Seven Years Earlier...
I.
vandelia tried to conceal her astonishment when her rescuer's face
fell off.
She had not been expecting a rescuer at all, much less one whose
visage suddenly abandoned him. Only five minutes be-fore, her situation had
seemed utterly hopeless. Not that it was in Vandelia's nature to admit that any
situation was hopeless or in any way outside of her control. It wasn't that she
was eter-nally optimistic. She was just too damned stubborn, not to mention
extremely fierce-natured.
She was a sinewy Orion woman, with thick green hair that cascaded
about her slim, bare green shoulders. She was scantily dressed, as was the
custom of her kind, in a clinging outfit that concealed almost nothing
and accentuated that which it hid. Orion females preferred such attire because
it made them more formidable fighters. After all, how was an opponent expected
to concentrate fully on his own defense when there was so much exposed flesh
coming at him? A male never quite knew where to look first, and consequently he
never quite reacted properly to an assault. Before he knew it, razor-sharp fingernails
would be slashing across his face, or filed teeth would be ripping a chunk of
his jugular from his throat. Even Orion men were daunted by their
females. Indeed, it explained the se-
rious population problem that Orions were having. Granted, each
new generation of Orions was stronger and tougher than the last That was out of
necessity, since only the hardiest of Orion males dared to try their luck with
their females. Survival rate of such engagements was roughly 83 percent... less
if the female in question happened to be in heat, a biological drive that was
probably the only reason Orions hadn't vanished from the face of the galaxy
centuries earlier.
The sinewy Orion girl pulled with renewed determination at her
bonds, but she had absolutely no more luck in severing them mis time than she'd
had the previous times she had tried to muscle herself free of her
imprisonment. Even her formidable fingernails were incapable of severing her
restraints. More out of a sense of pure frustration than any true belief that
success would result from the efforts, she strained against the bonds, her
clearly defined muscles undulating beneath her dark green skin. Still nothing.
She was held tight.
Matters might have been slightly improved if she had only had an
idea of where "here" was. Unfortunately, she had no clue at all. She
had been captured, in her sleep of all things. How cowardly was that? How
craven on the part of her captors.
Vandelia was a business woman, a professional entertainer. She
danced at parties and social functions, and not only was she very good at it,
but she had been extremely canny in investing the financial gains that her
performing had garnered her. She had millions of credits stashed away as a
result of her seven-plus years of playing to a crowd, plus additional activities
on the side.
She had been dancing this night... except she realized that she
had no reason whatever to assume that this night was the same night. She had no
idea how long she had been unconscious. One night, two, five... no clue at all,
really. The only thing she knew was that when she had woken up, she had been
ravenous. Nevertheless, when some flunky had shown up in her bare-bones room to
bring her food, she had spat it back in his face. He had cleaned the food off
himself without a word. The next time he came to her, he had two assistants
along, and they had pried open the woman's mouth and poured the food straight
down her throat. Obviously the actions did not endear them to her. They could
not have cared less.
The flunky was not or a race that she recognized. He was short and
squat, wider than he was tall, bald and jowly and with bright red skin. The
assistants he brought with him had similar coloration, albeit different builds.
But as far as Vandelia was concerned, if she never saw any members of the
entire race again, she'd be the happier for it. She did, however, feel some
degree of alarm when she started wondering what the coloration of any offspring
would look like. She hoped like bell that she wasn't approaching her heat cycle.
Being out of control of her mating instincts was simply not aggravation that
she needed.
They (whoever they were) didn't have to keep her trussed
up. There were, after all, various electronic devices capable of controlling
her. Collars, wrist bracelets with shock devices, and many other options. But
they had chosen none of those, instead going for something barbaric and
debilitating to the spirit such as total immobility through heavy-duty ropes.
It was as if her captors were almost daring her to slice her way free. If what
they were trying to do was totally muck with her head, then they were
succeeding. She was becoming angrier, more frustrated, more of a seething
volcano with each passing day. The most frustrating thing of all was that she
knew they were doing it just to anger her... and yet she couldn't help herself,
couldn't do anything to fight back the mounting ire.
On her third day of captivity, she met her host.
He was red-skinned, like the others, but he sported a series of
elaborate tattoos on his forehead and also at the base of his throat just above
the collarbone. He had high cheekbones and deep set eyes that glittered
fearsomely. He dressed primarily in loose-fitting black clothes, with a
loose-sleeved tunic and black pants tucked into the top of knee-high black
boots. He had an air about him, Vandelia thought, that made it seem as if he
didn't care one way or the other whether the individual he was looking at was
dead or alive. Furthermore, he didn't seem to care whether he was the one
responsible for that death or not. Vandelia was most struck by his hands, which
were huge in comparison to his admittedly muscular arms. Every so often, as he
spoke to her, his hands.twitched slightly as if he was envisioning what it
would be like to be crushing someone's windpipe.
"Greetings." His voice was amazingly soft-spoken for one
so large and apparently threatening. She had to strain to hear him, and she
realized that that was partly his purpose for speaking so quietly. "Have
you been enjoying your stay?"
She said nothing, merely snarled at him.
"You are a feisty one. That's what I like about you. There's
not enough feisty females in the galaxy."
This time, she spoke. "Come to my home world," she said
between clenched teeth. "You'll find more than enough feisti-ness to keep
you busy."
"I daresay." He bowed slightly at the waist as he said,
"My name is Zolon Darg. And you are Vandelia."
"And you are dead."
The smile never wavered from his thin lips, but one of his meaty
hands swung around so fast that she never even saw it coming. One moment his
arms seemed relaxed and at his sides, and the next the hand was smacking her in
the face. She lowered her head a moment, trying to compose herself and failing
utterly. When she glared back up at him, it was from between strands of hair
that lay upon her face, and her lips were drawn back in a snarl revealing her
sharp teeth.
"Mind your manners," said Zolon Darg. 'This will take as
long as it has to take."
"What is 'this'?" she asked.
"Why, to make you mine, my dear," Darg told her. "I
saw you dance. I was one of your many customers, your many admirers. But
unlike others, I choose not to admire from afar. I wish to draw close, to be
... personal."
"Go to hell," Vandelia said.
"Yes, yes ... I'm sure you would like that," he said in
a condescending tone that made it sound as if he were addressing a child.
"That will not be happening anytime soon, I'm sorry to say ... for your
sake."
"So that is all that this is about?" Vandelia demanded to
know. "You kidnapped me because you find me attractive? How pitiful. How
mundane."
"You misunderstand me." He smiled, and although he did
not have sharpened teeth as Vandelia did, his smile looked no less threatening
than hers. He looked perfectly capable of biting a piece out of her if it
suited his purposes. "It is not simple
attraction. You are a challenge. There are few enough true
chal-lenges in this galaxy, and I take mine where I can find them. When I saw
you dance, I knew instinctively that you'd be impossible to tame. But I thrive
on impossibilities."
"Then think about some impossible things you can do with your
own anatomy." Then she spat at him.
He hit her again. And again. The smile never wavered, his pulse
never sped up. Three, four, five times and more, and again and again, across
the face with those huge hands, first one cheek and then the other. The first
couple of times she tried to voice, at the very least, a snarl of inarticulate
rage, but when he'd slapped her die twentieth time, she'd stopped. She simply
sat there, her head hanging, trying to breathe and laboring because of all the
fury that had tightened her chest. She couldn't get a sound out. He folded his
arms and stood there with a quietly smug expression. He had the air of someone
who was utterly confident as to precisely who was in charge.
"I'm sorry, my dear," he told her, although he didn't
sound especially sorry. "I very much wish that I could tell you that there
is some deep, greater meaning to your being here. That in fact you have
something I need, or that you've actually got a microchip with secret
information hidden beneath your skin, or you're actually a long lost princess,
or perhaps you and you alone are capable of finding the cure for a terrible
disease. But it's none of those things. You're an amusement, a diversion."
He crouched down then, going to one knee so that he could regard her at eye
level. "A pleasant diversion, granted... but that's all."
"Is this what you do?" Her Ups were starting to swell up
a bit from the pounding she'd taken, but she was determined not to acknowledge
the pain. Even so, when she spoke her voice sounded thick and a bit uneven.
"Divert yourself? Is this how you... pass your days?"
"Not at all," said Zolon Darg. He straightened up and
then bowed slightly at the waist as if presenting himself in most courtly
fashion. "I will have you know that I am one of the premier weapons
suppliers in the territory."
"Are you now." She didn't sound impressed. "So
what. You help people kill each other. As if that makes you someone of
consequence."
You do me a disservice, woman. You oversimplify. I have supplied
freedom fighters who battle for their crippled rights. I have supplied
governments who fight to protect themselves from evil and unappreciative mobs
of rebellious ingrates. I am always, always, on the side of those who are in
the right"
"And what makes one right and one wrong?"
"Money, my dear girl," he smiled.
She spat in defiance once more. But this wad didn't even manage to
cover the distance before it splattered impotently to the floor. Darg didn't
give it a glance. "You amoral pig," she growled.
"The moral high ground, my dear Vandelia, belongs to whomever
can afford to pay the toll."
She said nothing, merely glowered at him. He smiled thinly,
clearly finding the entire encounter very amusing.
Since she was seated, he naturally towered over her. But he took
the opportunity to crouch and bring himself to eye level with her. He studied
her thoughtfully, and then said, "Let me tell you what's going to happen.
We're going to start putting you on a somewhat erratic eating schedule, for
starters. Sometimes you will find yourself starving, your belly aching so pitifully
that you'll feel as if it would gladly rip through your body and go off in
search of food on its own. Other times we will suddenly feed you in such
copious amounts that we will literally be shoving it down your throat. The
five or so gentlemen who have been overseeing your trips to relieve yourself in
delicate lady-like fashion will be assigned other duties. We will simply leave
you tied up at all times, so that you can wallow in your own waste products.
When you begin to fall asleep, loud noises will be blared at you, blinding
lights shined directly into your face. We also have one or two fairly
belligerent empaths at our disposal... individuals who will be able to project
into your mind whatever emotions it amuses me to have you feel. You have a very
strong mind, Vandelia. At the outset, you'd likely be able to resist them. But
that will only be at the outset, and we have a very long time available to us.
We will, in short, do all that we can to disrupt you, discommode you, and
utterly break you."
"And once that's done?" she asked levelly.
"Why then, at that point... you will be reeducated. Repro-
grammed. The personality, the attitude that you have now... that
will be like a bad dream. It will go far, far away where it can never be of any
harm to you again." As he spoke, his voice almost seemed soothing in its
confidence. "Instead, it will be replaced by a calmer, more loving
personality. Oh, but don't worry. You will continue to dance. But you will perform
your seductive dances ... only for me."
She looked at him with utter contempt. "You have no idea, do
you."
"What do you mean?" His head was tilted in a curious manner.
"My dancing. You think somehow that's separate from who I am.
That is, after all, what attracted you to me. You poor, pathetic fool, Darg.
When I dance... that is an expression of my personality. And that personality
holds you, and all your kind, in the utmost contempt. When I dance," and
she lowered her voice to an almost sultry tone, "I know that you all
caress me with your eyes. I know that you think of what you would like to do to
me. How each of you envisions possessing me. But you're all too stupid to
realize that in my gyrations, I'm letting you know just how little I think of
your desires. I don't dance to seduce. I dance to let you know what you can
never, ever have. Let us say," she continued as if wanning to the topic,
"that you somehow manage to break my personality. Make me less than I am.
Do you seriously think mat if I'm even capable of dancing again, it will bear
the slightest resemblance to anything you saw before? You will sit there and
shake your head in frustration, wondering what happened to the passion, the
fire, the sheer raw sexuality that drew you to me in the first place. And when
you sit there in discouragement, when you mourn the loss of something that you
truly adored... why then, my friend, you will have only yourself to blame. Only
yourself. And even if you manage to have your way with the body you see before
you now..." She grinned ferally. "Even if you manage that... you will
never have me. I will be long gone, beyond your ability to touch or harm or
seduce or even interest Do we understand each other now, Zolon Darg? Have I
made things sufficiently clear for, even a brainless pig such as
yourself?"
He smiled mirthlessly. "Abundantly clear, yes."
"But it is still your intention to hold me here?"
"Yes. You see... it doesn't particularly matter to me if you
wind up being destroyed as part of my endeavors. At least I'll know that I was
able to bring you down, and I will allow myself to take some pleasure in
that."
Then he slapped her several more times. There seemed to be no
particular reason to do so. But he did it anyway. Vandelia, for her part,
couldn't even muster the ability to spit.
That was when the alarm went off.
Vandelia was positive that that was what it was the moment she
heard it. The loud, screeching klaxon jolted Darg, and he looked around in
confusion as if he weren't quite certain that he was in fact hearing the noise
that was threatening to deafen the entire place. For the first time, Vandelia
saw a momentary bit of uncertainty pass across Darg's previously smug face. She
was extremely pleased to see it. Her only regret was that she wasn't the cause
of it.
He tapped a comm unit that he wore on his wrist and said,
"Central. This is Darg. Report: What is the cause of the alarm?"
"We have an intruder, sir," came back a voice crisply.
"How do we know that, Kapel?"
"We found Dikson down on level three. Apparently he'd been in
a fight. Someone broke his neck, and they did it very cleanly and very
efficiently."
Clearly, it took a lot more than the discovery of a corpse to
throw Zolon Darg off his stride. "Will you shut that damned alarm off? How
is anyone supposed to concentrate on anything with that godawful noise howling
in our ears?" A moment passed and then the alarm, obediently, was shut
off, although the lights were still rapidly dimming and glowing. Vandelia viewed
the flickering with grim amusement. Since the alarm had likely made everyone in
the area deaf, dimming the lights was probably the only remaining means of
alerting all concerned to the fact that there was a problem.
"Now then," Darg said slowly, once he seemed satisfied
that the alarm was no longer going to assail his ears, "We don't know
absolutely for certain that Dikson's death means that we have an intruder. He
had a history of gambling, as I recall. Could this be retaliation of some sort
for money owed?"
"Sir," came back the voice of the one who'd been
addressed as Kapel, "his debts were his protection? Who's going to kill
someone who owes them money? Rather difficult to collect."
"Hmm. Yes. Yes, you're right," Zolon Darg said after a
moment's consideration. "All right, then. I want everyone throughout the
base on full watch. Have all shifts report in. I want tech teams scouring level
three. Perhaps Dikson discovered this possible intruder performing some sort
of sabotage act. If so, it has to be found and rooted out immediately. Is that
clear, Kapel?"
"Yes, sir."
"I will be right up."
"Yes, sir."
He clicked off his comm unit, and then turned to Vandelia. "I
have to leave, darling. But rest assured, we will have time together. Not only
that," and he ran a finger along the line of her jaw, "but you will
dance for me... and only for me."
Her head struck forward tike a serpent's, her sharp teeth clacking
together, but he deftly moved his hand away lest he lose a finger.
"Feisty," he said once more in approval... and men swung a vicious
roundhouse punch. He connected with her on the point of the jaw with such force
that it knocked her completely over. The chair crashed heavily to the floor.
Vandelia's head lolled back, her eyes closed.
He turned and walked away from her. When he got to the door, it
slid open... and standing there waiting for him was another of his race. The
new arrival was slightly shorter than Darg, and summer. He seemed momentarily
startled, apparently not having expected the door to open right up.
"Zolon Darg," he said, recovering quickly. "The... the
alarm..."
"I heard it," Darg said impatiently. His eyes narrowed
as he stared at the other Thallonian. "What is your name again?"
"Qadril, sir," said the Thallonian. "We met not
long ago. I'm a friend of—"
"Yes, yes, I remember. Qadril... attend to her."
"To her, sir?" He looked uncertainly in Vandelia's
direction. "Are you sure—?"
"Of course I'm sure," Darg told him, his temper not
becoming any gentler with the constant need for repetition. "Haul her
chair upright so that she's not simply lying about on the floor
like that. And keep your fingers away from her teeth, would be my
recommendation."
"Yes, sir."
With that, Darg headed out.
Qadril glanced right and left. Vandelia knew this since she was
watching him carefully. Her eyes were narrow slits as she saw him draw closer,
closer. She suspected that he would be of no more use in freeing her than
anyone else, but she looked forward to sinking her teeth into him during an
unwary moment His howls of pain would bring her great pleasure, and be a
further reminder to Darg that she was going to make every moment that he held
her captive as much of a living hell as she could manage.
Qadril hesitated a few feet away, and then he went around her and
gripped her chair from behind. She was mildly surprised when he did not grunt
under the weight of hauling her back into an upright position. He didn't seem
all that strong. Obviously he had some muscle, although one wouldn't have
known it to look at him.
But, just as obviously, he was remarkably stupid, for the poor
fool was actually in the process of exhibiting something akin to concern for
her. He walked in front of her and took either side of her face in his hands,
tilting her head back so that he could try and see into her eyes. "Can you
hear me?"
When he said that, there was something different in his voice. He
sounded rougher, more brusque than he had mere moments ago when speaking to
Darg. Darg he had addressed in a manner that was fairly simpering. But not now.
Now he sounded more dynamic, more confident and sure of himself.
It was probably, she assumed, because she was unconscious. In
fact, he was probably trying to determine if... yessss. Yes, that was it. He
wanted to see if she was still out cold so that he could have his way with her
with impunity. Oh, and wouldn't that be something for him to boast to his
friends about. She could practically hear his weasely voice bragging of how he
had "tamed" her, made her beg for his attentions. Her fury began to
bubble over the imagined liberties that he was about to take.
He had momentarily distracted her from her purpose with his
feigned concerns as to her well-being. She was annoyed
with herself that she had allowed that to happen, no matter how
short a time her determination had actually wavered. As if to make up for it,
she attacked with speed and viciousness that would have done any Orion female
proud.
Just as he was making another inquiry as to her wakeful-ness, her
head whipped around and she sank her teeth into his left forearm. She had
envisioned chomping through his flesh, all the way down into the bone if she
were lucky. If not, then at least she would take some pleasure in tearing out a
large, dripping hunk of the man's arm and spitting it back into his face while
his blood trickled down the sides of her face.
But she did not come into contact with flesh or bone. Instead her
teeth bit through the cloth of his sleeve and hit metal.
"No!" he shouted.
What in the world? The thought flashed through her mind even as she quickly yanked
her head back. Perhaps, she thought, he was some sort of cyborg or android.
Sparks flew from the section of his arm that she had mutilated,
and she saw a few quick sparks dancing along his shirt sleeve. He tore at the
sleeve, pulling off some sort of device that had been strapped around his arm.
It was at that moment that his face fell off.
Vandelia gaped in confusion as the red skin cracked and crumbled
away, cascading to the floor in a powdery heap. Not only was his skin color
different, but the very shape of his visage had altered.
The man who only moments before that been calling himself Qadril
had gone from having a fairly round face to one that had a good deal more
definition to it. His chin was cleft, his nose somewhat irregular, as if it had
been broken. Instead of being bald, he had a thick mop of black hair. His skin
was no longer red, but instead a paler shade that was more evocative of human
beings. Even his eyes had changed color, going from a sort of pale blue to a
vivid purple. Most striking about him to Vandelia, however, was a scar that ran
the length of his right cheek. Considering the skin graft and dermaplast techniques
that were so readily available, Vandelia couldn't recall ever having seen a
facial mutilation that was quite so severe.
She found it rather attractive.
"Perfect," he growled, dusting away the remains of the
red
material that had been obscuring his true features. "Just perfect.
