and his men closed in around the big, ugly aliens, their phasers
pointed at the crowd.
"Transport
the Hirogen to the brig," Janeway ordered. The forms of the Hirogen
shimmered and disappeared. The crowd grew even more raucous, and the security
team fired, their phasers set on a wide angle. Dozens fell where they stood.
The gesture, fortunately, served to startle some sense back into those who
remained. They froze in their tracks, clearly sullen and angry and resentful,
but not
manic, not
anymore. They were the captains of then-respective vessels, and while the
situation was conducive to hysteria, they were intelligent enough to know when
it was in their best interests not to offer a fight.
Janeway
gasped for breath, staring at the diplomatic disaster before her eyes. At that
moment, her badge chirped again.
"Chakotay
to Janeway. I've got someone named Marisha who wants to talk to you."
"Not
now, Chakotay," said Janeway, stepping down from the makeshift podium and
hastening to her security chief. "You handle it."
"Kathryn,"
said Chakotay, and she stopped short at the use of her first name.
"Marisha is a V'enah. Apparently, there has been a slave revolt on the Relka. She's requesting asylum."
CHAPTER 15
janeway made her decision. the assembled group was either
unconscious or under control, for the moment. The Hirogen were safe in the
brig, where no angry mob could reach them.
"On my
way," she told Chakotay. As she sprinted for the door, she called out over
her shoulder, "Keep them here until I return, Tuvok."
Never had it
seemed to take so long for Janeway to reach the bridge. The minute the door
hissed open, she looked up at the screen and snapped, 'Tell me what's going on,
Marisha."
It was her
first look at a V'enah. Thin and with skin and hair colored in hues of purple
from soft pastel lavender to deep violet, the woman bent over the tiny
viewscreen in the small escape pod. She had
dark purple hair that was cut extremely short and in
a choppy
manner. She would have been pretty, had she had some softening flesh to her
angular skull. Marisha was highly agitated and her face was flushed as she
spoke.
"We need
asylum!" she screamed, her face looming huge on the screen. "Please,
Captain, what we have seen of your crew makes me believe that we can trust you.
We need your help!"
"What
happened? I heard something about an uprising. Did you lead an attack? How
many are dead?"
"We
didn't kill anyone," said Marisha. "We just wanted to get out. Seven
of Nine told us we should leave and she was right."
Janeway
tensed. Was Seven responsible, directly or indirectly, for this uprising?
"I read her report. The conditions aboard your ship are deplorable and I
sympathize with your plight. But I won't support a violent uprising. Tell me
exactly what happened."
"Grant
us asylum!" Marisha cried, tears welling in her eyes. Janeway saw cuts and
bruises on the purple skin and fresh blood on her outfit Whatever had happened,
the V'enah hadn't simply sneaked away in the middle of the night.
An insistent
beeping caught her attention. "It's the Relka,"
said Kim. "Arkathi wants to talk to you."
"No!" Marisha's eyes widened. "No, Captain,
do not listen to him! He is Todanian, he lies—"
Her face
disappeared from the screen. In its place was the image of six small escape
pods being fired upon by the massive Todanian ship. Even as Janeway watched,
one of them exploded into flames.
"Shields
up! Get a tractor beam on those pods!"
Janeway
yelled. "Open a channel. Janeway to Arkathi. Hold your fire or we will
fire in return!"
Her words had
no effect. The Relka fired again,
narrowly missing another pod.
"Kim,
get them as close as you can. The minute it's possible, extend our shields to
protect them. Chakotay," she said to her first officer, who stood at
Tuvok's post, "fire a warning shot. If they attack again, we do too."
"Aye,
Captain," said Chakotay. Red energy sliced across the Relka's bow but did no damage.
"They're
targeting us," said Kim. Hardly had the words escaped his mourn when the
ship rocked violently. Janeway dug her fingers into the chair arms and hung
on. Chakotay didn't need the order repeated; he fired upon the Relka.
"Their
weapons are temporarily disabled," he reported.
"Open a
channel," Janeway ordered.
The
unattractive, angry visage of Sinimar Arkathi filled the screen. "I demand
that you return my property!"
"They
have asked for asylum," said Janeway, fighting to maintain her cool.
"From what I've seen, they are indeed hi danger. What did they do,
Arkathi?"
He stared,
then broke into harsh laughter. "Do? Why, they killed, Captain! They
killed fifteen people! If you don't recognize our right to the V'enah as
property, then at least you will understand why we want to bring murderers to
justice!"
That seemed
to be the prevailing theme over the last few hours, Janeway thought. "We
will incarcer-
ate them on
our vessel until we can get to the bottom of this."
The swiftness
of his movement startled even her. Snarling, he sprang from his command chair
and pressed his face into the viewscreen. His red throat sacs inflated as he
spoke. "You will return our property to us for execution!"
"You
will sit down and let justice take its course," said Janeway, her icy
softness a sharp contrast to Arkathi's raging. "We've lost the Ammunii
vessel, and now we've lost entire crew of the Eru.
I won't add more body counts to those we already have. Janeway
out."
She turned to
look at Chakotay, still standing at Tuvok's post. "Don't talk to him
anymore, not for now. If they start getting itchy fingers, you're under orders
to return fire for fire, but nothing more. I want to do nothing that could
escalate this situation. Harry, are those pods in the shuttle bay yet?"
"Just
docking now," said Kim.
"Have
Seven and a security team meet them and escort them to sickbay. I'm going to
talk to the Hirogen," She rose and strode to the turbolift, pondering
what Seven's role in all of this might have been. If she had indeed been
responsible for bloodshed, she had a lot to answer for.
Seven of Nine
kept her emotions from showing on her face as she and a security team
"escorted" the escaped V'enah to sickbay. No one was so seriously
injured he couldn't walk, but neither was any member of that group without
damage of some sort.
Marisha
looked over at her several times, but took
her own cue
from Seven's demeanor. It was only when all of the V'enah, a small handful of
only eleven, were in sickbay and being treated by the Doctor that the alleged
leader of the alleged revolt spoke.
"We are
grateful that your captain has granted us asylum," she said.
"Captain
Janeway has ordered you confined to the brig until the matter has been
thoroughly investigated," Seven corrected her. "She has not yet
granted you anything but safety."
Marisha
smiled sadly. "Our injuries will be treated. We will have sufficient food
and water. We will not be forced to perform brutal labor and left to rot where
we fall. To me, this is asylum, no matter what term you use."
Seven could
think of no proper response to that. She struggled to keep her gaze from
wandering to Marisha's, but it was impossible. Something about the other woman
had captivated her soul, and Seven knew she would not be released from that
bond until she had done everything she could to help Marisha. Help her people.