You had to do that. You just had to."
"Who are you?" she demanded.
"The one who was going to get you out of here. At this point,
though, I'm half-tempted to leave you." He made an impatient noise,
blowing air from between his clenched teeth, and then he seemed to make up his
mind. "All right," he sighed, "we'll just have to make the best
of it If I free you, will you give me your word that you won't attack."
For a moment, despite the fact that he was offering her aid, she
couldn't hold back a contemptuous sneer. "Are you that afraid of me?"
"No," he said reasonably. "But you're a splendid
looking woman, and I try to minimize the number of splendid looking women I
kill in the average day."
The words were light, the tone quite flip, but she looked into his
eyes and there was something in there, a flat, cold stare that caused her to
realize that there was nothing cavalier about his attitude. He really did
believe that he was capable of killing her. Moreover, she began to get the
impression that he might actually be able to accomplish it.
"You would take the word of an Orion?" she asked after a
moment.
"Look," and it was clear from his tone that his patience
was starting to wear thin, "I'm not interested in passing judgment on a
species just now. I'm asking you, personally, if—"
"Yes, yes, all right, you have my word I will not attempt to
hurt you," she said at last.
He had a knife hanging from his right hip. He pulled it out and
briskly cut through the ropes that bound her. "You use that knife as if
you really know what you're about," she commented.
He said nothing, but instead simply slid it back into its sheath.
He glanced around the room they were in as if he were trying to see if anything
could be used as a weapon.
"What was that device you were using to disguise yourself?"
she asked.
"A Zynterian Camouflage Field," he replied as he went to
the wall and ran his fingers along it. He seemed to be probing for something.
He had been wearing gloves, which one would
have thought was simply for ornamentation, but now she realized
it had been to hide the true color of his hands.
"Zynterians? They're a passive race. They have no espionage
interests that I've ever heard of," said Vandelia. She was busy rubbing
her wrists, trying to restore circulation to them. She was a bit unsteady on
her legs as well, but was determined not to let the weakness show.
'True enough. But they don't use it for espionage. It's a sex
aid."
"A what?" She didn't quite think she'd heard him
properly.
He cast an impatient look at her, as if he couldn't quite believe
that he was wasting time explaining it to her. "They believe sex in any
form is inherently evil, and so they use the camouflage field to disguise
themselves as members of other races when they're... involved. That way they can
pretend that they themselves are remaining pure. It's a sort of ritual."
"I see." She didn't, actually, but it seemed the thing
to say.
"Generally Zynterians are the only ones who can use them.
Other races who have tried to employ the device for other pursuits—such as
espionage, as you mentioned—find that the device tends to sear the flesh from
their bones. However, we Xenexians are close enough biologically to Zynterians
that we can get away with using them. It causes considerable pain, but
otherwise no lasting damage."
"Pain? You were in pain the entire time you were using that
thing? I couldn't tell."
Tin very stoic," he said, never taking his eyes from the wall
as he continued his probe of the room. "For instance, my impulse is to
throw you to the ground and take you like an animal right here. But you'd never
be able to tell."
His voice was so flat, so lacking in inflection, that it was impossible
for her to tell whether he was joking or not. She felt a headache coming on
just trying to keep up with him. "Who are you?" she demanded.
"Call me Mac," he said over his shoulder.
"Ah."
"Ah?"
He had his hand against a section of the wall that looked no
different from any other. However, he pushed it and suddenly the wall swivelled
around, revealing what appeared to be some sort of passage. She couldn't quite
make out any details, al-
though she did see small, flickering lights lining the upper
sec-Don.
"Come on," he told her.
"But... where does this go?"
"Away from here. For the moment, that's good enough."
She mentally shrugged as she realized she had nothing to lose.
This strange individual, whoever he was and wherever he was from, at least
seemed to have some idea as to what he was about. She really couldn't be much
worse off than she'd been a few minutes ago.
They headed down the narrow passage. Moments after they'd entered,
the wall had slid back into place on noiseless bulges. The action dimmed the
corridor slightly, but not significantly.
"How did you know that was going to be there?" she
asked. That false wall, I mean."
"I didn't.
Not for sure. But we've done a good deal of research on Darg, and it seemed a
reasonable guess. He had a similar hideaway on Estarcion IV, and he'd laced it
with catacombs with similar entrances. He likes to get about unobserved and
show up unexpectedly. He feels it keeps his people on their toes."
"It probably does." She paused and then said, "Who
are 'we'? I mean, the 'we' who did this research?"
"You don't need to know that either," he said brusquely.
"Listen," and her temper started to flare, "I'd
better start getting some answers, or—"
"Or what?" He turned to face her there in the confines
of the passage, and there was unmistakable danger in his tone. "Look: You
weren't in the plan. I found out that you were here when I was already inside.
You're an innocent bystander who's in the wrong place at the wrong time. I decided
that it wouldn't be right to simply leave you to die. So I am risking myself to
save your neck. I didn't have to. I still don't. If you want to go off on your
own and take your chances, go right ahead." He flattened against the
corridor wall so that she could pass by him. "My guess is that it branches
off just ahead. You can go on and take your chances. I'll give you a five...
no, three... minute head start. You'll go your way, I'll go mine, and that'll
be that. Or tell me now if you're going to stick
with me but are going to continue to irritate me, because if you
are, then I'll put you down right now and be done with it. I don't need the
distraction or the grief. Life's too short and on the verge of getting even
shorter. Your only other option is to shut up so I can get both of us out of
here in one piece. Once we're out of here and safe, you can be as arrogant and
irritating as you wish. It won't bother me then because you won't be putting us
at risk. Now have I made myself clear?"
"Yes," she said tightly.
"Now are you going to be quiet?"
No reply.
"Good."
She took some small measure of satisfaction in the fact that he
actually appeared surprised that she had quieted down.
As she followed him, she said softly, "May I ask a less inflammatory
question?"
"If you must."
"You've been talking as if we have a deadline. Why is
that?"
That was when a massive explosion rocked them.
She stumbled against him as the passageway vibrated uncontrollably
around them. He steadied her and muttered, "Idiots. They must have found
it and tried to defuse it."
There was now an unmistakable rumbling all about them, and he
grabbed her wrist and yanked. "Come on." There was urgency to his
voice, but he didn't sound close to panic. Clearly this was someone who was
accustomed to handling difficult situations with aplomb.
She picked up speed and now they were heading at a full dash down
the corridor. There was the sound of a second explosion, and a third, and they
staggered as they ran. From a distance they could hear shouts and the sounds of
running feet, and voices being raised in alarm.
There was a sensation of heat from directly behind them. "I
wouldn't look back if I were you," the man called Mac warned her.
She looked back.
A gigantic ball of flame was roaring down the passage behind
them.
She looked forward once more, suddenly wishing that she'd done as
he suggested.
The seam in the wall that indicated a door barely had time to
register on her and then Mac was pushing both of them through. They stumbled
out into a main hallway that hardly seemed to be much better in terms of being
a safe haven, for men were running about in total panic and any one of them
might notice the escaping prisoner. Giving no heed to the danger mat being spotted
presented, Mac slammed the door back into place just as the jet of flame caught
up to them. The wall instantly became superheated, but Mac had blocked off the
passageway just in time, and the flames within passed them by harmlessly.
"Come on," and he pulled her roughly. "We've got to
get to our ride. This place doesn't have much longer."
It was the first opportunity that Vandelia had had to see anything
of her place of capture aside from the one room in which she'd been imprisoned.
The place was massive, stretching upward as far as she could see. There were
crosswalks and catwalks far overhead and then, when she looked down she saw
that they descended to a great depth as well. Everything had been constructed
so that everything was visible to some degree from elsewhere within the
complex. It was all rather clever, it meant that Darg could keep his eye on
just about everything from any point
Under ordinary circumstances, she and Mac wouldn't have had a
prayer of getting ten feet without attracting attention. But these circumstances
were far from ordinary. She continued to hear explosions, some further away,
some closer, and the entire place had spiralled into chaos. "What did you
do?" she cried out over the shouts of others who were running around
without noticing them.
"I'll tell you later, provided there is one!"
"You!"
Vandelia's heart sank. She recognized the voice immediately, of
course.
It had come from behind mem, and they turned to see Zolon Darg. He
was on a catwalk above them, looking down, and he had hah7 a dozen
men with him. He had spotted Vandelia, and more, he obviously realized that it
was Mac who was the intruder. Perhaps it was the fact that Mac was wearing the
same clothes as the supposed red-skinned guard had been sporting a short time
earlier. "You did this! You! Stay where you are!"
"You don't have time for this, Darg!" Mac shot back.
"These explosions you're hearing so far are nothing! A chain of bombs to
distract you from the real threat: The fact that I set two of your main boomers
in your central weapons room to overload. Once those go, you can say good-bye
to this entire place! You've got only a couple of minutes to get clear! Are you
going to waste them coming after me, or are you going to save your own
neck?"
The choice seemed fairly straightforward to Vandelia. Unfortunately,
it was less clear-cut to Darg, who did not hesitate to aim a fairly lethal
weapon squarely at Mac and fire.
Mac yanked Vandelia forward, barely getting them clear of the
shot. "Get them!" they could hear Zolon Darg shout after them, but
they didn't look back. Instead they bolted as quickly as they could along the
catwalk. "Get back here!" Darg's voice came, and a disruptor blast
exploded just ahead of them, missing them but blowing the leg off a hapless
individual who was trying to save his own skin. He hit the ground, crying out
as he clutched at the stump of his knee. Mac and Vandelia did not slow down,
but instead simply vaulted over him and kept going.
They angled left, then a quick right, and they were on a rampway
that was heading downward. Vandelia had no idea whether Mac truly knew where
they were going, or if he was simply guessing with sufficient confidence to
allay her concerns. But she was quite certain that the source of the explosions
which were wracking the entire area was below them, and heading toward that
source was the height of folly. She yanked her hand from his. He turned and
looked at her in confusion. "Come on!" he called to her.
"We're going the wrong way! We're heading towards the explosions!
It's suicide!"
"There's no time for this!"
But she wasn't listening. Instead she turned and ran.
Her legs moving like pistons, she charged back up the ramp, found
another turn-off and took it. Someone tried to get in her way. She didn't even
slow down, didn't take time to look at his face. She just slashed out with her
fingernails and ripped across his face. He doubled over, blood welling up from
between his fingers, and she shoved him aside and kept going.
Suddenly she was hit from the back, a flying tackle as someone
took her down. She hit the floor, taking most of the impact on her elbows which
sent a shock straight up her arms. But she did not cry out, instead keeping the
pain within. That was how she was going to get out of it, she had decided. She
would focus all her anger, all her agony, and it would drive her forward to
safety. At least, that was the theory.
Unfortunately, the weight of the person atop her was such that,
not only had the wind been knocked out of her, but she couldn't get the leverage
to thrust upward and knock him off her back. She struggled, she snarled, and
then rough hands grabbed her by either arm and hauled her to her feet. She
tried to angle her head around to bite one of her captors, but another pair of
hands came in behind her, grabbing her by the back of the head and snapping her
skull back. Her attempts to pull her head forward simply resulted in her nearly
tearing her hair out by the roots.
Zolon Darg stood in front of her. He was staring at her with
enough cold fury to peel the skin off her face just with the force of his
glare. "Where's your friend?" he demanded.
"What friend?" From closer than she would have liked to
hear, an explosion sounded. Several of Darg's men flinched or looked about
nervously. Darg didn't even glance in the direction of the noise.
"I understand now," he said evenly. "Very
elaborate. Very clever. You trick and seduce me into bringing you here so that
your mysterious associate could follow you and track you to our hidden
location."
"You idiot! I'm the victim here! You're giving me entirely
too much credit. You've created some elaborate conspiracy theory where none
exists!"
Darg circled her. "Then why did he stop to rescue you?"
"I don't know! Ask him!" She tried in futility to pull free.
"I don't know if you've noticed, but this entire place is going up!"
"I have
my best people on it," Darg replied confidently. "They will locate
whatever further boobytraps your partner has laid and dispose of them. As for
you..." And he aimed a disruptor squarely at her forehead. "Call
your partner. Summon him, right now."
"He's not my partner!"
"Call him." His tone didn't waver.
"He's probably long gone by now, because you've been too busy
playing games with me!"
He fired a warning shot to her right. It grazed her upper thigh.
To her credit, she still didn't cry out, as much as she wanted to. The bolt
almost struck the man who was standing behind her, holding her immobile. Aware
of the near-hit, he cast a nervous glance at his associates.
"Last warning." This time he aimed it straight at her
face. The man who was holding her head steady angled around so that Darg would
have a clear shot.
Realizing she had nothing to lose, Vandelia called out,
"Mac!"
"That's better. Call him again."
"Maaaaac!"
"Mac what? What is his full name?"
"I have no idea."
He activated the disrupter's energy feed, preparing for another
shot that would take her head off.
"Mac Morn Michelity," she said without further
hesitation, reasoning that they likely weren't going to be around long enough
for Darg to learn that she had no idea what she was talking about.
Suddenly there was a brief clatter from further down the rampway.
Vandelia couldn't help but notice that Darg and his men were well-trained: Half
of them looked in the direction of the noise, but the rest of them looked
instead behind them, just in case the noise was a diversion to allow Mac to get
in behind them.
Nothing, however, seemed to come from either direction.
Darg waited impatiently for another noise, and when none was
forthcoming, turned back to Vandelia and said—with very little trace of
sadness—"It appears your friend has deserted you. Farewell,
Vandelia." He levelled the gun right at her face.
That was when the deafening roar sounded from behind them.
As one, they turned just in time, to see a monstrous creature,
reptilian in aspect, with leathery skin and a huge mouth filled with teeth that
seemed capable of rending or shredding a shut-
tlecraft. It was poised above them on its hind legs, its whip-like
tail snapping about with such ferocity that anyone within range of it would
have been crushed instantly. When it roared, the hot, foul vapor of its breath
washed over them, and the sound drowned out yet another explosion in the near
distance.
The response among Darg's men was instantaneous. With a collective
shriek of terror, they broke and ran as the creature advanced on them, each
stomp of its massive feet causing the rampway to shudder beneath it. In doing
so, they released then-hold on Vandelia. Her immediate instinct was to try and
attack Darg, but the shot he'd taken at her leg had done her more damage than
she'd first realized. It went out from under her and she found herself barely
able to walk, much less capable of lunging to the attack.
The only one who did not break and run was Darg himself. He stood
precisely where he was, utterly paralyzed. His mouth hung open, his eyes were
wide and looked almost lifeless as he stared at the monstrosity before them.
Suddenly Vandelia's view was blocked... by a rope which had just
dropped directly into her line of sight. She glanced up and saw, on a rampway
above her, Mac. He was holding the other end and mouthing the words,
"Hurry up!"
She did not hesitate, but instead grabbed the rope with both hands
and held on as tightly as she could. Mac pulled, and she was surprised how
quickly and effortlessly he hauled her aloft. He had looked rather
unprepossessing, but there was clearly more than ample strength in his arms if
he was able to yank her upward so easily. He drew her upward, hand over hand,
one foot braced against the hand railing, his mouth set and his eyes burning
with a quiet intensity. He did not grunt, nor make any sound to give away any
strain he might be feeling.
Darg still hadn't budged. He was indeed so frozen by what he was
witnessing that he didn't appear to have noticed that Vandelia was no longer
there. The monster roared once more, a particularly high-pitched shriek, and
something in the piercing nature of the howl caused Darg's finger to tighten
spasmodically on the trigger. The disruptor ripped out a shot and it went
straight through the creature without the monster even acknowledging that it
had been hit.
It took a moment for Darg to register for himself what he
had just seen. Then his eyes narrowed and he fired again. Once
more the creature was utterly unharmed by the disruptor blast.
He shouted a profanity and suddenly looked around ... and then up.
He did so just in time to see Vandelia being pulled over the railing of the
overhead rampway, and he caught a glimpse of Mac looking down at him. Vandelia
saw the two of them lock eyes, two enemies truly knowing each other for the
first time.
"Get back here!" bellowed Darg, and he fired. Vandelia and Mac ducked backward as
the blast sizzled past them.
"Come on! And stick with me this time!" Mac admonished
her. The last thing Vandelia wanted to do was admit that her thigh was
throbbing, so she gritted her teeth and simply nodded. Mac grabbed her wrist
and they started to run. It was all that Vandelia could do not to limp in a
most pronounced fashion. "What was that monster?" she called out.
Without glancing behind himself to address her, Mac said,
"Holo unit. Pre-set monster, emanating from a disk about the size of my
palm."
"That was the noise we heard... you activated it on a time
delay and then tossed it down—"
"You're going to hear more noises than you'll want to hear if
we don't hurry—"
The rampway shook beneath their feet. There seemed to be a series
of seismic shocks building, one upon the other, throughout the structure. Mac
glanced around. There was a network of ramps some thirty feet away from them,
and between them was a deep well that seemed to fall away nearly into
infinity. The ramp trembled once more.
Suddenly there was a screech of metal and the ramp started to
twist at an angle. "Hold on," Mac said with a sort of resigned calm.
He yanked off his belt buckle, twisted it, and suddenly he was holding a
device that looked like a small gun. He tapped a button on the side and the end
of the device was ejected, trailing a cord behind it. It "clacked"
onto an upper rampway across the well.
At the far end of the ramp that they were upon, Darg was suddenly
there. He was howling with fury, heedless of the chaos around him, as he charged
straight toward them. He was firing his disruptor indiscriminately, no longer
aiming but in-
stead just shooting in their general direction. He lurched toward
them, gripping the handrail, apparently not even aware that the ramp was in
danger of collapsing.
Mac didn't even bother to glance at him. Instead he gripped the
device in his palm, threw an arm around Vandelia's waist, and launched off the
rampway. Vandelia had a brief glimpse of the ground, unspeakably far below, but
it was all a blur, and suddenly they were on the other side. Mac snagged his
legs around the railing and shoved Vandelia onto the ramp.
Zolon Darg brought his disruptor to bear, aiming at them across
the divide, and then with a roar of metal the rampway that he was standing upon
gave way. He tried to clutch onto something for support, but couldn't find
anything. The sounds of the tearing metal drowned out Darg's shrieks as he
tumbled downward and landed with a thud on the rampway below. He had about a
second's respite before the falling metal of the upper rampway landed on him.
The last that Vandelia saw of him was his face twisted in fury before he was
completely obscured by the mass of twisted metal that crunched down atop him.
Mac, for his part, didn't appear to give it any notice. He seemed
far more concerned about other things, such as survival. "This way,"
he said, and pulled her wrist. She limped after him.
"But we're heading toward the explosions!" she cried out
to him, the same objection that she'd been raising before. But she was at that
point somewhat resigned to her fate, convinced that she had only moments to
live anyway. As if to underscore the point, there was another explosion, even
louder than before.
"Here. Right here!" Mac called out to her. He hauled her
over to a spot near a wall that was quivering from the most recent explosion.
Then he stood perfectly still. "Don't worry," he said confidently.
"Don't worry!"
"That's right. Don't worry."
From deep within the well that the rampways surrounded, there was
an explosion that was so loud Vandelia felt her teeth rattle.
Orion beliefs had one aspect in common with human theology. They
shared a belief in an afterworld for the evil that was a scalding pit of
torment. At that moment, Vandelia was suddenly convinced that she was within
that very pit, for the air around her started to sizzle. She found it
impossible to breathe, the air searing her very lungs. The entire area seemed
bathed in light. She looked down into the well around which the ramp-ways hung,
and she saw a massive fireball roaring up toward them. Within seconds it would
envelop them.
Part of her wanted to scream, to curse, to agonize in loud misery
over the hideous and unfortunate set of circumstances which had brought her to
this pointless end of her life. Instead, somewhat to her surprise, all she did
was turn to Mac and say, sounding remarkably casual, "Can I worry
now?"
He sighed. "If you must."
And she saw a flash of amusement in his purple eyes ... at which
point his eyes abruptly started to haze out in front of her. Then she realized
mat she, too, was disappearing, as the entire area around them demolecularized.
Considering the circumstances, it was understandable that she didn't quite
realize at first what was happening. So this is what death is like went
through her head before she truly had a chance to register that she was not, in
fact, dying, but that instead she was in the grip of a transporter beam.
Then the world reintegrated around her and she found herself in
the back of some sort of small transport vehicle. Somewhat larger than a
runabout, it seemed like a small freighter more than anything, designed for
short runs with cargo that was generally contraband. The smaller the vessel,
the less chance there was of attracting attention. Then she fell, for Mac was
no longer supporting her. Instead he had moved quickly off the transporter pad
and was at the helm. "Hold on!" he called.
"Hold on! To what?!" she cried out. Ultimately it didn't
matter; the freighter suddenly leaped forward, sending Vandelia tumbling
backward, her feet up and over her head. She clambered to her feet, her leg
still throbbing but starting to feel improvement.
She could see that they were on the surface of a planet, but the
freighter was already firing up and leaping skyward. Vandelia lurched to the
front and dropped into the copilot seat next
to Mac. He barely afforded her a sidelong glance as he checked
readings on the control dash. "How's the leg?" he asked. Considering
the circumstances, he sounded relatively calm.
"Getting better."
"Good. Let's see if we can keep the rest of you intact."
He urged the freighter forward, and it rocketed upward, faster and
faster.
"That place you had us stand. It was a preprogrammed
transporter point," she said.
"Yes," he said tersely. "I didn't know the exact
layout of the place, but I knew they had scanners that would detect transporter
homing beacons or comm units, as well as any beam-ins. So I had to sneak in on
my own, and make a guess as to coordinates when I set a time and place for a
beam-out."
"You could have explained that."
He didn't reply. The chances were that he wouldn't have done so
anyway, but he was actually handed an excuse for not continuing the
conversation as several explosions around them caused the freighter to rock
wildly.
"Oh, now what?" demanded Vandelia.
"We have company," Mac muttered. "Computer, rear
view."
A section of the screen in front of them shifted. It was only men
that Vandelia realized they weren't looking through a window, but instead
through a computer-generated representation of what was outside. Most of that
view remained, but now part of it had altered to present the view from behind
them. Three small vessels were approaching them most rapidly. They were so
small that they appeared to be one-man fighters each, but because of their
diminutive size, they were fast and very maneuverable. The odds were that they
would be able to catch up with the freighter in short order.
But that wasn't the only thing that attracted Vandelia's attention.
What she noticed in particular was a tall tower in the distance. It was
surrounded by rich and green forest, but stood high above it, almost a mile
high, it seemed. It had a wide base, becoming progressively narrower as it got
higher. It was silver and gleaming and would have been far more impressive if
it hadn't been for the huge gusts of black smoke wafting out of a number of
places. Then, as Vandelia watched, the lower third of the tower was engulfed in
flame. She saw the upper
two thirds start to wobble, teeter, and then tumble over in excruciatingly
slow motion.
"Impressive," was all she managed to say.
Then the pursuing vessels began to fire. Mac's fingers flew over
the board, handling the freighter's course with astonishing confidence, sending
it zigzagging one way and then another, dodging a number of the blasts with
facility even as he continued them on their upward course. Nevertheless, the
freighter shuddered as several of the shots got through.
"Rear deflector at eighty percent and dropping," the
computer informed him.
"Concentrate all deflector power to rear shields. Shore it
op," he ordered.
"We're not going to make it," Vandelia said.
The vote of no-confidence didn't seem to perturb him. "Then
we don't make it."
"You seem rather sanguine about the prospect."
"Would you rather I started to panic?"
"No."
"Then shut up."
She opened her mouth to reply, but came to the realization mat
perhaps shutting up would indeed be the smarter course of action.
The freighter angled down abruptly. The ground seemed to be
approaching them at horrifying speed and Vandelia was certain that there was
no way, absolutely no way, that they were going to forestall a crash, at which
point the freighter zoomed upward once more. Mac tapped the control board
again, and Vandelia was surprised to see on the rear view that a suddenly great
gust of white was billowing behind them. "Are we hit? Are we leaking
something?"
"No."
For a moment she could see nothing on the rear view, and men the
pursuing vessels burst through the mist and continued after mem. But men
Vandelia noticed something: Their hulls were starting to change colors.
"What's happening to them?"
"Watch," he replied. He hadn't taken his eyes off the
front view, but she could see a touch of amusement at the edges of his mouth.
The vessels that had been pursuing them were slowing, and then
Vandelia looked on in amazement as she saw their lower hulls start to be eaten
away. Huge spots of corrosion appeared on them and then rapidly spread. With
each moment it spread faster and faster, eating through the exterior of the
ships with the greed and velocity of a hungry child being handed a handful of
sweets. Breaking off the pursuit, the three vessels dove as quickly as they
could for the ground, but they didn't quite make it in time. Within seconds the
ships had fallen apart completely, and Vandelia watched with smug delight as
the erstwhile pilots of the vessels tumbled toward the ground, waving their
arms and legs in a most entertaining manner. She felt as much remorse and pity
for them as they likely did for her... which was to say, of course, none.
Seconds later, the freighter tore lose completely of the planet's
surface, spiralling into space. "We're clear of the planet's atmosphere
and gravity," Mac announced. 'Taking her to Warp One."
"This ship has warp capacity?" Vandelia said in
surprise. But then she reined in her surprise with clear amusement. "Well,
why shouldn't it? Apparently it packs some sort of gas that eats ships."
"Only unshielded ships. We were lucky. Vessels that small
don't pack enough power or equipment to generate anything beyond the most
minimal of shielding. They count on their speed to avoid attackers. Leaves them
vulnerable. Warp on line."
Space twisted slightly around them and the ship leaped into warp
space. Vandelia leaned back in her chair, shaking her head in amazement.
"I still can't believe it," she said. "An hour ago, everything
seemed hopeless."
"An hour ago, it was. Things change."
She turned to face him. "I owe you my life."
"Yes," he said matter-of-factly, without even looking at
her.
"And what do you want."
At that point, he did afford her a glance. "Want?"
"Yes. Want." She cocked an eyebrow.
To her surprise, he seemed to laugh slightly to himself, and he
shook his head. 'It's some world you live in. People do things because they
want something in return. Everyone's out for themselves. No one does something
for the common good."
She seemed puzzled by what he was saying, "That's right.
That's my world. Yours, too."
"And it's impossible that I could have helped you just because
it seemed the right thing to do at the time."
She sat back in the chair, her arms folded tightly across her
breast. "Everyone wants something in exchange. No one does anything if it
doesn't serve their interests, first and foremost."
"You're probably right," he said with a sigh.
"Which brings us back to what you want."
He appeared to give it a moment's thought, and then said,
"There's a changing area and hypersonic shower in the back."
Now here was something she understood. In a way, it was almost
comforting to her. Her entire world view was predicated on the selfishness of
all those around her, particularly males. The last thing she needed was someone
coming along and shaking up the very foundations of her philosophy. "So...
you want me to strip and shower, is that it?"
"Yes. You've been slapped around, tortured, shot at... you've
worked up quite a sweat, and it's detectable. So please shower it off. And
there's a jumpsuit you can change into."
She was stunned. There was no interest in his voice at all. He
wanted her to stop smelling. Beginning, middle, end of interest.
Then, of course, she understood.
"I see. You prefer men."
Mac looked at her, and then laughed. He didn't even reply, bat
instead continued to laugh softly to himself while shaking his head.
Without another word, Vandelia went to the shower and washed
herself thoroughly. Even though it was merely a hypersonic shower, it was
still a tremendous relief to her. It was particularly soothing for the injured
thigh, the hypersonics caressing it so that, by the time she was done, there
was not the slightest hint of pain in her leg.
She put on the jumpsuit, and walked back into the main cabin. Mac
didn't even appear aware that she was back. Instead he was finishing issuing
some sort of report as to the completion of the "mission." When he
did notice she was there, however, he ceased the recording, or perhaps it was a
transmission. Vandelia couldn't be sure.
"Who are you?" she asked as she dropped into the seat
next to him. "Are you some sort of spy?"
"If you wish," he said.
"Who do you work for?"
"Myself."
"Someone must be sponsoring you. You must report to..."
"Get some sleep. We'll be at Starbase 18 before too long.
I'll be dropping you off there. There'll be a connector flight there which will
take you wherever you wish to go."
"I... do not know what to say."
" 'Thank you' will suffice."
She considered that a moment. Then she rose from the chair, went
to his, and draped herself across his lap, straddling it.
"What are you doing?" he inquired.
"Saying 'thank you.' " She undid the fastenings of the
jumpsuit and slipped it off her shoulders. It dropped to her waist, leaving
her nude from the waist up.
He stared at her. "Apparently it's cold in here," he
said.
"We'll warm it."
"Vandelia..."
She put a finger to his lips, and grinned in a most wolfish
fashion. "I'm going to return the favor you've done me, Mac. And when I'm
through," and she put her hands behind her head, arching her back,
"you'll never think about having sex with men."
"That's probably true," Mac said.
And she began to dance. And for the first time in her life, she
danced only for one person... only for him.
It was not possible that anyone should be able to haul himself
from the wreckage of the tower. Not possible that anyone should have been able
to survive. Particularly when one was considering that the candidate for
survival had had his body crushed by falling metal.
All this, Zolon Darg was most aware of. Nonetheless, as he lay
there on the ground, staring up at the twilight sky that was rapidly becoming
night, it was impossible to overlook the fact that he had, in fact, survived.
It was also impossible for him to move. Sheer fury, pure force of
will, had pulled him from the flaming wreckage that
had been his headquarters. That, and the memory of a green woman
with a defiant gleam, and a man... a man with purple eyes and a scar on his
face. A man he would never, ever forget.
He tried to feel something below his neck, but was unable to.
Nothing would move, nothing would respond to the desperate commands that his
brain was issuing.
He drew in a breath, and it was an agonizing effort. But it was
worth it, for it allowed him to exhale, and when he did so, what he breathed
out were the words, "I'll... kill them..."
Then he lay there, a sack of broken bones and bloodied meat, and
wondered when the dark gods he worshipped would see fit to do something about
his condition.
He remained that way for three days before he received his
answer...
Now...
I.
doctor elias frobisher was 43 years and one day old, and he
couldn't quite believe he had made it When he woke up, he had to pinch himself
to make certain that he had really managed to accomplish it. When someone had
lived under a bizarre death sentence for the last decade or so, as he had, the
achievement felt particularly noteworthy. He lay in his bed, breathing in the
filtered air of the cone-shaped space station, but never had that air felt
quite so sweet It felt like a glorious day. Granted, concepts such as day and
night were entirely subjective, created and controlled by the computer core of
the station. There was neither sunrise nor sunset, and this was something that
had taken Frobisher some time to get used to. He had been planet-bound most of
his life, and the curious and unusual life which existed in space was a
difficult adjustment that Frobisher had made because he'd really had no other
choice.
Quite simply, he'd had no other choice. He'd had to get away from
the Guardian.
He took a long shower that morning, and felt that he had earned
it. It was pure water rather than hypersonic, a rarity that Frobisher was
revelling in that morning. As he did so, visions of the Guardian came to him
unbidden, as they were wont to
do. Frobisher shuddered, thinking about the hideous shadow he had
lived under all these years.
Then he started to tremble more and more violently. He had
lathered up his thinning brown hair, and the shampoo dribbled down into his
eyes, but it barely registered upon him. The soap slipped from his hands, his
legs went weak, and he sagged to the floor, still unable to control the spasms
which had seized him. Paradoxically, he began to laugh. It was a bizarre sound,
that choked laughter, a combination of chuckling and sobbing that grew louder
and louder, so much so that it could be heard hi the hallway outside his
quarters. His assistant, Dr. David Kendrow, heard it, and started banging on
the door. Normally Kendrow, a thin, blond man, was overly mannered and reserved
in his attitudes, but one wouldn't have known it at that point as he was fairly
shouting, "Doctor Frobisher? Are you all right, sir?"
"Yes! Yes," Frobisher called back to him. "Yes,
I'll... I'll be fine." It was all that Frobisher could do to pull himself
together. He hadn't expected to react in that manner, but really, it was
inevitable when one looked at it with hindsight. The amount of anxiety that had
built up as he approached his 43rd birthday had been truly horrific. The
knowing, and yet not knowing. That insane combination of certainty and doubt,
warring within him as each passing day had brought him closer and closer to
the inevitable ... except, maybe not.
And he had made it. He had survived his birthday. It really was
true, what they said: Today is the first day of the rest of your life.
He emerged from the shower and, as he towelled off, looked at the
gut that had been building up on him. As the dreaded day had approached, he
hadn't been bothering to exercise or take care of himself. He'd had a
fatalistic attitude about him, and that was certainly understandable. But now
the joke was on him, as was the extra flab. He was going to have to do something
about working that off. After all, it wouldn't be particularly attractive to
women.
Women. His face lit up as he dressed. Relationships. He had been
afraid to begin any, because the prospect of condemning some poor woman to
become an early widow. Oh, certainly he could have had a string of casual
relationships
that went nowhere. Love them and leave them, and rationalizing
that, since he was a walking dead man, it was the only way that he could
conduct his life. But he was a highly moral man, was Dr. Frobisher. Highly
moral, and more than that: He knew that one woman after another, used and
tossed aside, was simply not for him. He wanted companionship, he wanted
someone who, he knew, was going to be there for him. He wanted someone to wake
up to, someone who would cheerfully kiss him in the morning and loved him so
much that it wouldn't bother her if he hadn't had a chance to brush his teeth
yet. Someone he would be able to look at across the breakfast and smile at.
Someone who wanted to spend a lifetime with him... a real lifetime, not the
truncated thing that had been handed him.
Oh, and someone who was a brilliant engineer in the field of artificial
intelligence and computerization, of course. That was a must as well.
There were a few likely possibilities, actually. To give himself
some vague bit of hope, something to cling to even though he was certain that
it was hopeless, Frobisher had had the Omega 9 run a scan of potential mates.
It was unbelievably quaint, even absurd: Using a creation as infinitely advanced
as the Omega 9 for the purpose of, essentially, computer dating, seemed absurd
on its face. But he had done so nonetheless, and the list that had been drawn
up had been quite impressive. Now that the dreaded day had passed, he was
looking forward to trying to act upon the possibilities. As he headed to the
lab, having had his customary quick breakfast, he patted the data chip in his
pocket to which he had copied the information that Omega 9 had obtained for
him. His mind was already racing with possibilities. He would pick the most
likely prospect, "likely" being derived from personality profile,
shared interests, age, background, etcetera. He'd subtly do some checking to
see if she was otherwise involved and, if not, he would find a pretense to
begin a correspondence with her. Hopefully, he would be able to develop it into
something substantive and sufficiently personal that she would be prompted to
come out to the Daystrom Station where he worked and meet with him.
And then... who knew? Who indeed knew?
"I knew,"
he said rather cheerfully to no one. "I knew, but I didn't know. But now I
know, and it's great knowing and not knowing!"
He entered the lab, his lanky legs carrying him across it with a
jaunty speed. Kendrow was already at work, but he was casting a watchful eye
upon Frobisher. "Good morning, David!" called Frobisher.
"Good... morning, sir." The surprise in his voice was
un-mistakeable. He wasn't used to Frobisher sounding so cheerful in the morning
... or ever.
Frobisher glanced over the station log, and frowned slightly.
"Some sort of glitch in the standard running program?" he asked.
"Yes, sir, I just noticed it. It's minor systems failures ...
so minor that we hadn't even been noticing when they'd been going down. I'm
running diagnostics checks on them, sir. I'm hoping to get it locked down by
this afternoon."
"Oh, you'll get it sorted out, Kendrow." He patted him
on the shoulder. "I have the utmost confidence in you."
"Th—thank you, sir." Kendrow stared at him as if he were
concerned that Frobisher had been replaced by a lookalike, lighthearted alien.
"Not used to seeing me this chipper, are you, Kendrow?"
asked Frobisher.
'To be blunt... no, sir. I'm not."
Frobisher laughed, and then sighed to himself. "Between my
attitude now and what you heard earlier... you must be somewhat puzzled, eh,
Kendrow?"
"Yes, sir. I am, sir."
"Sit down, Kendrow."
Kendrow looked down at himself. "I am sitting, sir. Already,
I mean."
"Oh. Yes, of course." Frobisher leaned against a console
and smiled broadly. "I'm sorry, Kendrow," he said earnestly.
"The truth is, this last week, leading up to the day I've dreaded for so
long, seemed almost to fly by. Now I know I've been out of sorts the past few
days ... weeks ..."
'Try months," Kendrow muttered, but then looked immediately
apologetic.
Frobisher waved it off. " 'Months' is probably more accu-
rate, to be honest," he admitted. "And yesterday was
probably the worst of all."
"Well, I have to say, your behavior was rather pensive considering
it was your birthday. I know that some people become daunted by the prospect of
turning forty or fifty ... but forty-three." He shrugged. "It
seemed... odd. You seemed to want to do everything you could to ignore
it."
"Believe me, I did want to ignore it. Although I'm surprised
that my parents did. Usually they send me a greeting on my birthday, but this
year... nothing."
"Had you told them not to?"
"No. No, I kept my unease to myself... or at least I thought
I did. But perhaps they picked up on unspoken signals nonetheless. Ah well...
no use worrying about it now. You see... there's been a reason for my concerns.
Do you know what I used to do, Kendrow? Before I joined Daystrom, I mean, to
work on the Omega 9."
"You were involved in some sort of archaeology project, I
think, sir."
"Not just some sort. This was THE project. The Guardian of
Forever."
Kendrow bunked in surprise. "The time portal? I'd heard about
that, but I'd almost thought it was a myth."
"Oh, it's not a myth, I assure you. It's real." Despite
his newly achieved state of bliss, Frobisher shuddered slightly as he recalled
the image of that cheerless place. It wasn't just the Guardian itself that so
spooked him. He couldn't get out of his head that eerie, mournful howl of the
wind that filtered through the remains of the ruined city around the Guardian.
It was as if ghosts of a race long lost still haunted the place, laughing and
taunting. "It's ... all too real."
He was silent for a moment. Prompting him, Kendrow said, "And
you studied it?"
"People ... tend to come and go there," Frobisher told
him. "Oh, they're excited at first. Word spreads, after all. And it's an
irresistible proposition: Studying the past, seeing it un-spool before you. How
can anyone pass that up? And yet... people burn out, very, very quickly. Six
months, a year at most, and suddenly you see complete turnover in the staff
there. I didn't understand why. But now I do." He
laughed softly to himself. "Now I do. It just... gets to you
after a while."
Kendrow tilted his head slightly as he regarded the doctor.
"What happened there, sir?"
"I... saw my future. At least, I thought I did."
"The future? But..." Kendrow shook his head. "I
thought that the Guardian only shows the past, not the future."