"Leader
Arkathi claims you killed in order to effect your escape. Is this true?"
Marisha's
eyes narrowed and her breathing quickened. "We fought, yes; that much is
true. My orders were to have the weapons on low. I cannot vouch for every
action taken by every V'enah who escaped with me, but I certainly did not wish
to kill and I gave instructions to that effect. We would be no better than the
Todanians if we did that. I would not knowingly start my life of freedom with
blood on my hands."
"I
believe you," said Seven firmly. "I will be your advocate."
Marisha
smiled, slowly, hesitantly. The smile grew until she was almost radiant with
it. Seven knew she was doing the right thing, regardless of what Janeway might
order.
"The
evidence is overwhelming," stated the Hirogen Alpha in a calm voice.
"Nonetheless, we did not do it."
His second
was less composed. "Massacre a race of cowards? The accusation in itself
is an insult!"
"Besides,"
said the Alpha, lifting a hand to signal his subordinate to be silent, "we
promised that we would abide by the agreement we made with you. There is no
honor in dissolving that agreement, especially not for such pathetic
relics."
"We
believe you," said Janeway, and she could see that she surprised them.
"We think you've been made to look like the killers, when in reality someone
else has done the killing. We are willing to do what we can to prove your
innocence."
The Alpha
nodded, as if what she had just said had merely been what he had expected.
"If it will help, you may search our vessel and report the findings to
all the others in the caravan."
"That's
a start," said Janeway. "There are seventeen species, including mine
and yours, who were on that vessel and who will start our list of suspects.
We're eliminating you, and by that gesture, I think you can agree to eliminate us."
The Alpha
inclined his head. "If you had set us up as the main suspects, you would
hardly now try to demonstrate our innocence."
"Fifteen
races, then. Commander Tuvok will continue to work with you." She rose.
"I've got Chakotay on the bridge trying to manage all those other people
who are convinced you did it. And I've also got a slave uprising on my hands,
with fifteen people dead. If you'll excuse me."
Janeway
nodded to the security guard posted at the brig's entrance and frowned at the
sight that met her gaze. Seven of Nine was inside the cell with Marisha. They
were sitting close to each other, heads bent close in intense conversation. The
contrast was striking—Seven's full head of blond hair almost touching
Marisha's purple, shorn scalp; her full, curved figure seated beside the
V'enah's nearly skeletal frame. But they were both tall, strong women, and when
they paused in their conversation to turn and regard Janeway, they looked more
alike than dissimilar.
"Seven,
a moment." She deactivated the forcefield and Seven stepped out of the
cell. Janeway walked a few feet away, then said in a quiet voice, "Marisha
said you urged them to an uprising. The Doctor commented to me on some of your
more inappropriate comments while the two of you were on the Relka. Your own report is full of passion
and outrage for the V'enah's plight, something I don't ordinarily hear from
you. Now I find you sitting side by side, talking so softly that neither the
guard nor I can hear you. So tell me. What am I supposed to be thinking,
Seven?" Seven tilted her chin up defiantly. "That I am interested in
justice and freedom."
Janeway
searched her gaze, then sighed. "Chakotay said that you'd be able to
identify with the V'enah as you were in a similar situation."
"From
which you yourself liberated me," said Seven.
/
'True. But
that was—" Janeway suddenly realized how it sounded and stopped.
"Different?"
Seven finished. "How? I would say that this is a worse situation. These
people are able to comprehend how badly they are being treated. Drones cannot.
You see what they have done to her."
"And I
hear what they have done to their captors. According to Arkathi, fifteen people
are dead."
"Arkathi
is not telling the truth," said Seven, with the firmness of one stating an
absolute fact, not an opinion. Janeway raised an eyebrow.
"Really?
I want you to come with me, Seven. Arkathi has asked us to see the carnage for
ourselves."
"Marisha
did not do it."
"Seven,
perhaps she individually didn't. But someone killed these people. Let's
go."
Seven
hesitated, then threw a glance over her shoulder at Marisha, as if asking the
other woman's permission. Marisha stood as close as possible to the forcefield.
"Go with
her, Seven," Marisha said, her voice ringing with conviction. "We are
innocent. Go and see for yourself."
A few moments
later, Seven and Janeway, tricorders in hand and phasers at then- hips,
materialized in the transporter room of the Relka.
Seven realized that her body was tense, as if expecting an assault.
"Captain
Janeway. Seven of Nine," said Sinimar Arkathi, in the most pleasant tone
Seven had yet
heard from
him. Janeway, too, seemed surprised at his pleasant demeanor. "Thank you
for coming. I have instructed my security to leave everything untouched. It is
all as we found it, in all its brutal detail. You should brace
yourselves."
"We're
veterans of battle, Leader," said Janeway icily. "You won't be
showing us anything we haven't seen."
"We'll
see about that. May I point out the blood where you are standing," said
Arkathi. Seven looked down. Sure enough, she was standing in a pool of thick
yellow liquid. A few drops of purple liquid were scattered around as well. She
turned on the tricorder and began recording. "Mostly Todanian blood, but
I am pleased to admit that not all the blood spilled belonged to us."
Seven set her
jaw. She followed her captain, who carefully glanced around. "I thought
the V'enah fled in the escape pods," she said.
"They
did, but only because we had put a lock on the transporters," Arkathi
replied. "They came here first and discovered there was no escape this
way. Please, follow me. It's a grisly tour of my ship you'll be taking."
They followed
him, while he pointed out spatters of blood here and there. They turned a
corner and Arkathi held up a hand to stop them. "Proceed carefully,"
he said.
The two
humans turned the corner and gazed at the first body. It was a Todanian
security guard. He lay facedown in a pool of viscous yellow fluid. A hole had
been blasted into his torso. Seven resisted the impulse to cover her nose from
the rising stench.
"There
are two more," said Arkathi, pointing down the corridor. Two more security
guards lay where they had fallen. Seven stared, wanting to disbelieve. Marisha
wouldn't have done this, couldn't have
done it. She knew it, and yet there the evidence lay. Arkathi turned and headed
down another corridor, away from the bodies. Janeway followed. After a moment,
Seven, feeling dazed, followed as well.
More bodies.
And now, to her horror, Seven began to see the corpses not only of Arkathi
guards—which Marisha and her people could conceivably have attacked in
self-defense—but of unarmed workers.
"These
three were unfortunate enough to be returning from their duty shift to their
quarters," said Arkathi, his voice harsh. "They could have offered no
real threat to armed slaves, yet the V'enah scum slew them regardless."
Seven felt
her captain's eyes boring into her. Janeway didn't need to say anything; Seven
could all but hear the conversation in her mind: We've seen nine bodies so far, Seven. Nine. Marisha said she didn't
kill anyone. Yet she was the leader; she had to have known that these people
died. What do you say now? How can you stand by her claim that she is innocent?