"That was my understanding as well. That's what they told us,
at any rate. But I will never forget it, nonetheless. I had been there two
months ... well," and he smiled ruefully, "two months, seven days,
eighteen hours. I was monitoring a playback on the Guardian. No two are
exactly the same, you know. Even if you ask for the exact same scenario to be
replayed, there's always slight variances in the scene. Some of them can be
extremely minor... but they're there. That's one of the things we study: The
reasons for it all. It truly supports the notion that time is in a constant
state of flux.
"In any event, I was monitoring... and there was a rather
fearsome ion storm overhead. Not low enough to be of any direct danger to me,
but I was getting apprehensive just the same. In fact, I was even considering
packing it in for the day. Still, I was doing my job, my tricorder picking up
the events as they hurtled past on the time portal's screen.
"Suddenly, overhead, there was this ... this burst of ionic
energy. Despite the awesome artificial intelligence that the Guardian displays,
it's still just a machine. Perhaps the most sophisticated machine that ever
existed... aside from the Omega 9," he smiled, and then continued,
"but a machine nonetheless. Perhaps the ion storm interfered with its
working for just a moment... or perhaps it was my imagination all along... I
couldn't be sure. But the screen flickered in a way I'd never seen before, and
then I... saw it... or at least, thought I saw it..."
"Saw what?" When Frobisher didn't immediately continue,
Kendrow repeated, "Saw what, sir?"
"A report. A news report... a printed one, actually. It flew
by so fast, my eye barely registered it. And it said..." His mouth
suddenly felt dry. He licked his Ups. "It said, 'Elias Frobisher Killed
on 43rd Birthday.' "
"You're joking."
"Do I look like I'm joking?" Even though the awful day
was behind him, he still couldn't keep that feeling of dull terror completely
out of his thoughts. He had lived with the knowledge for so long ... and had
never shared it with anyone. How could he have, after all, inflicted that upon
another human being?
"No, sir,
you certainly don't." He let out a low whistle. "That's... truly
awful. To be carrying that with you all this time. Are you sure of what you
saw... ?"
"No. That's the worst part. I wasn't sure, not completely. It
happened so quickly and then it was gone. Not only that, but no matter how many
times I played back my tricorder record of the event, there was no trace of it My
tricorder hadn't picked it up either. Then there was the 'knowledge' that the
Guardian only played the past, not the future. Every credible, scientific
measure that I had available to me only served to underscore the impossibility
of what I was sure I'd witnessed. And yet..."
"You couldn't be sure."
"Could you?" he asked. Kendrow shook his head.
"Well, neither could I. I couldn't help but wonder if I'd been given
this... vision... for a purpose. Except what that purpose might have been, I
could only guess. Was it a warning? A random attempt at torture? Was it
something avoidable, or was I supposed to surrender to fate? I
remember..." The recollection was painful to him, even after all this
time. "My last day mere, I stood in front of the Guardian and just
screamed and kept on screaming, wanting to know what the purpose to all of it
had been. And the thing just sat there, replying in one of its preprogrammed
ways that it was there to be my guide. No man should know his fate, Kendrow, or
the time of his demise ... even the possible time.
"The events that I experienced on that world shaped—'distorted,'
might be a better word—the way in which I handled the rest of my life up to
this point I had no idea whether I had imagined it, whether it was to happen
irrevocably, or whether it was one of the assorted possibilities that trickled
through the Guardian but wound up being swept away by the rivers of time. I
spent about six months barely functioning as a human being before I pulled
myself together enough to carry on
with... well, with whatever it was that I was going to be left
with.
"But you know what, Kendrow?"
"What, sir?"
Slowly he walked over to the interface console of Omega 9. The
flashing pad blinked its hypnotically entrancing lights at him. The pale blue
pattern was rather soothing to him. "If not for that experience... it's
possible the Omega 9 might not exist When your mind reaches a point where it
can't function in its normal patterns, it seeks out new patterns. And my
thoughts eventually brought me in the direction of the Omega 9. I saw...
possibilities," he whispered the word. "Circuits, possibilities,
revealed themselves to me, one unfolding upon another. And when I saw them,
ignoring them was not an option. That's what brought me to the Daystrom
Institute. The years hurtled past, Kendrow. I almost didn't notice them, because
I was so busy working to produce the Omega 9."
"I just wish ..." Kendrow began to say, but then he
stopped.
"No, it's all right, Kendrow." He folded his arms and
leaned back against a console. "What's on your mind?"
"Well... the top secret turn this entire project has
taken." He gestured around him, at the banks of computer circuitry and
nannite growth technology that was in place. "It's... well, tius outpost
is fairly remote, sir. Somewhat lonely."
"I prefer it that way, Kendrow. My theories, my work is off
the beaten path. I'd prefer that I remain that way as well. The fortunate thing
about the Daystrom Institute is that they understand and respect the concept
of creative vision. Once they're convinced that they're dealing with a true
visionary... such as myself, I modestly admit," and he laughed at the
obvious pretentiousness of the viewpoint, "then they're willing to
provide as much or as little help as required, as much or as little in terms of
equipment as needed. And the precise working environment to foster the best
work. I wish..." and he shook his head, "I wish I could have met
Daystrom himself. Poor fellow. What a tortured genius he was. That incident
with the Enterprise a hundred years ago..."
"Sir... about this working environment..." He coughed
politely. 'To be honest, I haven't spoken to you about it since I first came
here six months ago because of, well... your atti-
tude, and the tension that seemed to, frankly, ooze from every
pore. But since we're being open and straightforward now, I feel inclined to
ask... doesn't our presence here make us something of a target, sir? The Omega
9... ?"
"Of course not." Frobisher laughed at the notion.
"The work we've developed here is going to be made available to all.
There's nothing for anyone to steal. And even if we did... we have enough
internal defenses here to hold them off until help comes. And those defenses
were built by very paranoid Daystrom executives who have the exact same
mindset as you, Kendrow. You should be pleased... or maybe you should be
afraid, I'm not quite sure." He clapped Kendrow on the shoulder. "Be
of good cheer, Kendrow. I feel like I have a new lease on life. Tell you what:
Let's track down that glitch you were talking about, and then we can actually
take the rest of the day off from work. Have you put Omega 9 on the trail of
this glitch?'
"Oh, sir, that's kind of like using photon torpedoes to kill
an insect. It's just some sort of elusive little bug. Why waste the O-9's time
on it?"
"Kendrow, for all its advancement, for all the potential it
displays... it's still just a machine. It's not as if we're going to hurt its
feelings or insult it by asking."
"Sir, perhaps..."
"Kendrow, for crying out loud, cheer up! Life's too
short." He walked over to the Interface station and placed his hand
against it.
"Interface activated," came the calm tone of the Omega
9. Despite the ominous name of the computer itself, the machine's voice was
that of a young female, not more than ten years old. One of the scientists back
at the main institute, in the early days of the computer's development, had
patterned the voice on his daughter's as a sort of birthday surprise for her.
He had intended to change it subsequently, but Frobisher felt it was so
charming that he opted to retain die voice for the Omega 9.
"Interface prepared," said Frobisher. "Activate
nannotech for link."
He felt the familiar tingling along his palm. The most difficult
thing he'd ever had to accomplish in the early days of the
Omega 9 was develop the confidence to allow the machine to work as
intended. It had taken something of a leap of faith for him, and he still saw
it as the one possible drawback in the widespread acceptance of the Omega 9.
But he hoped that that, too, would pass.
"Nannotech on line," the computer informed him. Already
he could sense the computer's voice not outside of his mind, but within.
"Link established."
"Doctor..." Kendrow seemed to be trying to get bis attention.
But it was too late. Frobisher's mind was already deep within the
Omega 9. He felt the usual, intoxicating rush that came to him at such times.
It took an act of will for him to steady himself, to avoid being swept away
into the morass of the complex machine's innermost workings. The nannotech
helped keep his mind focused, and then he turned the Omega 9's formidable
abilities to the fairly minor task at hand.
His mind plumbed the depths of the machine, information coming in
from all over, giving Frobisher a link to every part of not only the computer,
but the entire station.
At times such as this, Frobisher rarely had any true sense of
time. Usually, he felt as if he were inside the machine for at least an hour,
perhaps more. Invariably, though, he was there for less than a minute.
This time it was only seconds. But when he emerged from the
machine, his eyes were wide and his face pale. Slowly he turned his gaze toward
Kendrow. "What... have you done?" he whispered.
"Done, sir?" Kendrow appeared politely confused.
"You've... taken down our defenses. Slowly, gradually, subtly
... done it in such a way that the computer detected no attempt at sabotage.
Rerouted systems, drained away energy..."
Kendrow started to voice a protest, but one look from Frobisher
was enough to silence him.
"... and your work... affected the chronometers," Frobisher
continued, as if speaking from a place very far away. "You probably didn't
even realize it. It was an accident, an unexpected side effect of your
tampering. It sped the chronometer up. That's why time seemed to fly by. It
wasn't
just subjective. The computer core was actually malfunctioning,
shortening hours and minutes, eventually days over the past week or so. At
night, while we were sleeping, we lost even more time. At his point, we've
misplaced about twelve hours. Which means ..."
Kendrow's expression was one of frightened understanding. 'I'm...
I'm sorry..."
"Which means ... today is still my birthday," Frobisher
said tonelessly.
At that moment, the entire station shuddered as something smashed
against the exterior. Frobisher, at one with Omega 9, felt the shock as if it
had happened to him personally. Alarms screeched throughout the station, and
the Omega 9 registered that a group of unknown beings had just materialized in one
of the station's upper sections. There was a ship, a massive war vessel of some
sort with utterly unknown markings, in orbit around the station. The sensors
and early detection devices had all been taken off line, as had communications
and weaponry.
So... here it was. His destiny, staring him in the face.
Oddly, he had never felt more calm. He had spent so many years
worrying, wondering, angsting over his known-but-frightening future, that now
that it had arrived, all the fear dissipated. Instead he marshalled his
concentration and dove into the Omega 9 with all the speed and precision that
he could muster. All the damage that Kendrow had done was laid out before him,
and he had only seconds to choose what would be the most effective thing to
undo. Shields? Too late. Weaponry? Likewise. That was all created to deal with
potential intruders while they were still outside, but they already had unknown
enemies rampaging through the station.
Communications. That was the only hope. Again, seconds were what
remained to him... but a second for a computer is quite unlike a second for
anyone else. Frobisher envisioned himself within the Omega 9, saw his hands
moving through the circuitry like an electronic ghost. Like a father gently
kissing a scrape on a child's knee in order to make it feel better, Frobisher
untangled the knots of interference that Kendrow had tied. Kendrow, good lord,
how could Kendrow have done this to him? He had hand-picked the man out of a
field of twenty-seven applicants as the man who seemed most capable, most
intelligent, who had the most on the ball. And Kendrow had
betrayed him to these... to whoever these people were.
He had allowed his mind to wander. That was pure foolishness,
something he should not be permitting himself to do. He had little enough time
as it was.
Using the Omega 9, he punched through the comm snarl that Kendrow
had created and immediately sent out a distress call. He didn't have to record
it, didn't have to speak. His mind shouted into the computer, "This is
Daystrom Station, we are under attack, repeat, we are under attack. Any Federation
vessel hi the area, please assist. This is Doctor Elias Frobisher of the
Daystrom Station, we are under attack, please assist..."
A comm message suddenly sprang into existence within the
computer's program. That was fast, miraculously fast. Perhaps there might be a
hope in hell of salvaging this situation yet. Frobisher's mind opened the
message ...
It was from Earth. It had been sent hours ago. There was an
elderly couple, smiling at Frobisher. The man looked like an older version of
Frobisher himself.
"Elias, darling! It's Mom and Dad! Happy birthday, son! We
ran a little late, but this should still get to you in time, and we wouldn't
want you to think we forgot your very special day!"
And suddenly Frobisher felt himself yanked out of the Omega 9. He
fancied that, from very far away, he heard the alarmed cry of a young girl's
voice ... the voice of the Omega 9, pleading with him to come back, asking that
she not be left alone.
Frobisher staggered, the nannites slipping away from him,
scurrying back into their techno hidey-hole. The world around him appeared
flat, one dimensional, as his senses fought to cope with reintegrating
themselves with reality. The world snapped into two-dimensions, then three, and
Frobisher found himself handled roughly by an alien being of undetermined
origin. His skin was brown and leathery, and he had thick tusks jutting from
beneath his upper lip.
There were several others nearby, a mixed bag of races, and one
being from a race he did recognize, for they had been very much in the news
lately. It was a Thallonian. He was very oddly built, however. His head seemed
smaller in proportion to
his massive body than it should have been. Frobisher attributed it
to body armor.
Beg for your life, the suggestion came into his head. You might still get out of
this. Beg. Beg to live.
Frobisher was not a fighter, not a hero, and not particularly
brave. But he felt an anger, implacable and unstoppable, bub-bling up and over.
And he realized that all these years of living in fear, all the years of
frustration, he had carried incredible resentment within him. The problem was,
he had never had anyone to be angry with. No one had done anything to him. No
one had forced the knowledge upon him. He had simply stumbled upon it, like a
scientist out to probe the secrets of the universe and inadvertently finding
more than he had bargained for.
But he resented it nonetheless. Why had the fates done this to
him? What in the world could he have possibly done to deserve this awful
foreknowledge of the time of his demise? He had been a good person his entire
life. Never cheated anyone, never tried to hurt anyone that he knew of. And yet
he had been handed this hideously raw deal.
For years, for more years than he cared to think about, he had
wanted someone, anyone he could strike against. A target upon which he could
vent his anger, anger which had grown exponentially as years had passed.
Wasted, wasted years ...
The being who was leering over him was bigger, broader, infinitely
stronger than he. It was the kind of situation where, under normal
circumstances, Frobisher would have put up his hands, surrendered, and
prayed...
... and given over control of his life one more time.
In his mind's eye, he saw the Guardian staring at him. That thing,
that monster, that machine had cast a long shadow over so much of his Me. Built
by beings unknown, functioning hi ways no one knew. The Andorians had their own
name for it: The T'Sh'Iar, which meant "God's Window."
God had looked through the window, seen Frobisher peering through,
and had punished him for absolutely no reason at all. Taken away his destiny by
sadistically handing it to him.
Frobisher saw the blaster hanging at the hip of the alien with the
brown, leathery skin, the being who looked like a giant serpent. There was a
throbbing in Frobisher's head. The tall red
alien nearby was addressing him, but the pounding in his head
drowned it all out. All the rage, all the anger, everything that had ever
infuriated him over the hopeless wreck that his Me had become as time's
inexorable march had carried him unwillingly toward his doom, it all exploded
from him at once.
There was no way that Frobisher should have been a threat to the
serpent man, no way. The serpent man was paying so little attention to the
possibility of Frobisher as a threat that he never even saw the trembling fist
that Frobisher's fingers had contracted into. Furthermore, his skin was so hard
that even if Frobisher were to land a punch, he shouldn't even have felt it
Frobisher's years of anger congealed into that fist, and without
listening to a word that the red-skinned alien was saying, he spun and swung
his fist into a powerful roundhouse. In his ' entire adult life—for that
matter, throughout his childhood and adolescence—he had never thrown a punch in
his life. The roundhouse was his very first.
It was perfect.
It caught the serpent man squarely in his lantern jaw. The impact
immediately broke Frobisher's knuckles. It didn't matter. Frobisher never even
felt it. But the serpent man most certainly felt the blow as his head snapped
around and he let out a startled squeal that seemed totally at odds with his
hulking demeanor. He staggered, and that was all the opening Frobisher needed.
He yanked the blaster out of the holster at the serpent man's side, swung it
around and aimed it squarely at the red-skinned man who was clearly the leader.
The red-skinned man looked mildly surprised.
It was the single most exultant moment in all of Frobisher's life.
Given a half second more, he would have fired the blaster.
He never saw the blow from the serpent man coming. The alien swung
his fist like a club, and it caved in the side of Frobisher's head. His arm
swung wide. His finger squeezed spasmodically on the trigger and the shot went
wide, exploding harmlessly against the far wall. Frobisher collapsed, his head
thudding to the floor. He heard a sort of distant buzzing, saw a thick liquid
dripping in front of his eyes that he did not recognize as his own blood. He
reached out a hand, and it touched something warm. He couldn't tell what it
was, but a female voice seemed to be singing to him.
His lips puckered together. He drew in a breath with effort, and
then with even more effort expelled it. It rattled from his throat and out
through his mouth, and in his mind's eye he saw candles flickering in front of
him. With the gust of breath from his lungs, the flames disappeared. All out at
once.
/ hope I get my wish, thought Frobisher as he died.
Zolon Darg stared at the corpse on the floor, and then slowly
levelled his gaze at Shunabo. Shunabo, for his part, seemed extremely
irritated with Kendrow. The brown-skinned, leathery Shunabo approached Kendrow
with a stride that was an odd combination of swagger and sunk. "You said
he wouldn't be a problem," Shunabo said, his irritation causing him to
over enunciate every syllable. "You told us—you told me—that he was
a quiet, reserved, run-of-the-mill human who wouldn't offer up the slightest
resistance." His soft voice began to get louder. "Oddly, you didn't
happen to mention mat he had a punch like a berserker Klingon, or that he was
capable of coming within a hair of shooting Zolon Darg's head off!"
In point of fact, Zolon Darg knew that Shunabo was right. He had
been caught completely flat-footed, and this little scientist, this no one,
this weakling, this nothing, had nearly succeeded in accomplishing what some
of the greatest and most accomplished bounty hunters in two quadrants had not.
Darg had gotten sloppy, very, very sloppy, and Shunabo had saved his ass.
It was a situation that had to be addressed immediately.
In two quick steps, Darg was directly behind Shunabo. He slapped a
hand around Shunabo's chest, yanked him backward, grabbed the top of his head
and twisted quickly. The sound of Shunabo's neck snapping echoed through the
suddenly silent lab.
There was still a flickering of light hi Shunabo's eyes as Darg
snarled in his ear, "I was in no danger. I could have handled him. And
you were under specific instructions to keep Frobisher alive." That last,
at least, was accurate, and really, in the final analysis, one point was all
that was necessary. Zolon Darg spread wide his arms and Shunabo sank to the
floor. Before Shunabo even landed, Darg turned away from him disdainfully. He
towered over Kendrow, and he could see that
Kendrow's legs were trembling. Kendrow appeared to be keeping
himself standing by bracing himself against a table.
"Are you going to be able to do the job in Frobisher's
place?" he demanded.
Kendrow's mouth moved, but nothing audible came forth. Darg
scowled in a manner that seemed to suck the light right out of the lab.
"Well?" continued Darg. "Are you capable of speech at all?"
"Probably not at the moment Zolon."
The voice behind them, in contrast to the increasing bellow of
Darg, was remarkably mild. The individual to whom it belonged likewise seemed
mild in appearance. He was a Thallonian like Zolon, but whereas Zolon Darg was
massive, the newcomer appeared quite slender, although it was hard to tell
since he was wearing fairly loose black and purple robes. He had a neatly
trimmed, yellowing beard, which indicated his age to anyone who happened to
know that Thallonian hair tended to yellow with age rather than turn gray or
white, as occurred with humans. His face was carefully inscrutable. Only his
eyes seemed to burn with an inner light. The rest of his presence was so
minimal that one's gaze could easily have passed right over him.
"Is that a fact, General Thul?" Darg said. But despite
the defiant sound of the words, there was nothing in his tone that was
challenging. It wasn't out of fear, of course. It was more from a sense of
respect. And it was quite possible that General Gerrid Thul was the one
individual in the galaxy for whom Darg was capable of showing that sort of
deference.
"Well, look at the poor man," Thul said. He crossed the
room toward Kendrow, and didn't seem to walk so much as glide. "You seem
to have scared him terribly. Am I correct sir?"
Kendrow slowly nodded.
"There? You see?" The General clucked sympathetically.
"You know, Darg... you used to be a much calmer, understanding
individual. The difficulties you've encountered in the past years have not
mellowed you. You must learn to be calmer. You will live longer."
Darg smiled in a rather mirthless way. "I shall be sure to remember
that"
"See that you do. Now, Mr... Kendrow, is it?" When
Kendrow nodded, die one called Gerrid Thul continued, "Mr. Kendrow... you
have been paid a significant amount to cooperate with us, have you not"
"Yes, sir. I have, sir."
"Articulate speech. You are capable of articulate speech.
That is good, that is very good. Now then, Mr. Kendrow ... since the good
Doctor here," and he tapped Frobish-er's corpse with the toe of his boot,
"is not in any condition to provide assistance to us, it is important to
know whether you are going to be able to continue in his stead."
"I'm..." He cleared his throat "Do you really want
an honest answer?"
General Thul smiled in an almost paternal fashion. "Honesty
is always to be preferred."
"Truthfully, I'm not sure. I tried to familiarize myself with
all aspects of his work, but the Omega 9 was such a uniquely personal, and
truly amazing, piece of work... I can't pretend that I know or understand all
the parameters and aspects that he brought to it. I know and understand the
basic interface options, I can program the—"
Thul stopped him with a casual gesture. "It is not necessary
to go into details, Mr. Kendrow. Your honesty is appreciated. Is it safe
to assume mat you can aid us in transporting the key components of the Omega 9
to our ship, and that you will, at the very least give us your best effort in
adapting and understanding the possibilities this amazing device
provides?"
Kendrow's head bobbed so eagerly that it seemed as if it was about
to tumble off his shoulders. "Yes. Yes, absolutely, sir."
"That is good. That is good to hear. So, to summarize,"
and he placed a hand on Kendrow's shoulder, "you will help us ... and we
will allow you to live. And if you cease to help us, either due to lack of
cooperation or lack of knowledge, why... you shall meet the same fate as Doctor
Frobisher. Except your demise will be far slower, much more protracted, and
will involve an impressive array of sharp objects. Do we understand each
other?"
Kendrow gulped deeply.
Zolon Darg, for his part, smiled. For a moment there, he had
been concerned that Thul was going to be entirely too sympathetic.
He realized that he should have known better. After all, when someone was
interested in obliterating almost all sentient life, as General Thul was, such
an individual was not about to be concerned about sparing the feelings of one
insignificant little scientist.
"Well, Mr. Kendrow?" General Thul prompted once more.
"Do we understand each other?"
Kendrow nodded.
"Well, then!" Thul said, and he clapped his hands and
rubbed them together briskly, "let's get to work, shall we?"
And as they got to work, the distress call continued to issue
form, searching for someone... anyone... who might be able to save what was
left of the day...
II.
commander william riker felt as if all the eyes hi the Ten-Forward
lounge were upon him. He kept telling himself, however, that he was probably
imagining it. He found a table off in the corner and signalled to the bartender
that he'd like a drink. One was quickly produced and he proceeded to sip it in
relative peace that lasted for a whole seven seconds.
He glanced up as Lieutenant Palumbo looked down at him. Palumbo
was half a head taller than Riker, with black hair slicked back and a rather
open manner that Riker wasn't quite sure how to react to. Palumbo clearly
considered Riker something of a curiosity; one might even have said that
Palumbo came across as being in awe of him, as if not sure how to respond to
the presence of the Great William Riker aboard the Starship U.S.S.
Independence.
"So... what's it like?" asked Palumbo without preamble.
" 'It,' Lieutenant?" Despite the breach of protocol,
Riker couldn't help but feel some amusement at Palumbo's manner.
Palumbo promptly dropped down into a chair across from Riker.
"Being related to one of the original signers of the original
Resolution."
"Well... Lieutenant," Riker felt constrained to point
out, "the Resolution of Non-interference was signed nearly two
hundred years ago. Granted, I'm related to one of the original
signers. But it's not as if Thaddeus Riker was someone that I spent a good deal
of time with. In point of fact, he died more man a century before I was even
conceived."
"Even so. Even so," Palumbo's head bobbed as if he were
furiously agreeing and disagreeing simultaneously. "It must make you proud,
right? Am I right?"
Actually, Riker had never given the matter all that much thought.
Riker had always considered himself somewhat self-sufficient. He was determined
to carve his own career and obtain his own notoriety, and he wasn't the type
of person who rested upon the achievements of those who had come before him.
Still... he had to admit that there was something to be said for
it He'd done a good deal of reading up on Thaddeus Riker as the bicentennial
had approached, and the more he'd learned, the more impressed he'd been.
"You're right," agreed Riker.
Palumbo slapped the table. It shook from the impact. "See, I
knew I was right!"
'Is this guy bothering you, Commander?"
Lieutenant Mankowski had come up behind Palumbo. During their
shift, Palumbo operated conn while Mankowski was at ops, so they were
accustomed to working tightly together. When Mankowski spoke, it was with a
faint southern drawl. Riker couldn't help but notice, to his amusement, that
Mankowski was keeping one eye on his reflection in the observation glass
nearby, running his fingers through his wavy brown hair to make sure that it
was "just so."
"No, Mankowski. No bother at all."
"Thanks for being so concerned, Joe," Palumbo said in
obvious irritation. "What, you trying to embarrass me in front of the
Commander here?"
"Oh... please. You needn't concern yourself about that,
Lieutenant," said Riker. "Really. It's not a problem. To be perfectly
honest, if I were in your position, I'd probably be reacting in exactly the
same way."
"Well, that's good to hear, sir. Very understanding of
you." There was one other chair at the table, and Mankowski sat in it.
Riker chuckled softly to himself as he saw that Mankowski
straddled the chair in the same manner that Riker habitually did.
"Look... to be honest, sir, there's a goodly number of people on this ship
who would love to bend your ear about all manner of things. Not just about your
ancestor, but about you yourself. You've had a hell of a career, after all."
"It's been... interesting."
"You're being too modest, sir."
"Oh, yeah. Way too modest," echoed Palumbo.
"Now me," and Mankowski tapped his chest, "I'm not
that kind of person. The hero-worshipping sort, I mean. I mink people have a
right to be proud of their accomplishments, but that's no reason to elevate
them to some sort of bigger-than-life status. In fact, I was just saying the other
day to—"
From across the lounge, a crewman called, "Hey, Joe! Joe! Got
a second?"
"Hey!" Mankowski shot back, clearly annoyed. "Can't
you see I'm talking to Commander William T. Riker here? The William
Riker?"
The crewman held up his hands, palms out, in mute apology for
butting in.
Riker put a hand in front of his mouth and laughed into it.
"It's just that," Palumbo jumped in during the momentary
lull, "it's just mat, well... the truth is, I've been a fan of yours ever
since I was a kid."
"A kid?" Riker couldn't quite believe bis ears as
he stared at the young officer. "Lieutenant, for God's sake, I'm not that
old."
"Well... not a little kid," Palumbo amended hastily.
"Just since, well..." He considered it a moment "Since I was a
teenager."
That still seemed a hideous age discrepancy to Riker, and he said,
"That can't be right I haven't been at it that long... have I?" His
voice trailed off on the last two words.
"Oh, sure," Palumbo said with a cheerfulness mat Riker
couldn't help but find disturbing. "My dad was—is—in Starfleet, and he
talked about officers who were on the fast track. He especially thought the
crew of the Enterprise was top-notch."
Riker quickly did the math in his head and realized mat Palumbo
was exactly right
"Those were the good old days, huh, Commander?" Palumbo
asked.
"Ohhhhh yes. The good old days." Riker was suddenly
starting to feel as ancient as Thaddeus Riker.
"Mike... I think you're making the Commander uncomfortable,"
Mankowski said cautiously, glancing from Riker back to Palumbo.
"Nah! Am I? I didn't mean to..."
"It's... all right," Riker said. He generally had a
fairly ready smile and it didn't fail him this time either as he was able to
appreciate the more amusing aspects of the situation. "It's just that,
well..." and he tapped his chest, "in here I feel like I joined the
Fleet only yesterday. I'm not entirely sure at what point I went from eager
young cadet to gray eminence. It's a disconcerting transition, that's
all."
"Do you think Captain Picard went through the same thing?"
"The captain?" Riker smiled puckishly. "Absolutely
not. The truth is that Captain Picard was born forty years old. He didn't have
the time or patience for child or adolescence. He simply went straight to the
status of 'authority figure.' "
"I believe it," said Palumbo. "He came and lectured
to one of our classes once. He scared the crap out of me. But... don't tell him
that next time you see him, okay?"
"My lips are sealed," Riker assured him.
They chatted for a few minutes more, although Palumbo and
Mankowski seemed more and more interested in crosstalk between the two of
them, leaving Riker serenely to his thoughts. And, naturally enough, those
thoughts turned to Thaddeus Riker.
The truth was that the Resolution was indeed one hell of an accomplishment,
and Thaddeus Riker had been one of the main architects. The Resolution of
Non-interference had been a sort of United Federation Bill of Rights. It had
pulled together a number of fractured members of the United Federation of
Planets into a basic position paper that put forward, in language so plain and
firm as to command their assent, die basic philosophies that the UFP hoped to
pursue. Many historians felt that the Resolution was not only the turning point
in the UFP's early development, but the basics for some of the Federation's
most fundamental philosophies—including, most no-
tably, Starfleet's Prime Directive—had its roots in the Resolution
of Non-interference.
Thaddeus Riker, one of the principal drafters of the Resolution,
had affixed his name to it along with some fifty other representatives of
assorted worlds, outposts and colonies. That important event had occurred
nearly two hundred years ago, and a major celebration on Earth was in the
works. Indeed, that was the reason for Riker's presence on the Independence.
The Starship was en route to Earth anyway, and the ship had been instructed
to pick up Riker and bring him along. For other officers, the easy assignment
would have been considered something of a paid vacation. That was not the case
with Riker. He thought it a colossal waste of time, and tried to convince
Starfleet that this endeavor was worth neither the time nor the effort as far
as his presence was concerned. He could think of a hundred more constructive
things he'd rather be doing than putting in an appearance at some high-profile
function, no matter how historically important that function might be. Unfortunately,
as so frequently happened in cases like this one, Starfleet wasn't able to come
up with any.
Which was how Riker had wound up aboard the Independence, being
made to feel old by two young officers who seemed bound and determined to
worship Riker to bits. They chatted on with Riker barely listening, and hoping
against hope that something—anything—would distract them from the unwanted
attention they were lavishing upon him.
That was the moment that the yellow alert klaxon went off. Without
hesitation, Mankowski and Palumbo high-tailed it out the door, as did the other
patrons of the Ten-Forward. Within moments the place was empty, leaving a
disconsolate Riker staring at the glass still in his hand. His very soul cried "Foul!"
as he thought of where he was during an emergency as opposed to where he'd
prefer to be.
On the other hand... he was a guest. Guests should be, and are,
accommodated whenever possible. And perhaps he was a guest who could lend a
hand, presuming the captain was interested in the extra help.
Couldn't hurt to ask him, Riker reasoned. Couldn't hurt at all...
* * *
Captain George Garfield, a man of modest height but booming
authority, looked surprised to see Riker striding onto the bridge. Garfield's
face had a craggy ruggedness about it, and his gray hair was so tightly curled
that some felt it was possible to slice one's ringer open on it. "Is
there a problem, Commander?" he asked.
"No problem at all, sir. I just..." On the face of it,
it seemed absurd to make the offer now that he was there. It was an insult,
really, an implication that the captain was unable or unwilling to handle the
situation on his own. First officer Joe Morris was watching Riker warily. He
was a lean man with thinning hair and a foxlike face. He tended to smile a lot
for a first officer, and he had a habit of taking pains to display his
perfectly arrayed teeth whenever possible.
Garfield smiled grimly and nodded in apparent understanding.
"When there's a red alert, you don't exactly feel comfortable with the
prospect of hiding down in your quarters, is that
it?"
"Exactly it, sir."
"Very well. As long as we remember whose ship this is."
There was a bit of a ribbing quality to the comment, but at the
same time, a very clear, somewhat territorial warning. Riker didn't have to be
told twice. "I'm just a spectator, captain."
"Spectate from there," Garfield said, indicating the
vacant counselor's chair. The ship's counselor, Lieutenant Aronin, hadn't been
feeling particularly well as of late, and had been confined to sickbay under
orders of the ship's CMO, Doctor DiSpigno. "And don't you worry. Once we
attend to whatev-er's going on, I assure you we'll give you a smooth ride to
your destination."
"Much obliged, sir."
Riker promptly slid easily into the chair.
"Talk to me, Mr. Palumbo," Garfield said.
Palumbo scanned the board and reported, "Distress signal,
sir. I believe it's coming from the Daystrom Institute Outpost"
From the tactical board, Lieutenant Monastero called, "Confirming,
sir. Putting it on screen."
The image of a gentle-looking man appeared. But the background
behind him was extremely strange. It didn't seem
to be an actual place so much as an environment of pulsing energy.
"Good God," said Morris. "What's that?"
"This is Daystrom Station, we are under attack, repeat, we
are under attack," said the man on the screen. "Any Federation vessel
in the area, please assist. This is Doctor Elias Frobisher of the Daystrom
Station, we are under attack, please assist..."
"It appears to be computer generated," Mankowski said.
"Not an actual image, but one composed by a computer. Question is,
why?"
"No, Mr. Mankowski, that's not the question at all,"
Garfield told him in no uncertain terms. "The question is, 'How fast can
we get there?'"
"At maximum warp... ?" Mankowski did some rapid-fire
calculations. "Three hours, eighteen minutes."
Morris had stepped over to the ops station and was glancing over
Palumbo's shoulder. "We appear to be the closest ship in the area,
sir."
"Lieutenant, best speed to Daystrom."
"Aye, captain." Mankowski immediately punched in the
course, and the Independence angled sharply away from its then-current
heading and headed with all possible alacrity toward the scene of the distress
call.
The captain shifted in his chair and looked at Riker with mild
apology in his eyes. "Seems we're going to be late getting you to your
appointment with fame, Commander. Regulations clearly state..."
"That any Starfleet vessel capable of responding to a distress
call must lend assistance whenever possible," Riker recited with a smile.
"Captain, there's a number of regs that I would be the first to dispute...
but that is most definitely not one of mem. The only question is, is there
going to be anyone or anything left by the time we get there."
"I don't know," Garfield admitted. "We can only do
the best mat we can do, Commander. The thing is, a science station such as
Daystrom's outpost isn't like a planetary treasury or some such, where you just
go in, raid the riches and depart. Whatever these possible raiders want—whether
it's technology, files, information, what-have-you—it's probably going to have
to be handled with delicacy. That means they'll have to
take their time extracting it for fear of damaging it, and if they
take enough time," and he nodded grimly, "then we've got them."
There was little talking for the remainder of the trip. Riker
watched the crew of the Independence going about their business. It was
an odd sensation for him. He was, after all, part of his surroundings and
environment. And they were all Starfleet, after all. They might be spread out
among various ships, but they were a unit nevertheless, each capable of helping
one another and functioning as a team.
But just as he was a part, he was also apart. He had his rank,
certainly, but he had no place on this vessel. He was simply a passenger, with
no more intrinsic importance to the ship than cargo being carted down in the
hold. It was a very, very strange feeling. Every so often Garfield or Morris would
engage him in polite conversation, but it seemed to Riker that it was more a
matter of form than any real interest in him. Then again, he might simply have
been imagining it.
"Approaching Daystrom Station," Mankowski announced finally.
"Sensors indicate that the company hasn't left the party yet."
"Magnify," ordered Garfield.
The screen rippled briefly, and then the conical shape of Daystrom
station appeared in front of them. Sure enough, in orbit around the station was
a vessel the likes of which Riker had never seen before. It was low slung,
built for speed but, at the same time, clearly heavily armed... an assessment
that Monastero confirmed a moment later from tactical.
"Disruptors, phasers ... and some sort of plasma weapon as
well. They're well armed, all right. Nothing our own weaponry and shield can't
handle, but I don't think I'd care to face them in anything less than a
Starship."
"Thank you, Mr. Monastero. Open a hailing frequency,
please."
"Open, sir."
Garfield leaned back in his command chair, crossing his legs in a
rather casual manner as if he were having a comfortable chat in his living
room. "This is Captain George Garfield of the Starship Independence. Please
identify yourselves immediately and prepare to be boarded. Thank you."
"Captain," warned Mankowski, "they're powering up
their weapons."
"Didn't their mothers teach them that 'please' and 'thank
you' are the magic words?" said Morris.
"I know mine did," said Garfield. "Shields up.
Maintain hailing frequency. Unidentified ship, please stand down your weapons
immediately, or we will be forced to defend ourselves."
"They've opened fire!" Mankowski said. Sure enough, plasma
torpedoes were hurtling across the void and spiralling straight toward the Independence.
And both Garfield and Riker called, "Evasive action!",
the latter doing so by reflex. Immediately realizing his error, he looked with
chagrin at Garfield. Fortunately, Garfield seemed more amused than usurped.
Mankowski spurred the mighty ship forward, and the Independence
gracefully angled down and away from the brace of torpedoes. "Return
fire," ordered Garfield.
"We're not yet at optimum distance for full
effectiveness."
Garfield glanced over his shoulder. "Indulge me."
Monastero nodded as his hands flew over the tactical array, and
the phaser banks flared to life. But the distance was indeed too great, and
although the phasers scored a direct hit upon the opposing vessel, the damage
done to their shields was virtually non-existent.
"They're moving off!" Mankowski said.
Riker realized that Garfield was faced with a dilemma. If he
attended to the space station, took the time to send down an away team, men the
delay might give the other vessel time to get away. But if mere were wounded or
dying people at the station, men a chase after the attacker might delay the Independence
for so long that no aid to the station personnel—should there be any
surviving—would be possible.
An obvious solution immediately presented itself to Riker, and out
of reflex he was about to suggest it. But as Riker opened his mouth to speak,
Morris said, "Captain, I've readied the shuttle bay in case..."
"You read my mind, Number One. Bridge to security."
"Security. Petronella here."
"Mister Petronella, scramble a security team and med unit
and get yourselves down to the shuttle bay. Attend to whomever
needs help aboard the station and remain here until we return."
"Aye, sir."
Garfield noticed Riker's still-open mouth out of the corner of his
eye and asked, "Is there a problem, Commander?"
"No, sir. Obviously no problem at all."
"Good."
"Enemy vessel preparing to go to warp, sir," Mankowski
announced.
"Stay on her, Lieutenant," Garfield said calmly.
"Mr. Monastero, fire a warning shot. See if we can persuade them to stay
and chat."
As the Independence hurtled toward the station, closing the
gap, Monastero fired the phasers. One blast coruscated against the enemy ship's
shielding, while the other went across her bow, intercepting the vessel's
momentary trajectory. But the unknown vessel spun out of the way and moved away
from the station, picking up speed with every passing moment.
"Shuttle away!" called Palumbo.
"Chase them down, Mr. Mankowski," said Garfield.