Seven could
not recall feeling so miserable in her life. How could this be so? How could
Marisha, who had so quickly managed to get into Seven's mind and heart, be a
cold-blooded killer? And yet the bodies spoke volumes, though their voices
were forever silenced.
On they went,
tracking a trail of slaughter. Civilians would have been appalled and
nauseated by the sight and stench. Even Seven, who was no stranger
to carnage,
and Janeway, who Seven knew had seen battle intimately, could not help but
react.
"This is
the worst," said Arkathi as they stood before a large door. "This is
engineering, where the leader of the uprising was stationed. This is where it
began." The door slid open to reveal eight corpses.
Seven's blue
eyes widened and her full lips trembled.
Arkathi was
right. This was the worst, because the dead here were not armed guards, nor
even unarmed Todanians. The only people to have died in here, where Marisha had
been a slave, were her fellow V'enah.
"Personally,
I do not care about their worthless lives," said Arkathi. "But the
thought that any sentient creature, even a V'enah, would so ruthlessly
slaughter its own species for its freedom... well, you may not think highly of
me, Captain, but even I am sickened by this."
Seven felt as
though she were walking in a living nightmare. She stepped over the bodies.
Thin, pale purple, their eyes had been wide with shock and surprise as they
had died. She thought she recognized a few. There was Talyk, the man who had
taken the wrong turn and been beaten for his "transgression." There
was a woman she remembered, a youth who had smiled at her despite a mouthful of
broken teeth when she treated him.
No. No, she could
not have been so mistaken. This was wrong. Something was wrong, though she did
not know what, but this was not what it seemed, it couldn't be-----
"Seven,"
said Janeway, grasping the former Borg's upper arm gently to steady her.
"Let's return to the ship. I think we've seen enough."
Seven licked
her lips and straightened, forcing composure on a body that wanted nothing more
than to curl up in a fetal position and shudder with the shock of betrayal.
"Of course, Captain," she said, keeping her voice as steady as
possible.
"Now,
you understand," said Arkathi. "You can see why we want to bring the
woman who did this and those who obeyed her brutal orders to justice."
"I do,
Commander," said Janeway. "My apologies for doubting you."
Unexpectedly,
Arkathi seemed to soften. He waved her words aside. "We have clashed in
the past, you and I. But that is forgotten. We need to bring the V'enah and the
Hirogen to justice. Then our caravan can move on with, I hope, less
friction."
Seven said
nothing. She remained silent the entire way back to the transporter room. When
she and Janeway materialized on Voyager, Janeway
ushered her out of the room. Alone in the corridor, Janeway said softly, with
great compassion, "Seven, I'm sorry. I didn't want to believe it either. Regardless
of how dreadful an institution slavery is, we can't let slaves win their
freedom by murdering their captors."
Seven did not
answer, nor did she meet her captain's eyes.
"Seven?"
"I
believed her," Seven said in a low, husky voice. "I believed her when
she said that they would be no better than the Todanians if they stooped to
murder."
Janeway's
face grew soft. Gently, she placed a hand on Seven's shoulder. "I know. I
wanted to, too. It fits with what we think is right and just. And in a way,
it's hard to blame Marisha. What kind of a life must she have led? How in the
world could she possibly learn a real moral code when—"
Seven
stiffened. She stared at the tricorder in her hand as if it were a lifeline.
"Captain, please don't authorize the transfer of the V'enah to the Relka immediately."
"I don't
think it's a good idea for you to have any further conversation with
Marisha," said Janeway. "Don't make me make it an order."
"No,
that's not it. Something is incorrect, out of proper alignment. I... I feel
that there may be something we're overlooking."
Janeway
raised an eyebrow and smiled. "Why, Seven," she said, a hint of mirth
in her voice, "are you having a hunch?"
Seven
returned the smile, though it felt forced. "I believe you may be correct,
Captain. Please. A half hour is all I need to verify this ... hunch."
"All
right. I'll stall Arkathi. But that's all. Believe me, if you can find
something, anything, that can be construed as solid evidence to exonerate the
V'enah, I'll support you."
"Thank
you, Captain." It was all Seven could do not to break into a run as she
headed toward the turbolift. "Sickbay," she told it, and the speedy
transportation device had never seemed so slow to her.
"Doctor,"
she said, preempting any greeting he might give, "did you record every
patient we examined on the Relka?"
"And
hello to you too," he said, a trifle annoyed. "Of course. Why?"
"I need
to review the information immediately."
He gazed at
her, his dark eyes searching hers, then went to his station. He tapped the
controls, then rose and indicated that she take the chair. "Here it is. It
begins when we transported down and continues through the last person treated.
Have fun."
She ignored
the gibe and slid into the seat. Something caught her attention and she
glanced up. On the Doctor's desk was a small bowl of water containing an orange
fish. The fish floated, unmoving, at the surface.
"Doctor,
your fish has expired."
"Damn!
Computer, delete hologram." The image of the bowl with the floating fish
vanished.
'To what
purpose was there a fish in sickbay?" Seven asked.
The Doctor
sighed. "Just an experiment, that's all. One that went awry. I'd, um,
appreciate it if you wouldn't mention this to the captain."
Seven raised
an eyebrow. "Very well," she agreed, then turned her attention to the
task at hand. Swiftly she began to scan the scene the tricorder had recorded.
She saw herself and the Doctor preparing the rations. The Todanians were the
first to be treated. Seven heard again her own voice giving instructions,
Arkathi's rude remarks. Arkathi grew angry and stalked out of the room.
The Doctor
began treating the Todanians. The first was as arrogant as his captain, but the
second was much more polite. "You are kind to help us," he told the
Doctor. Seven started. She now recognized him as one of the unarmed Todanians
who had been on
his way to
his quarters when he had been killed. A quick glance at the recording she had
just made aboard the Relka confirmed
it.
"Computer,
edit and recompile all data on this individual," she instructed. An
instant later, the computer told her, 'Task completed."
She watched
all the Todanians receive treatment and food. And she saw herself begin showing
signs of irritation with the assignment.
"Let me
guess, Seven. You feel like your time and unique talents are being wasted on
this assignment," said the recorded image of the Doctor.
"Correct,"
said the recorded Seven.
"So do
I. Anyone could administer these vitamin supplements and rehydration hypos. I
haven't even seen so much as a scratch on any of them. The Todanians are
almost obscenely healthy. Some of them could stand to skip a few meals."
"Seven
of Nine to Commander Chakotay." Seven watched as she attempted to neglect
her duty, and felt shame heating her face. She knew now, as she had not then,
what was to come.