"Aye, sir." Mankowski grinned in a slightly devilish
manner. If there was one thing he liked, it was a pursuit.
The Independence darted straight toward the alien vessel,
but the other ship immediately kicked into high gear. It was a burst of speed
that was a bit surprising to those on the bridge of the Starship, for it hadn't
seemed as if the other ship had that much power to her. But they were only
momentarily daunted. "Looks like we're in a race," observed Riker,
and no one disputed that.
The "race" continued for some minutes, and then for an
hour. Every so often, the opposing vessel would scatter something behind them:
A plasma torpedo, or a bomb. But the Independence adroitly kept out of
the way. Unfortunately, the Starship wasn't drawing close enough to do any
serious damage with her own array of weaponry.
"Sir... we're approaching Thallonian space," said Mankowski.
"I know that she's been opened up ever since the collapse of the
Thallonian Empire..."
"But there's still an 'approach with approval only' mandate
on it. I know, Mr. Mankowski. But this is likely where they
were heading in hopes that we were going to break off pursuit. Are
you interested in quitting the chase, Mr. Mankowski?"
"No, sir," Mankowski said with a grim smile.
"Maintain course and speed, then."
Riker found the give and take between the captain and his crew to
be a bit amusing. Garfield was older than Picard, and yet he seemed to take a
somewhat paternal air with his crewmen. It was a very different command style,
and certainly not Riker's own during the times when he'd been in command, but
it was certainly a viable one nonetheless.
"Engineering to bridge." A formal British accent came
over the comm unit.
"Bridge. Garfield here," replied the captain. "Go
ahead, Mr. McKean."
"Captain... may I inquire as to whether we will be reducing
velocity in the near future? I am uncertain whether I will be able to maintain
maximum thrust for all that much longer."
"No promises, Mr. McKean."
"Sir, I'm not asking for a commitment. But I do wish to be
able to provide the velocity you require if and when you require it. As things
stand, I am unable to guarantee said velocity will be yours for the asking. The
warp core is, if you'll pardon my poetic language, complaining bitterly. All
the velocity in the galaxy will be irrelevant if the ship has exploded."
"Understood, Mr. McKean."
"Captain!" Mankowski suddenly called. "The other
ship is slowing down."
"Is she turning to fight?"
"Doesn't appear to be turning, no, sir. Perhaps their engines
are overtaxed."
And from down in engineering, McKean could be heard muttering,
"Perhaps their bloody captain listens to his engineering officer and
reduces speed when reasonable."
It was all Riker could to do repress a grin. It was comforting to
know that there were some universal constants, and chief engineers appeared to
be one of them. For his part, Garfield kept a poker face as he said, "Mr.
McKean, we still have an open channel."
"Oh." There was a pause, and then another, "Oh.
Uhm... McKean out," and the connection was broken.
Turning back to business, Garfield said, "Bring us ahead
slow, Mr. Mankowski. Let's see what we've got Monastero, open a channel."
"You're on, sir."
"Unidentified ship, this is the Independence. Please
respond."
On the screen, the vessel they'd pursued all that way had come to
a complete halt. She wasn't dead in space, but she wasn't taking any action at
all. She just sat there.
And Riker couldn't keep his mouth shut. "Sir, I don't like
this. With all respect..."
"No apologies necessary, Commander," Garfield said, rubbing
his chin thoughtfully. "I'm not sure I like it either. Smells like some
sort of set-up."
"My thoughts exactly, sir."
"We can't exactly go running away from a ship we chased down
this far, and which isn't even firing at us. But still..." He thought a
moment and then said, "Sensors on maximum. Sweep the area."
"Sweeping, sir," said Mankowski. "Not picking up
anything."
"Nothing on tactical sensor scans either," Monastero affirmed.
"Checking the..." Suddenly Mankowski's voice caught.
"Picking up an energy discharge, sir. Consistent with the patterns
detected..." He turned and looked straight at the captain. "...
detected when a Romulan ship is decloaking, sir."
"Where?" demanded Garfield.
'To starboard, sir. At 813 Mark 2."
A moment later, everyone on the bridge saw that Mankowski was
correct as a Romulan vessel shimmered into existence to the ship's starboard...
,.. and then, a moment later, to her port. In the meantime, the
ship they'd been pursuing had come around. "Enemy ship approaching.
They're weapons hot, sir," said Mankowski.
"Captain..." Riker said in a tone of warning.
Garfield surveyed the situation arrayed against them and nodded
his head. "I believe it's time to make like a shepherd and get the flock
out of here. Reverse course, Lieuten—"
And then two more ships materialized, one forward and one
after. They were now completely surrounded by Romulan war-birds,
all of them combat-ready with their weapons prepared to discharge.
Despite the fact mat they were overwhelmingly outnumbered,
Garfield did not appear the least bit perturbed. Instead, acting as if he still
maintained the strategic advantage, he called out, "Attention all ships.
This is the Starship Independence. The vessel we have been pursuing has
illegally entered, and attacked, an outpost in Federation space. This is not
your concern, and I strongly advise you to veer off before it's too late."
And then, to their surprise, a voice crackled back across the
channel. It was a female voice, and the moment Riker heard it, a chill went
down his spine. The voice said, hi a mocking tone, "Too late? Too late for
whom? For us? Or for you?"
'This is Captain George Garfield. Identify yourself, please."
The image of the ships around them momentarily vanished from the
screen, to be replaced by the face of a female Romulan. She had tightly cut
blonde hair and an expression that seemed to radiate contempt. "Very
well," she said. "We are the ones who are going to kill you. Is that
sufficient identification ..."
Then her gaze flickered toward the officer seated in the
counselor's chair, and her eyes went wide with sadistic delight. "Well,
well. It's been ages, Will Riker."
"Sela," Riker said tersely.
Garfield didn't even pretend to understand what was going on.
"Commander, do you know this... individual?"
"Her name is Sela. She's the half-Romulan daughter of a deceased
woman from an alternate time line."
"Oh, well, that clears things up," Palumbo could be
heard to mutter.
"If you know mis individual, then I suggest you advise her
against any rash actions."
"You heard the man, Sela. Don't look for a fight where there
need not be one. It's not as if you're in the best of relations with the
Romulan government at the moment You can't afford any more military
disasters."
"How kind of you to care about my well-being, Riker,"
Sela replied, "considering that all of my past 'disasters' can be
placed squarely at your door. But," she added thoughtfully,
"you're right I don't need more blemishes on my record."
"As I said..."
"Instead, I need to blow you all to hell. All vessels,"
she called out, "you're tapping into this communication. Directly in the
middle of us is one Will Riker. Let me tell you, I've been waiting to say this
for ages." Her lips drew back in a feral smile of triumph. "Fire at
Will."
And as the Romulan ships, as one, opened fire, Riker felt the
world explode around him.
III.
it was the weekly poker game, and all the usual suspects
were grouped around: Deanna, Data, Worf, and Geordi. As Riker studied his hand,
Geordi leaned forward and said without preamble, "So there's this mighty
sailing ship, a British frigate, cruising the Seven Seas, and one day the
lookout shouts down from the crow's nest, 'Captain! Captain! There's two pirate
ships heading our way! They mean to attack! What should we do?'And the captain,
he says, 'Bring me my red shirt.' So they bring him his red shirt, he puts it
on, and leads his men into battle. It's difficult, and there are a number of
casualties, but they manage to beat back the pirates. That evening, after the
survivors have gotten themselves bandaged up, they ask the captain why he
called for his red shirt. And he says, 'Because if I'm wounded and bleeding, I
wouldn't want the sight of my blood to destroy the morale of my men. But if I'm
wearing my red shin, no one will see it.' Well, the crew thought, 'Wow. What a
captain,' "
By this point, every eye at the card table was on Geordi. He
continued, "So the next day, another shout, even more worried, comes dawn
from the crow's nest. And the lookout says, 'Captain, my captain! There's ten
pirate ships heading our way, and they mean to board us! What should we do?'
The fright-
ened crew turns to their captain, but he doesn't flinch. He
doesn't hesitate. And he calls out, 'Bring me ...my brown pants!' "
Laughter echoed around the worn, although Worf was naturally
somewhat restrained. Even Data, thanks to his newly installed emotion chip,
was able to laugh in appreciation. Suddenly Geordi immediately stopped laughing
as he looked at something over Riker's shoulder. Riker turned and promptly fell
silent, as did the others.
Jean-Luc Picard was standing there. It was impossible to tell how
long he'd been there, for he'd entered fairly quietly and everyone had been
engrossed in the joke. It was also impossible to tell what was going through
his mind. He had a small, enigmatic smile, but that was no indicator. Picard
had a standing invitation to join them for poker, but he almost never took them
up on it. And of all times, that was the moment he had chosen to make an
appearance at the game.
They all waited.
And at last, without the slightest change in expression, he said,
"I don't think jokes about cowardly captains are very funny." With
that observation hanging in the air, he turned and walked out.
Then the room jolted under Riker, tossing Troi, Worf, Data and
Geordi to the floor, and the recollection dissolved into reality.
It took Riker a few more moments to sort die confusing real world
from his recollection of times past. The jolt had been rather sudden and, when
Riker had been thrown from his chair, he had hit his head rather severely. It
had dazed him and sent his mind spiralling back to a time with his shipmates where,
somehow, things had seemed simpler. But then, didn't times past always seem
that way, no matter how complicated they were?
His lungs began to ache. He wondered why, and then the full
realization of his situation imposed itself upon him. The bridge was thick with
smoke.
The flame-retardant chemicals were already being released and were
controlling the fire adequately enough, but that still didn't help the wreck
that the bridge had become. It had all
happened so fast, so decisively, that it was difficult for Riker
to fully grasp.
Then he saw Palumbo's unmoving body slumped backward in the chair,
with half his scalp torn away and a huge metal shard buried in his skull, and
the full reality of it sank in quite quickly.
His immediate impulse was to stop, to mourn, to dwell on how just
hours before he had been chatting in relaxed and casual fashion with this
young man who had considered Riker someone to emulate. And now he was gone,
just like that. No more aspirations, no more dreams. Nothing.
And the others, my God, the others. First Officer Morris was also
gone, buried under a pile of debris that had broken loose from overhead.
Then Riker, from long practice, pushed such sentiments and
concerns aside. There would be time enough later to mourn... presuming there
was, in fact, a later.
Mankowski wasn't moving either, tilted back in his seat, his head
slumped to one side. But he seemed to be breathing at least, albeit shallowly,
and he was moaning softly. There was a streak of red down the side of his face,
but apparently the wound was under his hair because Riker couldn't immediately
discern it.
As for the captain... Garfield was unconscious. He was slumped
over the ops console, and Riker realized that Garfield must have tried to take
over when Palumbo went down. But there was only a blackened shell where the ops
console had been. Apparently the entire thing had blown up in Garfield's face.
His uniform was torn, his face was blackened, and there was blood everywhere.
That Garfield was breathing at all was nothing short of miraculous.
"Commander..."
The voice came in a croak. Riker turned and saw Monastero, the
security chief, rising from the wreckage like a ghost. "We've... got to
get them out of here..."
"Report, Lieutenant," Riker said through cracked and
bleeding lips. "Where are the attackers."
"We have to get out!" Monastero repeated.
"Give me an update, Mister!" Riker was starting to
become irritated. Monastero appeared to be in shock.
"A report." Monastero pulled himself together and then
fired a dark glare at Riker. "Sensors are down. We're dead in space.
Impulse engines off line. Emergency distress signal has been activated. And
thirty seconds ago, we got word from engineering that there's a warp core breech."
"What? Riker to engineering." He wasn't quite sure that
Monastero, who had a dazed look in his eye and appeared to have gone several
rounds with a brick wall, was fully reliable. On the other hand, he was the
only person still coherent on the bridge.
There was no response to Riker's hail. But at that moment, the
computer voice of the Independence said with its customary sang
froid, "Warp core breech reported. Four minutes, eighteen seconds to
final detonation. Evacuation of ship proceeding ..."
Monastero spread his hands in a 'Told you so" gesture.
It was not a situation that gave Riker a warm, squooshy feeling.
Outside the ship was an array of Romulan vessels, and he was quite certain that
they weren't about to be sporting about the emergency situation. The only hope
they had was that the Romulans had moved off upon detecting the rupture of the
warp core. The explosion was going to be rather intense, and nobody wanted to
be in the vicinity when it happened.
Of course, that included the crew of the Independence.
"Are the turbolifts functioning?" Riker asked.
Monastero's look said it all. "No, of course not. That'd be too
easy," Riker continued, answering his own question. "All right
then." He hauled Mankowski out of the chair and draped him over his
shoulders in a fireman's carry. "The captain. Get the captain."
Monastero was already ahead of him. He draped Garfield over his
shoulder and headed for the emergency exit. Riker followed quickly, while the
computer calmly informed them that in just four minutes, the ship they were
presently residing in would be nothing more than a large patch of space dust.
When the Enterprise had suffered a warp breech, they had
been able to separate the saucer section from her and make their escape that
way. But that option was not open to the Independence. With the impulse
drive down, the saucer section would have no means of propelling itself away
from the blast area. They'd go up in a ball of fire the size of Topeka. The
only hope
they had was the individual escape pods which would be able to
hurtle away from the ship with sufficient speed to reach a safe distance from
the explosion. At least, that was the theory.
Riker just prayed they were still functioning. The escape pods
were on a separate, emergency system from the mainline computers, just for this
sort of emergency. Still, with everything else down, who knew for sure? But
there was no other option. It was either the escape pods or blow themselves out
the photon torpedo tubes and pray that they suddenly developed the ability to
breathe in a vacuum.
Climbing through the emergency hatchways under ordinary
circumstances was problematic enough. Doing so with the slumped body of
Mankowski over him was particularly challenging. Every so often Mankowski
would flutter on the light side of consciousness, muttering something
incoherent—once it was something about a beautiful waltz, another time it related
to triangles—before passing out once more.
Monastero, for his part, was utterly stoic. He hauled his captain
to safety without complaint or even the slightest grunt. One would have thought
he was carrying a bag of katha chips for all the effort he was displaying. He
was definitely stronger than he looked.
They arrived at the lower deck which led to the nearest set of emergency
pods. "Let's hope there's some left," said Riker.
"Let's hope a lot of things," replied Monastero.
They stumbled down the corridor, and Mankowski had recovered
enough of his wits to be able to haul his own weight. Garfield was still out
cold. His color—what was discernable of it beneath the burns—did not look good.
Riker was no doctor, but he gave Garfield a fifty-fifty chance at best. Then he
spotted the sign, glowing in the half-light of the hallway, pointing the way
to the escape pods. "There! This way!"
"I know that! It's my damned ship!" shot back Monastero.
They made it to the pods. Other crewmen were hurriedly launching
themselves into space, but when they saw the captain was there, several of
them stopped what they were doing and helped load him into a pod. It was a
gesture that Riker couldn't help but appreciate. They were placing the survival
of their commanding officer above their own. That was a true measure of the
mettle of Starfleet officers, particularly in a
time of crisis. Riker wished that the remaining pods allowed for
more than one person; in his condition, the captain could really have used
someone with him. But it simply wasn't an option.
"Captain away!" called Monastero. But rather than jump
into a pod himself, he helped Riker load Mankowski into an escape pod. Only
after that had been fired off into space did Monastero turn to head for his own
means of escape. He paused for a moment, however, turned to face Riker, and—despite
the fact that such gestures were all-but-unknown anymore—snapped off a crisp
salute to Riker. The commander returned the gesture and then climbed into his
own pod. He ran through the launch protocol as fast as he could, trying not to
think about the dwindling time left to him. The seal slid into place, and Riker
engaged the "eject" sequence. Seconds later, die escape pod shook
violently around him, and the next thing Riker knew, he was watching the Independence
spiral away from him.
Through the small viewing porthole of the pod, he couldn't believe
the damage he was seeing once he was outside. There was scarcely a section of
the ship that hadn't been scored or ruptured. Warp core breech? The amazing
thing was that the Starship had held together for as long as it had. One warp
nacelle had been blown away completely, and was hanging like a severed limb
nearby the ship's hull. Air was venting into space, the seals having failed.
Even the ship's name, etched proudly on the saucer, was covered with carbon
scoring and was barely visible.
"Bastards,'' breathed Riker.
Then he saw the ship begin to tremble violently, and he realized
that the moment of total destruction was very close. Unfortunately, so was he.
The escape pod was moving quickly, all right, but he wasn't confident that it
was quick enough to put enough distance between himself and the ship.
And then, with a final shudder, much like a death throe, the
engineering section of the Independence erupted. Riker looked away,
partly from the emotion involved in seeing such a magnificent vessel
destroyed, and also simply because such a detonation was blinding.
The unleashed energies of the all-consuming warp core en-
veloped the remains of the Independence like a high-speed
cancer, and seconds later the ship was gone. In its place was a massive,
dazzling blast, with a shock wave radiating from the midst of it that was
overtaking Riker's escape pod with horrifying ease.
Riker braced himself, and then the wave overwhelmed the escape
pod. It propelled him, faster and faster, and Riker set his jaw and didn't cry
out. He wasn't entirely certain why he felt the need to keep it in. It wasn't
as if there was anyone around. But he kept his mouth sealed just the same,
closing his eyes against the spin of the pod.
Throughout all of it, he was struck by the silence of it all. The
blast happened in relative silence, and as he spun about in space, caught up in
the force of the detonation, the main sound he was able to hear was that of his
own breathing ... and possibly the pounding of his own heart. He braced
himself within the pod, grasping the grips on either side to steady himself. He
felt his gorge rising and pushed it back down. The last thing he needed to do
was vomit in the confined space of the escape pod.
The momentum continued to carry him as he rode me crest of the
wave, tumbling end over end, and the incandescence was simply overwhelming. He
was shoved along, a pebble at the edge of a wave. Images flashed before him,
people he loved, people he'd worked with, people long gone and people he
wondered if he'd ever see again. He realized his Me was flashing before his
eyes and all he could think was, How terribly cliche.
It was only belatedly that he realized the light was fading. He
peered through the viewport and saw that the explosion was dissipating. He had
made it, had tumbled beyond the blast range. There were some other pods within
his field of vision, but it was impossible to tell who it was or how many of
the crew had survived.
Now mat he was clear, he activated the pod's propulsion system. It
wasn't as if the escape pod had a ton of maneuverability. To be specific, when
compared to the propulsion and maneuver capacities of a Starship, the pod was
equipped with little more than a pair of oars. Then again, since the pod really
was a glorified lifeboat, that was fairly appropriate.
The problem was, there wasn't really any place for Riker to head to.
He wasn't situated near any planet... and even if he was, there wouldn't be
any guarantee that it would have been hospitable. Up to that point, he'd been
more reacting than acting. The idea had been to get away from the dying
Starship rather man be concerned about getting to someplace. Now his main
concern was steadying himself and returning to the other pods. If there were a
hospitable planet in the area, then the smart thing to do would be to head
there as quickly as possible, touch down, and wait for rescue. But with
nothing around and Riker uncertain precisely where they were, the only reasonable
thing to do was keep together as a group and hope that a ship responded to the
rescue call that had been sent out...
Just as we responded to a rescue call, Riker thought ruefully. Well, this rescue
mission had turned out just wonderfully, hadn't it.
He saw a cluster of escape pods floating to his right, and was
about to try and open up a comm channel so mat he could discern who it was...