"This is
Chakotay. How's it going?"
"Inefficiently,"
Seven replied. "They have isolated us in a cargo bay and are sending the
Todanians in for treatment and food. I request to be relieved of this
assignment."
"Me
too," said the Doctor.
"As does
the Doctor. There's nothing—"
And Seven saw
her own eyes go wide, her mouth open in surprise. The V'enah were entering.
She again saw
the guards attack an unarmed man, heard herself order them to stand aside. She
saw
Marisha try
to appear subservient, but caught anew the flicker of defiance in the V'enah
woman's eyes. Seven knew now that this woman could never have planned or
executed the carnage she had witnessed on the Relka.
And she was about to prove it.
The Doctor on
the recording leaped into action. Seven saw again how the V'enah regarded
Marisha with deference.
"They
are here to help us," said the recorded Marisha. "Do what they tell
you to."
Seven
fast-forwarded through her treatment of Marisha. She wasn't the one Seven was
interested in. Not this time.
"We
operate the heavy machinery," said Marisha. "It is one of the more
dangerous tasks aboard the ship."
"Yes,"
said Seven, aloud. "Yes, it is dangerous."
They were
talking about the food now. "There is not that much," said Seven,
treating another woman. The Seven of the present leaned forward eagerly. This
was what she had wanted to see. "According to our estimates, that is the
standard amount of calories and nutrients you should be consuming per
day."
"We get
about a third of this," said the woman Seven was treating. "I get
more. Arkathi gives it to me and I steal what he does not eat off his
plate."
"You
serve Arkathi?" asked Seven on the tricorder.
"I am
his personal servant. I am Kella. I have not seen the others before now. I
didn't know how badly ... Are you done?"
"Computer,
freeze image."
She stared
intently at Kella. At the soft skin, the
rounded
flesh, the pretty clothes, the clean hair and body.
Kella was
Arkathi's personal servant.
Kella had
never labored a single day in engineering.
So why had Seven
seen Kella lying dead, supposedly murdered by Marisha, in the most physically
demanding section of the entire ship?
"Seven
to Captain Janeway," she said, and there was pride and relief in her
voice. "I have found the evidence you requested."
CHAPTER 16
"seven, I hate
to disappoint you, but I don't
know how solid this evidence of yours is," said Janeway.
"Kella
was a personal servant of Arkathi," Seven said, hammering at the
information that Janeway already knew. "She had never even encountered
the V'enah who performed the hard labor. She was fed well, clothed well... look
at her in comparison to Marisha."
Janeway had,
but to make Seven feel as though she had been heard, she looked again at the
corpse Seven had indicated on the tricorder. Kella lay sprawled in a pool of
her own purple blood. Her figure, while not fat, was curved and feminine. One
hand was upturned, and Janeway saw there was no hint of a callus on it. Peering
closer, she saw that the
dead woman
had even worn cosmetics. The clothes she wore looked new.
"I'll
grant you that Kella looks out of place among the other V'enah," said
Janeway. "But who's to say that she wasn't recently assigned there? You
know Arkathi, Seven. Perhaps she had done something to offend bun, and he
wanted to teach her a lesson. Then she would simply have been in the wrong
place at the wrong time."
Seven stepped
in beside her captain and tapped the tricorder. "Kella is still wearing
cosmetics," she pointed out. "Do you think Arkathi would have allowed
that if he wanted, as you say, to teach her a lesson? He would have stripped
her of everything that reminded her of her previous rank. She would never have
been allowed to have anything that made her feel beautiful or different from
the other slaves."
Unease
stirred inside Janeway. Maybe Seven was on to something. "I hadn't
considered that. Good detective work, Seven."
"And
this man, a Todanian." Taking the tricorder from Janeway, Seven called up
another image. "He expressed embarrassment at the way Arkathi was behaving.
This woman was friendly to us. Don't you find it interesting that all the dead
Todanians are ones who seemed to disagree, even mildly, with Arkathi's way of
doing things? Captain, this may not be enough to convict in a court of law, but
you must agree with me that it raises questions that we must have answered
before we can in good conscience turn the V'enah over to Arkathi's so-called
justice."
Janeway
nodded. "We'll confront him with what you've found and see how he reacts.
If he transferred
Kella, then
he should have records to show us." Her blue eyes flashed in anticipation.
"I wouldn't mind watching him squirm a bit. I've got another idea as well.
Janeway to Tuvok."
"Tuvok
here, Captain."
"I need
you to do a little research for me. And keep it quiet."
Sinimar
Arkathi was already on the viewscreen, larger than life, arguing with Chakotay
when Janeway and Seven stepped onto the bridge.
"There
you are. What are you waiting for, Captain? Hand over our prisoners
immediately."
"Not
quite yet, Commander." Janeway tried to smile pleasantly as she sank into
her command chair. Seven stood rigidly at attention beside her. "I've got
a few questions. My sharp-eyed crew member noticed a few things when we were
aboard your ship."
Arkathi's
throat sacs inflated so greatly that Janeway wondered if they would explode.
The thought didn't bother her much.
"Captain
Janeway," he said, in a cold and tightly controlled voice, "you have
the prisoners who admit that they used our weapons against us. You have seen
the trail of slaughter they left in their escape. What more do you require of
us? I think we have been very patient—"
"And if
you'll continue to be patient for about three more minutes, we could solve
this," said Janeway, an edge creeping into her voice despite her best
efforts. She glanced down at the padd. "One of the V'enah found slain was
identified by Marisha as your personal servant Kella. Is this true?"
She watched
him closely, but the comment didn't appear to unnerve him. "She's lying.
How would she even know such a thing?"
"Seven
of Nine met Kella and Marisha both on the day she and the Doctor transported
aboard your vessel to treat your injured," said Janeway. "Kella
identified herself as such. Marisha merely confirmed what Seven already
knew."
Now he did
look slightly uncomfortable. "So? What is your point, Captain?"
"Kella's
body was not found in a corridor, but in engineering. Dressed in working
clothes, as if that was her usual station."
"I
transferred her there. I am allowed to do what I want with my property,
Captain."
The anger
boiled in her so hotly that she had to force it down. She continued in a calm
voice, "Then may I see the records?"
He became
very still. "To what end?'
'To prove
what you've just told me. That you transferred your personal servant to
engineering."
"There
are no records. I did it in a moment of rashness. It was not a permanent
transfer. You can imagine my chagrin at discovering that my own personal
servant was among the victims of this terrible tragedy."
"Actually,
I can't," said Janeway. "Why didn't you tell us sooner? It would have
made us even more sympathetic."
"I don't
have to justify myself to you!" He was spitting his words now.
Janeway
leaned forward in her chair, her gaze locked on Arkathi. "And don't you
find it interesting
that all the
Todanians killed by the escaping slaves were ones who had expressed sympathy
for the V'enah? Who had perhaps made comments about your poor leadership?"
"I
refuse to continue this charade. You have both the murderous slaves and the
Hirogen on your ship, yet you sit here and attack me as if I were the one under
suspicion!"
"You
are," said Janeway, icily. "Tuvok, what were the results of that
research I had you do?"
"Positive,
Captain," the Vulcan replied. "I detected traces of Kuluuk supplies
aboard the Relka."
"Interesting,"
Janeway purred, feeling like the cat with the mouse. "I seem to recall an
argument with you in which you complained that your rations were running out
and demanded more. Perhaps you'd care to tell us how those came to be aboard
your ship?"
"They
were gifts, after our visit," said Arkathi.
No. They were not.
The voice was
as loud, as clear, as if it had been shouted, but Janeway heard it only in her
head. She whirled to see a small, slight figure standing next to the turbolift.
Tuvok immediately trained a phaser on the intruder.
More quickly
than spoken words, information flooded Janeway's mind. She guessed by the reaction
of Arkathi and the rest of her bridge crew that they too could understand the
stranger.
Arkathi murdered the Kuluuk. Their ship suffered another power drain
and they were dead in space. The Relka came
upon them and offered assistance. Arkathi murdered Tarna. and the rest died of
fright.
as you have surmised. Arkathi did not think anyone would suspect, as
the Kuluuk are known to be so fragile. Nonetheless, he removed the skeleton of
one Kuluuk, disintegrated it, and hid the body where a careful search would
discover it, so if suspicions were raised, it would appear as if the Hirogen
had committed the atrocity.
He lied to his crew, telling them that he had accidentally frightened
the entire ship to death, and reasoned that the Todanians should take the
supplies rather than letting them go to waste. When it was revealed that the
captain had been murdered, some of his crew began to suspect and voiced their
disapproval.
So Arkathi had to silence them. Marisha's escape attempt was the
perfect opportunity. He slew all the V'enah in her area, so they would not
speak in favor of their leader, and killed his personal servant as well, who
had been displeasing him recently. Those of his own people who had spoken out
against him were also slain. He had perfect... what is your term... scapegoats,
Captain, but the blood of dozens is on his hands.
"Who are
you?" Arkathi demanded. "Why are you telling these lies?"
The being
turned to face the viewscreen. / am Leader
of the Ones Who Will Not Be Named. We have been following this caravan since
its inception, watching everything. We have records of all your crimes,
Arkathi, and though it goes against our very beings to come forward with this
information, we could not remain silent and see so many die without justice.
She didn't
know how she knew it, but Janeway knew in her bones that this mysterious being
who had manifested on her ship was telling the truth. Tuvok had once said
something along the lines that there could be no lies in a telepathic link. She
believed it now.
And judging
by Arkathi's reaction, he knew it to be the truth as well. For the first time
since she had met him, he cast aside even the veneer of culture. He hunched
forward and made an incomprehensible, snarling sound, then abruptly terminated
conversation.
"Their
shields are up," said Tuvok.
"Get
ours up too," said Janeway, and not a moment too soon. The ship rocked
from the Keiko's attack. Before
Janeway could even open her mouth, a second volley came. And a third.
"They're
trying to blast us to bits," cried Chakotay.
"Fire,"
gasped Janeway, but before Tuvok could obey, the Relka was struck by green phaser fire and, a moment later,
by photon torpedoes.
"It's
the Umul and the Nivvika," said Chakotay.
"They've come to our aid."
'Tom, pattern
beta theta alpha," Janeway ordered. Obediently Paris put the ship through
its maneuvers. More ships were closing in, firing at Arkathi's vessel. Even as
Janeway watched, the Nenlars, in their tiny ship, approached. It was an act,
she knew, that had taken tremendous courage.
She didn't
believe in premonitions, but she knew that ship was going to be in trouble.
"Earn, open a channel to the Nenlars. They've got to get out of—"
The Relka fired. The Nenlar vessel went
reeling.
Janeway
watched in horror as it turned end over end, then exploded. There hadn't even
been time for her to get a lock on Ara and Torar. Grief welled in her, but
another volley from the Relka quickly
forced her to lay aside any mourning she might do.
They were
taking a beating. It was as if now, with no chance of escaping justice, Arkathi
was determined to drag Voyager down
with him. Then all at once, the firing stopped.
"Harry,
raise the Relka."
"They're
beating us to it, Captain."
"Onscreen."
It took her a
moment to recognize the young, rather frightened-looking male Todanian whose
image filled the bridge's viewscreen. Then she placed him: he was Sook, the
fourth of Arkathi's retinue to dine with her that evening. The one who had
looked back, embarrassed, when his commander stormed out...
"Captain
Janeway?" he asked, and the translator confirmed her suspicions that this
was a youth.
"Yes.
Where's Arkathi?"
"We
don't know. He ran. We're trying to stop him but he's barricaded himself in the
pod bay and has overridden all the controls. We only just got visual back.
Captain, please don't keep firing on us. We don't believe in what Arkathi did.
We're trying to catch him ourselves."
He speaks the truth, came Leader's "voice" in
Janeway's mind. She had come to the same conclusion herself.
"We'll
withhold fire," she agreed, "but if—"
"Sook!"
The young Todanian whirled at the sound
of his name.
Someone Janeway couldn't see was calling to him. "He's gotten in one of
the escape pods."
"Put a
tractor beam on it!" Sook cried.
"We
can't!" the unseen Todanian yelled back. "It's still offline!"
"Perhaps
we can help," said Janeway. "On main screen." Sure enough, there
it was, a single small pod fleeing into space. "Tuvok, can you get
him?"
"I will
attempt—" The lights flickered. They returned for a moment, flickered
again, and went out. The emergency lighting came on and the bridge was bathed
in a bloody glow.
"What
the hell was that?" She turned to look at Leader. "Is this your
doing?"
The small
being gestured impotently. The power drain
is affecting all our ships. We believe that it's coming from the gateways
themselves. That they are fueling themselves with our power. Masters Technology
has been working on it and we have learned all that you have about it, but no
one seems to know how to stop it.
"Captain,"
said Chakotay. "You'd better look at this." He touched a control, and
instead of Sinimar Arkathi's escape pod, the viewscreen now showed all the
various gateways that had been their silent, mysterious, softly glowing companions
on this bizarre journey.
Except now,
they weren't softly glowing. Even as she watched, enthralled and horrified at
the same time, each doorway in the sky exploded with color. Before she ducked
her head to shield her vision, she saw every color of the rainbow, and then
some. It was a glorious, dazzling display.