... and that was when a huge burst of light detonated. Reflexively
he shielded his eyes. He didn't even have to look, though, to know what had just
happened.
They were moving in, vultures converging on a wounded and helpless
herd. Two Romulan cruisers were coming in. Only two, he realized.
Obviously the Independence had not gone out without giving a good
account of herself. The other warbirds, as well as the ship they'd been
pursuing, had either been destroyed or else so badly shot up that they had had
to return to home base—wherever that was—for repairs.
Unfortunately, two warbirds were going to be more man enough to
handle the life pods. In fact, considering that the pods were for life
maintenance only and contained no offensive capacity, a single Romulan warrior
with a phaser cannon could probably dispose of them handily. So two warbirds,
in this instance, was overkill.
They were taking their time, the damned sadists. They began
fine-tuning their shots; instead of disposing of a group of pods, as one of the
ships had just done, they started picking mem off one at a time. Target
practice, thought an infuriated Riker. They want to drag it out, have some
"fun." Naturally they
weren't interested in rescuing any of them. Romulans habitually
did not take prisoners. The only time they had that Riker knew of was the
imprisonment of Tasha Yar which had resulted in the birth of Sela, and
apparently that had been a rather unique set of circumstances.
He wondered if Sela was aboard one of the ships now, or whether
she had been on one of the ones that was crippled or destroyed. "She's
there," Riker muttered. "She's definitely out there, taking her time,
making us suffer. That's her style."
Another pod picked off, and another still. There was no way for
them to know who was in which pod. There was no mission to try and seek out
particular individuals. It was simply an exercise in barbarism.
"Selaaaa!" Riker shouted, even though she couldn't hear. Even though no one
could hear. "Sela... I'll find you! Even after I'm dead, I'll still find
you, and drag you kicking and screaming to whatever hell you're destined
for!"
One of the Romulan warbirds slowly started to turn in bis
direction. A more fanciful turn of mind would have prompted Riker to mink mat
Sela was hi that ship, and that she had heard him. And that she was about to
give her reply hi the form of phasers aimed right down his throat. At that
moment, he thought about the joke. About being faced with a situation where the
odds were utterly hopeless.
Never, in all his career, had Riker been as close to death as he
was at that moment A Romulan warbird staring at him, her weapons fully charged
and ready, and he had no means of escape, no ability to defend himself.
Nothing. He was a sitting duck. And it was just he in the pod. He was faced
with the moment of his death, and if he cried out, or sobbed, or broke down in
frustration, or shouted out curses at the unfair universe that had left him hi
such due straits... no one would ever know.
He levelled his gaze straight at the warbird's gunport... and then
he straightened his uniform jacket, tugging down on the bottom to smooth it.
"Farewell... Imzadi," he said to one who was not mere.
Then he tilted his chin slightly, like a prize fighter daring a challenger, and
he said, "Take your best shot."
It wasn't a phaser that the warbird fired, as it tinned out ft
was a photon torpedo, and it streaked from the ship's underbelly
straight at Riker. There was absolutely no way that it could miss. Through the
silence it came at him, and within a second or two, it would blow him to bits.
At least it would have... had not a phaser blast lanced down from
overhead, spearing the photon torpedo with surgical precision and detonating
it while it was still a good five hundred yards from the pod.
"What in the—?" said a confused Riker, which was no
doubt what they were saying aboard the warbird as well. A shadow was cast over
them as something blotted out the light from the nearest star.
Down the Starship flew, normal space twisting and roiling around
it as the mighty vessel leaped out of warp, firing as it came.
If the warbird could have let out a shriek of surprise, like a
genuine bird, it would have. The warbird literally back-flipped out of the way
as the new arrival unleashed another phaser barrage that clipped the warbird's
warp nacelles. Riker was impressed at the precision. Whoever was manning
tactical aboard the Starship unquestionably knew what he was about.
The other warbird peeled off from its steady annihilation of the
life pods and opened fire on the Starship. The warbird's phaser blasts danced
around the Starship's shields, even as the Starship returned fire with a photon
torpedo barrage that bracketed the warbird, leaving it no where to go, keeping
it in position for another well-placed phaser blast.
The first warbird tried to move upon the Starship, operating in
tandem with its mate, but the Starship would have none of it. In what had to be
the most insane maneuver that Riker had ever witnessed, the Starship actually
barrel-rolled via thrusters. As it did so, it unleashed phaser fire that
pinwheeled around it, tracing such a bizarre arc that the warbirds didn't know
where to maneuver in order to avoid them.
" Who the hell is flying that thing ?! " Riker
said in shock.
The first warbird moved in the wrong direction and paid dearly for
it as the phasers sliced straight across her underbelly, slashing through what
remained of the warbird's shields. A plume of flame blossomed from the ship's
lower decks. Natu-
rally die vacuum of space quickly snuffed it out, but it didn't
matter as the interior of the ship blew apart Pieces of warbird scattered
everywhere, all in eerie silence.
The second warbird, seeing the fate that had overtaken the first
one, apparently didn't need to see anymore. It whipped around and, seconds
later, had leaped into warp space and was gone. If it had so chosen, the
Starship could have gone after it, but much to Riker's relief, it chose to stay
and attend to the floating life pods.
The ship slowly cruised over him, and he was finally able to make
out the name of the vessel as it drew near enough: U.S.S. Excalibur.
"I should
have known," Riker said. Indeed, he should have. The Excalibur was
the primary Starship that had been assigned to Thallonian space. Still,
considering they weren't that far into Thallonian territory—indeed, that
they were relatively close to the borders of Federation space—the rescuer could
have been anyone. However, it was cosmically ironic that it was the Excalibur
because it meant that, any moment, he'd likely be hearing the voice of—
"All lifepods, this is Excalibur, Commander Shelby
speaking," a familiar voice came over the pod's speaker system.
"We'll be beaming you all aboard momentarily. Please be patient"
"Shelby. Naturally it would be Shelby," Riker said.
To his surprise, her voice came right back at him over the comm.
"Commander Riker... is that you?"
He blinked. He'd been unaware that the two-way was on, bat he
realized somewhat belatedly that it was. Still, considering that Shelby had
likely gotten numerous responses to her opening hail from other escape pods, it
was nothing short of amazing that she'd been able to single out his voice.
"It's me, Commander."
"Hold on." Clearly she was busy getting a track as to
which pod his transmission was coming from. "My God," she said after
a moment, "you're in the one mat we intercepted the torpedo for."
"That would be me, yes. Kudos to the timing of you and your
CO."
"I just wish we could have gotten here sooner."
"So do I," he said regretfully, thinking about the
crewmen who had been lost.
Suddenly the pod seemed to dematerialize around him, and then he
found himself standing on a transporter pad with a number of other
shaken-looking former crewmembers of the Independence. Elizabeth Paula
Shelby, who had served under Riker as his second-in-command when he'd captained
the Enterprise against a Borg invasion, was standing in the transporter
room with her hands draped behind her back. "Welcome, all of you,"
she said briskly. "Please report to sickbay immediately. We have a
medteam just outside who will escort you down."
There were murmurs of "Thank you" as me crewmen filed
out. The last one out was Riker, who stopped within a foot or two of Shelby.
"Be certain to tell me as soon as you have Captain Garfield's status
confirmed... whatever that might be."
"I certainly will. It shouldn't take too long to find out.
We're utilizing all the transporter rooms to bring the rest of them aboard even
as we speak," she said.
He nodded.
She actually smiled. "It's good to see you again, Commander,"
and she sounded like she meant it. Considering that she and Riker had spent
most of their time at each other's throats the last time they'd served
together, he considered that a genuine compliment.
"Good to see you too, Commander," he replied. "For
a little while there, I thought I wasn't going to be seeing anyone again."
"It must have been terrifying when that thing had you targeted."
He gave it a moment's thought and then said, "Well... at
least I didn't need my brown pants."
She stared at him. "Oh. Well... good. That would... clash
with your uniform top."
He nodded and walked out, as Shelby stared after him and scratched
her head in obvious confusion.
IV.
captain mackenzie calhoun was sitting behind his desk squeezing two
small, green rubber balls together when Commander Shelby entered. She stared
at him for a short time and then asked, "What are you doing?"
"Relieving tension," he said.
She watched him for a moment longer. "Squeezing those relieves
tension?"
"Absolutely. A friend got them for me, many years ago. Would
you care to try?" He held up his hands, and there was a green ball in
either one. They were fairly small, but the rubber was sturdy and was able to
withstand pressure with relative ease.
"No. Thank you."
"Because you look tense."
"I'm not tense."
"You look it."
"Mac ... I'm not tense."
"All right." He leaned back in his chair. "So...
bring me up to date."
"We managed to rescue 374 crewmen. The rest either died
during the initial Romulan attack, or else when the two ships returned and
starting picking people off. Starfleet has been in-
formed and has told me that they'll be sending a transport. We're
supposed to be hearing back from them once they've finned up the rendezvous
point"
Calhoun shook his head. His face was fairly impassive, which was
not unusual for him; he didn't tend to keep his emotions up near the surface
for casual display. But the disgust was evident nonetheless. "Not
honorable. Picking off helpless people. Not honorable at all."
"The Romulans don't particularly care about such things as
honor."
"They used to." He put the balls down on the desk and
tapped his computer console. "I've been doing some research. They've
always been in opposition to the Federation... but they used to be far more
honorable than they are now. It's very odd. The Romulans used to focus on
honor, while the Klingons were the dastardly race you wouldn't dare turn your
back on. But they've switched places in their racial conduct Curious."
"You can find it curious if you want. What I want to
know," and she sat down opposite him, "is what they were doing out
here in Thallonian space."
"So would I." He considered the question. "The Independence
was lured here by that unknown ship they were chasing. The Romulans were
waiting for mem. Which suggests one of two things: Either the vessel they were
chasing signalled ahead, picked this area at random, and instructed the
Romulans to rendezvous here. Or else..."
"Or else the Romulans have a base somewhere hereabouts, and
this was a pre-arranged rendezvous point" finished Shel-by. "If
that's the case... we should find it."
"Excellent idea. Considering that space is infinite in all directions,
which way do you suggest we look first?"
"I never pretend to have all the answers, Mac. I leave that
to captains."
He smiled thinly and then shifted gears. "Speaking of that...
how is the captain of the Independence? Or at least what was the Independence"
"He'll live. He was one of the lucky ones, actually, to have
survived that shooting gallery from the Romulans."
"They'll pay for that," Calhoun said with quiet
conviction.
'It's not the job of the Excalibur to carry out acts of revenge."
When he'd spoken earlier, he had been staring off into space, but
now Calhoun swivelled his head so that the gaze from his purple eyes was
squarely levelled upon Shelby. "Don't kid me, Eppy," using the
nickname—a collapsing of Elizabeth and Paula—that he knew so irritated her.
"If we find ourselves in a battle situation with the warbird that got
away, or that ship they were chasing, you'll be hoping I blow them out of
space. You know it. I know it"
"That's the difference between us, Mac," she said
softly, even a little sadly. "I wouldn't revel in it Two wrongs don't make
a right."
"Yes. They do."
"But—"
"They do," he told her firmly. "Someone commits a
wrong, a wrong is committed against them in turn... mat comes out right"
"I'm speaking from a moral point of view, Mac."
"So am I," he said mildly. "That's the joy of
morals. They're not absolute."
"There are absolute standards of right and wrong, Mac."
"You should know better than mat, Eppy. Physics are absolute.
But anything that man can conceive from his own skull is up for debate."
"You see, Mac... you would think that Because you're someone
who thinks that rules apply to you when you feel like it but can be discarded
when you consider mem an inconvenience."
"Not always."
"No. Not always. Sometimes you have your moments. Sometimes
you realize the importance of regs. I like to think mat I've contributed to
that somewhat. But most of the time..." She shook her head and let out a
long, exaggerated sigh. "Sometimes, Mac, I just don't know."
"Fortunately enough, I do. But then again, I am a captain. As
you said, either I know, or pretend that I do." He paused and eyed her in
a slightly amused manner. "So... getting reacquainted?"
"What?"
"With Commander Riker."
"Oh. Him." Shelby absentmindedly picked up one of the
green balls and started squeezing it. "There's not that much to get
reacquainted about."
"Really." He drummed his fingers on his desk. "From
what I've heard, the two of you had some interesting chemistry together."
"Chemistry? We didn't have chemistry, Mac. We had fights.
Riker is ..." She shook her head and squeezed the ball tighter.
"Riker is what?"
"Oh, he's an arrogant ass. So self-satisfied, so smug. Spends
his entire career hanging onto Jean-Luc Picard's coattails. Now Picard, there's
a quality officer... as you well know. And Riker, he thinks he's the moon to
Picard's sun, basking in the reflected glory."
"Very harsh, Commander. From what I've read, he handled
himself in exemplary fashion during the Borg encounter when Picard was
assimilated."
"He had his moments, I suppose. But it's..."
It's what?" He cocked an eyebrow. "Eppy?"
"He's got potential, all right? Potential. There's something
there. Possible greatness." She was speaking all in a rush, the words
tumbling one over the other. It was hard to tell whether she was angry or
frustrated or sad or some combination of all those. "I can tell. I can
tell these things because I've just got a knack for it. He could be one of the
great ones, one of the truly legendary captains..."
"But I thought you said—"
"He's got to come out from Picard's shadow, though!" she
said in frustration, as if Mac hadn't spoken. "I don't know why he's so
satisfied to hide there! And when you talk to him about it, he gets all
defensive and his jaw gets so tight and his eyes get all hard while the edges
crinkle up..."
"Oh, do they?"
"But he's just so... so... so..." Her voice became
louder , and a bit more shrill with every word."... so... so..."
The ball popped.
Shelby jumped back in her chair, startled by the sound and
reflexively her hand flipped the broken rubber shell away from her. It
"thwapped" onto Calhoun's desk rather pathetically.
Calhoun stared at it and then, as if handling a rotting carcass,
he picked it up delicately between his thumb and forefinger. "I've had the
set for nine years. I didn't think it was possible to do this."
When Riker entered sickbay to check on Captain Garfield, he was
momentarily surprised to see Doctor Selar checking over one of the Independence
crewmembers. He remembered her from her time on the Enterprise, and
hadn't been aware that her new assignment was the Excalibur. He
remembered mat he'd always been quite impressed with her. She didn't have the
most delicate bedside manner, but she was a superb diagnostician and extremely
efficient. Plus, because she was a Vulcan, she had the customary Vulcan
reserve.
He walked up behind her and said, by way of greeting, "Doctor
Selar..."
"What
do you want?!"
He had never, in his life, heard a Vulcan speak above normal
conversational tone, much less have one bellow at him. And it had been, to put
it delicately, completely unprovoked. And the oddest thing was probably the
fact that no one in sickbay seemed to feel that this was behavior that was
remotely unusual for a CMO, let alone a Vulcan.
Remembering the accelerated strength that Vulcans possessed, to
say nothing of such techniques as the Vulcan nerve pinch, Riker suddenly felt
that it would probably be wiser for him to take a few steps back. He promptly
did so. Selar had now turned to face him and was staring at him with no hint of
recognition.
"Doctor... Selar? Commander Riker. Will Riker. We... worked
together."
"I am aware of who you are, Commander," she said.
"I am also aware that we served together aboard the Enterprise. I
am further aware that I have been working steadily since the arrival of the
survivors from the Independence. Fortunately I do not require rest and
relaxation as humans do. Lack of sleep has absolutely no effect on me
whatsoever. What does have an impact upon me is people engaging me in
pointless discussion, social niceties, and significant wastes of my time. If
you consider it a possibility that you fall into any of those categories,
you might want to reconsider your apparent interest in engaging
me in extended social intercourse."
"Doctor," Riker said slowly, "I know this isn't my
ship. I know I'm a visitor here. But nonetheless... I still outrank you... and
that rank, to say nothing of simple common courtesy, should afford me a degree
of respect. Respect that I don't see happening here. Now I'm not entirely sure
what you think I've done to deserve mis sort of brusque and, frankly, rude
treatment. But I suggest you either tell me what's going on, or—"
"I am not interested in your ultimatums, Commander. Nor do I
wish to discuss my personal affairs. Kindly tell me what you desire by coming
here, or please leave."
"I'm looking for Captain Garfield."
"There." She pointed to a bed in the far corner and,
sure enough, there was Garfield lying there, looking somewhat battered and
bruised but most definitely alive. His eyes were closed, his chest rising and
falling regularly.
Riker was about to say a curt "thank you" but Selar had
already moved off. Shaking his head, Riker walked over to Garfield and stood
over him.
"That you, Commander?" Garfield's eyes opened to narrow
slits. His voice sounded raspy.
"Yes, sir."
"Sony... we weren't able to give you that smooth ride I
promised you."
"Don't worry, Captain. I won't hold it against you."
Garfield stared off into space.
"Captain... ?"
"I once met a captain... in a place... a special place,"
and he didn't quite smile, but it seemed to bring back pleasant memories.
"A place for captains. Perhaps you'll go there sometime. We would sit
around... tell stories... and one evening... me subject became losing a
command. Different captains talked about it... but it wasn't addressed with the
usual enthusiasm that usually involved discussions at this ... particular
place. And eventually... it got rather quiet. Quiet throughout the entire
place, as it never had been before. And someone turned to me... and asked me if
I'd ever experienced ... such a loss. And I said I hadn't. That I was totally
ig-
norant of what it was like. They looked at one another, the other
captains did, and then they raised their glasses and, almost as one, they
chorused, To ignorance.' They hoped that I would never have to go through it.
But I'm afraid that I've had to disappoint them."
"Sir, it wasn't—"
He held up a cautionary ringer to silence him. "If the next
two words out of your mouth are going to be 'your fault,' I would suggest you
keep them to yourself. It's always the captain's fault, commander. Always. No
matter what boards of inquiry may decide. No matter what others may say. Do
you know why captains are supposed to go down with their ship? It's so we don't
have to listen to well-meaning individuals telling us it's not our fault.
Because it is always ... the captain's ... fault."
It was as if he'd expended all his remaining energy just to get
those words out. Then his head slumped back and he closed his eyes. For just a
moment, Riker was about to shout an alarm, but then he glanced up at the
scanner mounted on the wall and he saw that the readings were steady. He had
simply fallen back to sleep.
"He appears to be resting comfortably."
Riker literally didn't recognize the voice at first as he turned
to see Dr. Selar standing at his arm. "Yesss ..." he said cautiously.
"It was very traumatic for him. We have him slightly medicated
to ease him through... but not excessively."
He tilted his head slightly as if needing to make sure that he was
talking to the same person he'd been addressing before. "Doctor Selar...
?"
"Yes? Is there a problem, Commander?"
Her attitude and disposition had completely changed. Gone was the
edge of anger, the snappishness, the impatience. Now she was a standard-issue,
matter-of-fact Vulcan.
"I... don't know. Is there a problem?"
For answer, she looked not at Riker, but at the bio-readouts over
Garfield's bed. "No," she said after studying it a moment.
"There does not appear to be. However," and she looked back to Riker,
"if you believe there is one, please do not hesitate to inform me. Good
day." All-business, she moved on to the next
diagnostic table, leaving an utterly perplexed Riker literally
shaking his head.
The doors to the Medlab hissed open, and Commander Shel-by
entered. "Commander Riker," she called.
"Yes, Commander?"
"I was just informed by the captain that we're receiving an
incoming message from Starfleet, and apparently our presence has been
requested."
"And you came down to get me yourself?"
"I was in the neighborhood and thought I'd drop by."