She blinked,
forcing her nearly blinded gaze to re-focus, and inhaled swiftly.
The gateways
were gone.
The ship was
dead.
And Sinimar
Arkathi's escape pod was nowhere to be seen.
CHAPTER V7
there was a harsh crackle, and then the lights that indicated
the forcefields were operative blinked off. The security guard immediate lifted
his phaser.
"Don't
move," he warned. The V'enah exchanged glances. Many of them turned to
Marisha. She rose, went to the forcefield, and extended a hand. Simultaneously,
the guard fired.
Nothing.
Neither from the guard's phaser or the forcefield.
They could
leave if they wanted to. She heard laughter and some of the V'enah surged
forward. Whirling, she extended her hands.
"No,"
she cried.
"Marisha,
the field is down and the guard's weapon is inoperative! It's our chance!"
one of them yelled.
"No. Our
chance lies with Captain Janeway and
Seven. The
eleven of us can't take this entire ship. We stay where we are and hope for
justice." Slowly, she turned to face the guard. "You see how we trust
your captain," she said. "I hope you—look
out!"
Her warning
came too late. The Hirogen had none of the compunctions that Marisha had. They
left their cells, struck the guard with a casual blow that was nonetheless
quite sufficient to render him unconscious, and moved toward the doors without
a word. They did not open, but the two huge aliens forced their way through
with ease.
Marisha
watched them go. She closed her eyes and hoped she was doing the right thing.
"What
just happened?" Janeway demanded. "Seven—I need you in astrometrics.
See if you can find any gateways in this sector."
Seven nodded
her blond head and headed for the turbolift, not without a backward glance at
Leader. It was that last glance that caused her to slam right into the door
that refused to open.
"The
doors are offline," she said, trying to maintain her dignity. "I
will utilize the Jefferies tube."
"Hurry,
Seven. Tuvok, any comments?"
"Inconclusive.
Any statement I might make at this juncture would be considered mere
conjecture," said Tuvok, maddeningly Vulcan.
"Leader,"
said Janeway. "Do you know anything that might help us?"
Leader
hesitated, then sent, / will return to my
vessel and send One Who Masters Technology and One Who Braves Strangers to
speak with Chief Engineer Torres. And just that quickly, he was
gone.
No hum of a
transporter, nothing ... he simply vanished.
"Now that was odd," said Paris dryly.
'Torres, prepare
for visitors. It's difficult to explain, but I think they're allies."
"They're
already here, Captain," said Torres, her voice sounding tight over the
comlink. "I'll let you know what we find."
"Ensign
Harris to Janeway. The Hirogen have escaped."
"Explain,"
snapped Janeway.
"When
that power surge happened, the forcefields went down and my phaser wouldn't
operate. The V'enah stayed put, but the Hirogen came up behind me." There
was a bit of self-disgust in his voice, but Janeway knew that no one on her
crew would have been able to stop the Hirogen without a weapon.
"Acknowledged.
Tuvok, issue a shipwide alert. Without power, they won't get too far. Kim, get
Sook back."
After a
moment, Kim shook his dark head. "I can't, Captain. Everything's down. And
from what I can tell, all the other ships in our caravan have suffered the
same fate."
Mr. Kim is right, came Leader's thoughts in Janeway's mind.
The doorways have closed, but not before
they drained the energy in every ship.
Janeway
couldn't believe it. She felt stunned. They were all dead in the water, to
borrow a several-hundred-year-old phrase, and there didn't appear to be a damn
thing she could do about it.
"Well,"
said Chakotay, breaking the silence, "at least no one's firing at us
anymore."
"I
wonder what happened to Arkathi," said Janeway. "I suppose we'll
never know." She took a deep breath. 'Torres, how are you and our friends
coming along?"
"I'd
kill for an axe along about now," said Torres. "When they said
everything is out, they meant everything is out. Phasers, everything. All but
the emergency lighting."
"Keep
working on it, Torres. Life support needs to be the main thing. If—"
There was
another flash of rainbow light. Again, Janeway hissed in pain and lifted a hand
to shield her eyes from the shining glare. And as suddenly as they had gone
off, the lights came back on again. The panels flashed to life, and the subtle,
oft ignored but now very welcomed hums of a ship running at full power reached
Janeway's ears. Blinking, Janeway stared at the screen.
"They're
back," she said aloud. They had only shut down for about ten minutes, and
now they were reactivated.
"Security
to bridge. We have apprehended the Hirogen."
And as if the
ship's return to power had fueled her as well, Janeway began issuing orders.
"Good work. Take them back to the brig. Janeway to the caravan. A short
distance away, there is a small class-M planet. We need to make for it at once.
The gateways may be in their last stages of operation and could shut down
permanently at any time, and we've all seen what that could do to us. We need
to be near a habitable planet, in the event that we need to evacuate. We will
be sending you the coordinates. Please
utilize your
vessel's top speed to rendezvous in orbit. If anyone needs a tow, please
request it now."
She waited
for several ships to pipe up; no one did. A quick scan confirmed that all the
ships were back to, if not full power, then at least adequate power to reach
the planet. "According to my data, it looks like we'll all be able to make
it We will speak again once we are all in orbit around the planet" She
hesitated, then said, "Godspeed. Janeway out." She glanced over at
Kim. "Ensign," she began, but Kim interrupted her.
"Coordinates
sent, Captain."
"Good
job, Harry. Tom—"
"Course
laid in, Captain. Ready to move at warp nine when you give the signal."
She smiled.
"Consider it given," she said. "Nice to know my crew's on top of
things."
Marisha was
asleep when Janeway approached her cell. All of the V'enah were, curled up
together in a small pile, their arms wrapped around each other as if offering
support and reassurance even in sleep. For a moment Janeway stood, then finally
spoke.
"Marisha,"
she said, just loudly enough to wake her. Marisha opened her eyes; then, as
one, the V'enah started awake, frightened looks on their faces. "I'm
sorry. I tried not to startle you. I understand you opted not to escape. I
thank you for your confidence in me."
"Captain."
She was completely awake now, her painfully thin body tense, as if ready to
jump. "What is it?" Fear flickered across her face. "Are you returning
us to the Relka for
judgment?"
"No,"
Janeway replied, smiling. "Far from it You're free." As quickly as
she could. Janeway told
Marisha about
Seven's discoveries and their confrontation of Arkathi. Marisha and the
others, crowding around their leader, listened intently as she described the
timely and peculiar appearance of the leader of the Ones Who Will Not Be Named,
the strange shutdown of the doorways and the dire consequences, the equally
strange resumption of gateway activity, and the class-M planet to which every
ship in the caravan was heading at top speed.
"I
regret to inform you that when the gateways flared, we were distracted. We lost
sight of Arkathi's escape pod. We scanned the area, but we had no success
locating him or any signs of debris. We can only presume he was successful in
fleeing from us."
Marisha
didn't seem to know how to react to that. "Oh" was all she said.
"I know
that you would have liked a sense of closure on this," said Janeway,
stepping to the side and turning off the forcefield. She gestured that the
V'enah could now step safely through.
"And
yet, perhaps it is a good thing," said Marisha, surprising Janeway with
the maturity of that response. "What would we have done with him? Killed
him ourselves? That goes against everything I believe in, and is not the way I
wish to begin my new life. Kept him prisoner? He was a persuasive man, from
what I can determine, and he might have been a powerful symbol for some who
still hate my people. No, Captain. I have a great faith in destiny, even though
I know I can actively shape it myself. It is best that Arkathi is just gone. If
he returns, we will be stronger. We know what he is. We can deal with him
then."
Janeway was
beginning to see just what kind of charisma this woman possessed, and
understood why Seven had been so adamant in her defense of the former slave.
"You're
a very wise woman, Marisha," she said.
Marisha
didn't seem to know how to respond. Finally, she smiled hesitantly. "If I
am wise, then that wisdom was bought at a cost, Captain."
"Indeed
it was. But it would seem that the Todanian who has filled Arkathi's footsteps
is also wise. Sook has had no part in Arkathi's schemes, and is anxious to
welcome you back to the ship. He wants to explore working with the V'enah on an
equal basis."
"Sook,"
repeated Marisha, smiling fully now. "I know Sook. He is a good man, a man
of his word. He has been kind to us in the past. This is a good thing, Captain.
A very good thing. Will we be returned to our ship, then?"
"Not
just yet. We'll rendezvous with the entire caravan at the designated planet
shortly, and then you'll be free to transport over. In the meantime,"
Janeway continued, "we'd be honored to treat you as our guests. With the
strange goings-on with the gateways, I'm afraid I have Seven of Nine busy in
astrometrics, but Lieutenant Andropov will be happy to escort you to your
quarters until your ship arrives. I'd appreciate it if you would remain there
and not move about the ship, considering the circumstances, but please note
that's a request, not an order." She didn't want Marisha to feel as
though she was simply trading one sort of prison for another, more comfortable
one.
Marisha
understood and nodded. "Things are still quite chaotic. Certainly we have
no wish to further
complicate
the situation. We will be happy indeed to stay in the assigned quarters and
wait for your orders. Captain, I... there are no words to express my
gratitude. Thank you for believing in us enough to challenge Arkathi."
"You're
very welcome. And it's Seven who should get the credit. You'll get a chance to
thank her when this is all finally straightened out."
As Janeway
watched the eleven V'enah move slowly into true freedom for the first time in
their lives, she wondered when things really would be finally straightened
out. She took a breath, then went to her other batch of, if not quite prisoners,
people who were certainly not yet free.
"I don't
appreciate your attacking my crewman when you know you were being held for your
own safety," she told the Hirogen Alpha a few moments later.
He regarded
her coolly. "I would have felt safer aboard my own ship. Your crewman was
not permanently damaged."
"Fortunately,
no." She sighed. "You've been completely cleared. It turns out that
Sinimar Arkathi was behind everything. He killed the Kuluuk for their supplies,
then tried to make it seem as though the Hirogen had done it. When the V'enah,
the slave race aboard his ship, had an uprising, Arkathi turned that to his
advantage too. It was very convenient for him to eliminate any who knew about
the Kuluuk murders and who might be tempted to talk, and put the blame on
Marisha and her fellow slaves."
"A
coward of the lowest sort," growled the Alpha,
his voice
quavering with disgust. "I assume you blasted him out of the sky."
"Actually,
we don't know what happened to him. We were all distracted because at one
point, the gateways went completely offline. That was when the power went out a
while ago. We lost everything, and apparently, many other ships did as well.
We're all heading for a class-M planet at top speed in case it happens again.
We'd rather be stuck where we can live than float forever in a dead ship."
"Agreed,"
said the Alpha, "but Arkathi is gone?"
"Disappeared.
He could have used the opportunity to employ some land of device we don't know
about that would permit him to escape undetected. Or his pod could have been
destroyed by the power drain somehow. I'm sorry, but we just don't know."
"I
see." His voice was flat.
Janeway went
on to explain their present situation, mentioning the Ones Who Will Not Be
Named and their timely intervention, and concluding by saying, "We'll
return you to your vessel once it reaches orbit around the planet. In the
meantime, please stay in your quarters if you wouldn't mind. Do I have to put a
guard there?"
The Alpha
cocked his head and looked at her with an expression she couldn't quite
decipher. "Not at all, Captain. We have no wish to inconvenience you
further. We will wait."
There was
nothing ominous in the words, and yet Janeway felt a chill chase up and down
her spine. "Thank you. We'll notify you immediately when you may transport
back to your vessel."
They were the
first to reach orbit around the planet, and when Janeway returned to the
bridge, she found everyone looking grim.
"Status,"
she snapped, bracing herself.
"The
gateways are going offline again," said Chakotay. "One by one, this
time. The power drain is subtle, but it's there. Not even our telepathic
friends in engineering are being of much help."
Forcing
herself to sound calm, Janeway said, "It would seem we got here just in
time."
"And
there's another thing," said Chakotay, exchanging glances with Tuvok.
"There's a gateway on the planet. It just opened about a minute ago."
"Is it
going offline too?"
"No,
it's stable, for the moment. But Captain ... the frequency resonance is
identical to the one we encountered on the R-and-R planet. Where you found the
dog."
Janeway's
whole body quivered with shock. "You're joking," she said softly,
glancing at Tuvok. He confirmed Chakotay's words with a nod. "But that
can't be! Every single gateway had a different frequency resonance. The odds of
mem being duplicated must be staggering!"
"There
is only one explanation," said Tuvok. "The gateway on the planet is
the same gateway as the one we first encountered."
"But
how? Why? Why is the same gateway appearing right here, right now?" She
didn't want to answer her own question, but she thought she knew the answer.
That gateway had been waiting for them, for this moment. When she didn't go
through with Fluffy the first time—and now she recalled the al-
most
unbearable yearning she had had to enter—it waited until Voyager had come here, now, its power
draining steadily and there was no other option than to...
"Ships
approaching, Captain," said Paris. Janeway realized she had been staring
at her hands clenched tightly in her lap. She looked up to see several ships
take up orbit around the planet. Even as she watched, one of the gateways in
the distance flashed its rainbow hue, then closed.
"Our
power has dropped six percent," said Tuvok.
"Captain!"
yelled Paris. She saw it now, too. One of the ships had broken orbit and was
now racing madly for one of the remaining gateways.
"Kim,
hail them," she cried. Even as she spoke, she knew it was too late. The
gateway for which the ship was making began to flash its rainbow lights and,
before her horrified gaze, shut down.
The ship was
caught half in, half out.
It was
severed quite neatly. There was no fire, no jagged edges. "Lock on to all
life signs and beam them aboard!" Janeway ordered.
"Got
them," said Kim. "Only about twenty."
More ships
were arriving. They were hailing Voyager now
as they watched their only means of ever returning home closing slowly, one by
one.
"Captain,"
said Kim. "I've got eight commanders wanting to speak with you. Who shall
I put through?"
Janeway made
her decision. "None of them," she stated, tilting her chin up.
"Broadcast this message, Mr. Kim. Attention caravan, this is Captain
Jane-way. It appears as though all the gateways are clos-
ing, singly.
With each one that closes, a greater power drain is put on many of our vessels.
I can come to but one conclusion: that when the last gateway closes, we will
effectively be drained of power. All the people on the remaining ships can live
in a class-M environment. I advise all vessels to prepare to evacuate. I have
one last avenue I wish to explore. I will contact you shortly and give the
orders to evacuate if this last avenue bears no fruit. Janeway out."
Chakotay
stared at Janeway, at the clean profile and the straight back. He knew what she
was going to do. Even as he watched, mentally willing her not to say the words,
she turned to him and spoke them.
"I'm
going through."
Chakotay's
heart sank. He had been afraid of this. He knew her too well. He opened his
mouth to protest, but Janeway continued.
"If
something isn't done soon, Voyager will
be dead in the water—so to speak. But these gateways ... Chakotay, there's
something very deliberate about them. I know they've got to be artificial
constructs. And if there is a door, a door created by someone for the purpose
of going through it... well, then there might be someone on the other side of
that door we can talk to. Maybe I'll be able to find some answers, come back
with a solution. Maybe not. But I'll never know if I don't go through."
She was
right, and he knew it. But he didn't have to like it.
"You
shouldn't go through by yourself," he said, though again he knew what her
answer would be.
She smiled
oddly. "I'm not going through by myself. I'm taking Fluffy with me."
"What?
Why?"
"The
readings are exactly the same as the doorway through which Barkley ...
whatever his name is... came the first time. It stands to reason that whatever
is on the other side of that door is his home. And if he can exist there, so
can I. It's actually safer than you might think. At least we know I won't be
walking into some other dimension."
"But we
don't know that!" Chakotay protested. "We don't know anything for
certain."
She smiled
sadly, her eyes locked with his. "Which is precisely why I have to go
through. And why I can't risk taking anyone with me. I will take Tuvok to the
planet with me, but not through that gate. I have to go alone."
Gently, she
placed her hand on his and continued. "I owe it not only to everyone on
this ship, but everyone on all those ships out there. They're all just like us,
Chakotay. They want a way home. And the pain is still fresh to them, still raw.
They still have connections back home that are alive and thriving. They deserve
to get home, just like we do. Maybe even more than we do, because they still
have a chance to pick up their lives right where they left off. If there are
answers on the other side, you bet I'll find them. I'll find them for all of
us." The smile grew. "And at the very least, I can see to it that
Fluffy gets home."
He had
nothing to say to that. He didn't trust his voice enough to speak.
An hour
later, Janeway entered the transporter room. The animal whose appearance had heralded
the whole strange adventure was in her arms, eyes half closed and panting
happily. Ensign Campbell stood at the controls, her eyes enormous in her pale,
pretty face. Janeway knew what she was thinking— what they were all thinking,
including the captain herself. Danger was nothing new to this crew. But seldom
had they had the chance to think about things, to walk away from a decision
like this. There was nothing certain about the situation save its uncertainty.
Tuvok and
Chakotay were there, as she had requested, one on the platform, the other
standing beside Campbell. They stood rigidly at attention, not meeting her
eyes at first.
"Gentlemen,"
she said, feigning a confidence she did not feel. "If all goes well, I'll
be back shortly. And with any luck, I'll have some information we can all put
to use in our quest to return home. If not, I've left instructions in my room
for each of you. Some personal comments as well." Playfully she punched
Tuvok's arm. "I know you don't want to hear all that emotional stuff,
Tuvok. Tough."
"The
ship and I will be monitoring you at all times," said Tuvok. His reaction
to her comments.
"For all
the good that will do you," said Janeway. "You will recall we lost
contact with the probe the minute I tossed it through mis same gateway the
first time."
"The
outcome may be different," said Tuvok stubbornly. Janeway's vision
blurred for a second. She recognized the Vulcan's attitude for what it was—as
much of a
gesture of caring as he would permit himself.
"Anything's
possible," she told him. She looked up at Chakotay. Oddly, it was safer to
show affection to the sometimes frosty Vulcan than to the warmly human
Chakotay. "You're in charge, Commander Chakotay. You've got more than just
Voyager to worry about right now.
I know I leave them all in capable hands."
Now, finally,
he did look down at her. He stretched out a big hand to rub Fluffy/Barkley's
head. "I'll take care of them just as you would, Captain," he said,
and that was all he needed to say.
Without
another word, Janeway turned and stepped lightly up onto the transporter beside
Tuvok. "Energize," she told Campbell.
She
materialized on the planet, and was again struck by the similarity to Earth.
Five meters straight ahead, the gateway yawned open. For a moment, Janeway
allowed herself to absorb the scene. It was almost magical, surreal; the
strange gateway, its interior utterly black and completely unknown, standing
against the lush, waving grasses of this world.
Flurry/Barkley
began to squirm in her arms. Heartened, Janeway held him a little closer.
"Not long now, little fellow," she murmured to him. Louder, she said,
"Janeway to Voyager."
"Reading
you loud and clear, Captain," came Chakotay's voice. "Your signal's
strong."
"That
probably won't last," said Janeway. "I'm directly in front of the
gateway. Fluffy seems anxious to go through. I'm going to take that as a good
sign."
"I can
detect nothing beyond the door. Captain."
said Tuvok,
in a warning voice. "I do not know if I will be able to assist you if you
encounter problems."
"I
understand. But you'll be right here in case I do need you." She paused,
swallowed, then said calmly, "I'm going in."
Head held
high, shoulders squared, Captain Kathryn Janeway stepped over the threshold,
not knowing what lay beyond.
On the bridge
of the starship Voyager, Ensign
Harry Kim took a swift breath. At Chakotay's questioning look, he said in a
low voice, "She's gone."
To be continued...