"I see. Very considerate of you." He headed for the
door, stopping only to nod slightly to Doctor Selar and say, "Doctor."
"Commander," she nodded in acknowledgment as she went
about her business.
Riker and Shelby headed down the corridor and into a turbolift.
Waiting until the door had slid shut and they had privacy, Riker turned to
Shelby and said, "Would you mind telling me what the hell is Doctor
Selar's problem?"
"Problem? Oh," she said as if just realizing, "the
mood swings."
"Is that what those were? It's not Bendii, is it?
"No. Pregnancy. And when the father is a slightly flighty
Hermat, with whom the doctor has formed a close psychic bond due to their
intimacy which has permeated her entire personality, well..."
"Wait a minute. She's pregnant?"
"Yes."
"But the father is a Hermat?"
"That's right."
"Hennats ... that race that has both male and female—"
"Correct again."
"And they've formed a psychic bond because ... ?"
"Of reasons too complicated and, frankly, delicate to go
into."
"I'm afraid that's not good enough."
She had looked amused at the situation up until that point. But
now she studied Riker as if he were a single-celled organism under a
microscope and said, "I'm afraid it's more than good enough. I remind you,
Commander, that Captain Calhoun
is in charge of this vessel, and not you. You are simply a
visitor... a refugee, if you will. Captain Calhoun obviously feels that Doctor
Selar is capable of carrying out her duties. His judgment is not only to be
respected, but particularly in your case, it's not to be second-guessed. Do I
make myself clear, Commander?"
"Commander," and he folded his arms across his broad
chest, "I am not about to try and undercut a CO. But by the same token, I
will speak my mind where I see fit."
"You do that. And of course, if you wish to show us the best
way to go about running a ship, you can just head back to the ship that you're
commanding ... oh! Wait!" She slapped her forehead with her open palm as
if she had just recalled something fairly crucial. "That's right. You
don't have a command of your own. Do you? Perhaps the next time one is offered
you, it would be in your best interests to take it, because sooner or later,
they'll stop offering."
Riker said nothing, but he couldn't help but feel that the
temperature in the turbolift had just dropped rather precipitously.
Calhoun glanced up as Riker and Shelby entered the captain's
ready room. They walked in several feet, both stopped, smiled gamely in perfect
unison, and stood at parade rest. He looked from one to the other.
"Have a tiff, did we?" he inquired.
"Simply a spirited discussion, sir," Shelby said. Riker
nodded slightly in affirmation.
"Mm hmm." Believing that it would probably be wiser not
to pursue it, he called out, "Bridge to Lefler. We're ready. Put the comm
through."
When the face of the Starfleet officer calling them came on
screen, no one could have been more surprised than Calhoun. He hadn't been
expecting anyone in particular, and yet, despite that, this was the last person
he was expecting.
One would not, however, have had any inkling of his astonishment
from his voice. Instead, without blinking an eye, he said, "Admiral Nechayev.
A pleasure as always. I wasn't expecting to hear from you. This business is a
bit outside your normal purview, isn't it?"
Nechayev looked a bit older than when he'd last seen her. A little
jowlier, a little grayer. He'd always been impressed how little the strains of
her job seemed to weigh on her, but he had to assume that time caught up with
everyone... even the Iron Woman of Starfleet. "My purview tends to expand
as the need arises," she said drily. "Commander Riker, it's good to see
you hale and whole. Your loss would have been a terrible blow to the public
relations plans for the bicentennial."
Riker bowed slightly at the waist. "I appreciate your concern,
Admiral."
"There's humanitarian concerns as well, of course, plus
Starfleet's interest in the money they've invested in you as an officer... but
those worries would likely be outside my purview, and I wouldn't want to tempt
Captain Calhoun's wrath."
Calhoun noticed Shelby hiding a smile behind her hand, but he
chose not to comment on it.
Quickly becoming all-business, Nechayev said, "And how is
Captain Garfield?"
'1 believe Commander Riker was the last one to speak with
him." Calhoun half-turned in his chair and looked to Riker.
Riker nodded briskly. "If anything, I'd say he's somewhat in
shock."
"If he weren't, I'd think there's something wrong with him.
Poor George. A good man. He, and his crew, deserved better man this." She
shook her head, a grim expression on her face. Then she continued, "A
transport is under way, Captain, as promised. You will leave Thallonian space
and proceed to Deep Space 4, where you will discharge your passengers. And you,
captain, will join them."
There was a brief moment of unspoken confusion in the ready room.
"I'm sorry... say again, Admiral?" said Calhoun. "I'm joining
them on Deep Space 47"
"That is correct"
"And the Excalibur is to remain on station for how
long?"
"She is not to wait for you. I will be meeting with you on
DS4, to discuss a matter of some urgency. The Excalibur is to return
immediately to Thallonian space and continue the investigation of this Romulan
attack. We've put our best people on it, and they've come up with one or two
possibilities: Either it
was random chance that the Romulans intercepted the Independence
where they did, or else there's a secret Romulan stronghold somewhere in
Thallonian space."
"Thank heavens we had the best minds in Starfleet to come up
with that," Shelby commented. The remark was, of course, not lost on
Calhoun. He knew perfectly well that Shelby had come to the exact same
conclusions all on her own. It was probably Elizabeth's greatest curse, he
decided, to feel that she was consistently undervalued as an officer. Not only
was she hungry for her own command and feeling thwarted that she hadn't
received it yet, but he knew that she still felt a certain degree of
"exile" in her current post as second-in-command to Calhoun. She
believed she was ready for a command of her own, and truth to tell, so did
Calhoun. That didn't stop him from valuing her contributions and presence as
first officer. There was probably no one else in Starfleet whose advice Calhoun
would readily listen to, even though he frequently gave Shelby the impression
mat he was hardly attending to anything she said.
"Either way," Nechayev was saying, "we want the Excalibur
to look into the matter and see what you can discern either way."
"How long will I be away from her?" Calhoun asked.
"Impossible to say at this point."
But Calhoun wasn't really listening to what she was saying.
Instead he was attending to what she wasn't saying... and it spoke volumes.
Some years earlier, Calhoun had departed Starfleet under rather
acrimonious circumstances. It had been Nechayev who had seen a potential waste
of material and had drafted Calhoun to work freelance for The Division of
Starfleet Intelligence, that she oversaw. Her connection to SI was not widely
known. She had other, more prominent and promoted duties to which she attended,
most of which simply served as cover for her SI responsibilities. After all, it
wouldn't do for any communique' from Nechayev's office to immediately carry
with it a likelihood that there was something going on with Starfleet Intelligence.
Notoriety is counterproductive to secrecy.
But Calhoun, who had done a number of jobs for her on "his
own," knew all too well. He also knew that DS4 was an out-
post station for SI, another fact that was neatly hidden from the
public at large. If Nechayev was meeting him there, it was because she wanted
to assign him to something. He wasn't especially sanguine about it,
considering those days long behind him. But he was also aware that if Nechayev
had targeted him for an SI assignment, then there had to be a pretty damned
good reason. She wouldn't be removing him as captain merely on a whim. He
trusted her judgment that much, at least. Still... he was beginning to wonder
whether this might actually be a precursor to an extended departure from the Excal-ibur,
or even a permanent loss of command as Starfleet arbitrarily decided that
his talents could better be served elsewhere than the bridge of a Starship.
As if reading his mind—which he was convinced Nechayev was
actually capable, on occasion, of doing—Nechayev smiled and added, "Don't
worry, captain. It won't be indefinite. Simply a matter mat needs to be
attended to. You'll be back with your ship as soon as possible."
"Very well." Although his next remark was addressed to
Nechayev, he was looking at Shelby when he said it. "I have every
confidence that the Excalibur will be in good hands during my
absence." Shelby inclined her head slightly in response as if to say, Thank
you.
"As are we," Nechayev said. "Commander Riker has
proven his capability time and again, and we are certain he won't disappoint
us mis time, either."
The words hung there. Of everyone in the room, it was Riker who
seemed the most astounded. "Admiral... I assumed that I would be
departing on DS4, to head back for the bicentennial..."
"Never assume, Commander. It makes an ass of 'u' and 'me.'
Well... not of me, in this case, but you get the idea. Did they never teach you
that at the Academy?"
"Yes, they did, but I..."
The simple fact, Commander, is mat we're taking advantage of your
presence mere. You not only have more experience with Romulans man does Commander
Shelby, but you're certainly the most familiar with the operative named Sela.
You know how she thinks, how she plans... you can likely second-guess her
strategies. You will receive a field promotion to 'captain' for the
duration of your stay aboard the Excalibur, and assume command
as soon as Captain Calhoun has departed."
"But Admiral, I..." He glanced at Shelby, whose face was
a mask, and said, "it's my belief that Commander Shelby is perfectly
capable..."
"That is my belief as well. But I believe you to be more so,
and intend to exploit that. Commander Riker," and there was just a hint of
warning in her voice, "are you turning down a command... again?"
There was a momentary silence, and men Riker drew himself up and
said crisply, "No, ma'am."
"I'm glad to hear it. Captain Calhoun, I shall see you shortly.
Captain Riker... good luck and good hunting. And if you have any difficulties,
I know we can count on Commander Shelby to give you full back-up."
"Absolutely, ma'am," Shelby said without hesitation.
"Starfleet out."
No one said anything for a time, and then Calhoun said,
"Commander... I'm sorry, Captain... Riker... since apparently
you'll be here for a time, I suggest you go down to ship's stores and obtain
some things you might need, considering that whatever possessions you were
travelling with were blown up. Some off-duty clothing, toothbrush, that sort of
thing. I'll have Miss Lefler give you a more detailed tour of the ship at your
earliest convenience, and introduce you to some of the key personnel. We're a
rather... relaxed group around here. I'm sure you'll fit right hi."
"I'm sure I will, sir."
"Dismissed."
Riker turned and left. Shelby didn't even glance after him.
Instead her gaze was focused on the now-blank screen that Nechayev had been on
moments later.
"Are you going to be all right, Elizabeth?" he asked
with as much genuine concern as he could get into his voice.
"Not... immediately. In a while, perhaps... but not immediately."
She stopped talking and simply stood there, still staring at the
screen. She didn't seem to show any inclination to leave, but she appeared so
seized with contained rage that she couldn't quite figure out the best way to
move.
Calhoun picked up the remaining green ball. "In point of
fact," he said slowly, "it was Nechayev who gave me these... well...
this. Would you care to... ?" He extended the ball to her.
She took it from him, stared at it for a moment Then, her face
twisted into a picture of silent fury, she cocked her arm, and let fly.
The ball struck the monitor screen, ricocheted back, and Shelby
had to duck to avoid being struck in the head. The ball bounced back from the
far wall and landed squarely in Cal-houn's hand.
Slowly Calhoun stood up from behind his desk and stared down at
Shelby, who sat, shaking her head. "I actually assumed you were simply
going to squeeze it. But, as the lady said, never assume." He waited for
response and, when he didn't get one immediately, ventured to add, "Not
your day, is it, Eppy."
"Not my lifetime, Mac. Not my lifetime."
V.
the pubs of argelius ii were reputed to have the absolutely best
dancers in the entire quadrant, and it was there that Zolon Darg had journeyed
as part of what had become his eternal quest He was looking for a dancer who
would expunge the memories of... her.
After all this time, the recollection of Vandelia still remained
with him. When he closed his eyes, he could see the curves and tines of her
body. He could see her breasts upthrust. He could see the saucy smile, the
come-hither look in her eyes, the temptation and raw sex that radiated from
her body with the clarity of tight from a star. And most important of all he
could see his hands at her throat strangling her for the way that she had turned
on bun, tricked him, brought down his entire operation in flames around his
head. Her and that friend of hers, that "Mac."
Darg had many friends and a long reach, but Vandelia was still
just one person, and it was a big galaxy with lots of places to hide if one was
so inclined. She had probably changed her name, perhaps even left the quadrant
entirely. Who knew for sure? If she'd taken it into her head, she might even
have booked passage on a ship and gone through the Bajoran wormhole into the
Delta quadrant to explore new territories and possibilities there. Who knew?
Who cared?
He cared. She was a dangling loose end that he hoped he would one
day be able to tie off, and he would do so by tying it off around her neck.
In the meantime, this dancer that he was now watching was a
pleasant enough diversion.
She was not Orion, by any means. Her skin was milky white, for
starters, and her long black hair managed to tantaliz-ingly cover her bare
breasts at all times. It was somewhat amazing, really. She went by the name of
Kat'leen, and her gyrating body was a joy to behold. Her stomach was
remarkably muscled, and her legs seemed to go on forever. She kept time in her
dance with small finger cymbals, and an enthusiastic drummer pounded away
nearby. Darg found himself unconsciously keeping time with a steady beat on
the table.
He fingered the glass on the table and realized, with a distant
disappointment, that it was empty. "Shunabo, get me another drink,"
he ordered to his second-in-command, and then came to the hazy recollection
that Shunabo wasn't there, mostly due to the fact that—in a fit of
pique—he had killed him. The action seemed rather harsh, in retrospect. Shunabo
had served him well, and it was just remotely possible that he did not, in
fact, deserve what had happened to him.
"Well... so what," Darg growled to no one after a moment's
thought. " 'Deserve' has nothing to do with it. He was becoming full of
himself. A danger. If a man's going to watch my back, I have to be sure he's
not going to stick a knife in it. I don't need a man who's going to openly defy
me." Whether, in fact, Shunabo had openly defied him was a bit fuzzy in
Darg's mind. The drink wasn't helping to keep him clear.
Kat'leen's dance drew to its enticing climax, and then she sprawled
on the floor, her legs drawn together, her arms spread wide, her hair once
again strategically placed in such a way that Zolon Darg began to wonder if the
damned stuff had a life of its own. All around him, lights were clicking on and
off furiously on the table tops, which was the standard Argelius means of
showing approval.
The one exception was a human over in the corner. A heavyset,
gray-haired, mustached man, he was pounding on the table and whistling shrilly
between his teeth. He had a large bottle of some liquid that appeared to be
green positioned in front of
him, and he had clearly been at it for a while. His raucous behavior
drew glares from some of the more reserved patrons who liked everything
"just so." Darg watched in amusement as the owner of the
establishment approached the gray-haired gentleman and clearly, with some
polite gestures, indicated that perhaps it was time he take his business
elsewhere. With a growl and a burst of what was likely some sort of profanity—
but spoken with such a thick terran accent of some sort that Darg couldn't even
begin to comprehend it—the gray-haired man swayed out of the pub and into the
street.
Darg promptly forgot about him, instead deciding that now would
likely be the most opportune time to approach the young lady. Kat'leen was just
in the process of drawing a type of shawl across her shoulders. Darg found it
rather charming in a way. When she danced, it was with complete lack of inhibition
as she practically basked in her sexuality. But now that the dance was over,
she seemed almost shy. Not in a shrinking, frightened sort of way. Just a bit
more... modest... than she had been.
"Yes?" she said, one eyebrow raised as Darg approached.
"You dance magnificently," he told her.
"Thank you." She seemed to be looking him up and down,
trying to get a feeling for the type of man he was.
"I have two questions for you, if you don't mind."
"Not at all."
"First... have you ever heard of another dancer... an Orion
girl... named Vandelia?"
"Not that I can recall," she said with a smile that
seemed rather mischievous. "Why? Wasn't I enough dancer for you?"
"Oh, yes, you were superb. The second question is, Would you
do me the honor of accompanying me for the rest of the evening."
She sized him up once more, but before she could respond, another
voice said, "She's mine."
Zolon Darg turned and looked up... and up. Darg was certainly no
slouch in the height department with his massive build, but the individual
confronting him was, incredibly, a head taller and also wider. He had one .eye,
having apparently lost the other in a fight... or, for all Darg knew, in a card
game. His head was shaven, his nose crunched in so stylistical-
ly that it was difficult for Darg to tell whether he was an alien
who normally sported a nose of that style, or whether an opponent had simply
crushed it. His Ups drew back in a sneer to reveal a neatly pointed double row
of sharp teeth. This was not an individual who appeared likely to back down.
Then again, neither was Darg.
"Calm down, Cho," Kat'leen said to me behemoth, and then
looked apologetically at Darg. "I'm sorry. Cho is a regular ... customer.
And he gets a bit possessive sometimes."
"I understand," Darg said calmly.
"So you also understand," Cho growled, "that you
better backoff."
"I will on one condition."
Cho was clearly puzzled. "Condition?"
"Yes. Condition. A simple enough word. I'm sure it's even in
your vocabulary."
"What... condition."
"I will back off," Darg said calmly, "if you would
be good enough to take a step or two back, bend over, and shove your own head
up your own nether bodily orifice."
Kat'leen rubbed the bridge of her nose in obvious pain and took
several steps back as if to try and get as clear of the area as possible. It
was rather evident she didn't anticipate matters going particularly well hi the
next few minutes.
Cho digested Darg's requested stipulation for a few moments
before fully grasping just what it was that Darg had said to him. Then, with an
infuriated roar and no other warning, he came straight at Darg. He wielded no
weapon. Apparently he didn't feel that he needed one.
Darg, on the other hand, was quite prepared. He extended the
fingers of his right hand, and vicious-looking blades snapped out of the tips.
Each of them wasn't more than an inch long, but it was not their length that
was the main problem for Cho. Rather, it was the fact that Darg's hand moved so
quickly that the word "blur" wouldn't even have begun to cover it.
One moment his hand was at this side, the next it was across Cho's throat
Reflexively, Cho grabbed at his throat, and seemed quite surprised
when a thick red liquid began to seep from between his fingers, pumped through
the gaping wound in his neck that
Darg had just put there. Kat'leen looked from Cho to Darg and back
again in confusion. She had blinked when the strike was made and had literally
missed it because of that. So she didn't fully grasp what was happening at
first But when Cho sank to his knees, his hand still at his throat and an expression
of total bewilderment spreading across his face, that was when Kat'leen
understood.
"I believe you're now free for the evening," Darg told
her calmly. Hie blades were still in evidence on his fingers, but they were
tinted with red.
Kat'leen let out a shriek, and that was when Darg came to the
realization that Cho might have been many things, but what he was most
definitely not was friendless.
They started coming in from all sides, bruisers big and small,
advancing on Darg. Darg, slightly unpaired both by drink and by the headiness
of a blood strike, wasn't quite sure where to look first.
Cho burbled something incomprehensible and then fell forward like
a great tree, bitting the floor with such impact that the entire establishment
shook. That was all mat was needed for the attackers to converge on Darg at
full bore. Darg readied himself for the attack, and couldn't help but wonder if
perhaps, just perhaps, he might have gotten himself into a bit more trouble
than he could reasonably handle this time.
Suddenly the man was next to nun.
It was no one that Darg knew, no one that he had ever seen. It
wasn't one of Darg's entourage, certainly. He'd made a point of leaving them
behind for the evening, saying that he wanted some time alone. They had obediently
given it to him, and it had seemed for a few moments there that the decision
was going to cost him dearly. Not that he wasn't sure that he could have
ultimately handled all comers.
The question was rapidly becoming moot, however, thanks to the
newcomer. He appeared to be a human, but he wasn't particularly tall, not even
all that impressive looking. But he seemed to exude a confidence, display a
sort of pure magnetism and force of personality that could not be ignored. He
had a neatly trimmed gray beard, and a head of silver hair that was smoothly
combed back. His brow jutted forward a bit, and it was bis eyes that were the
most interesting to Darg. They
seemed cold and pitiless. They were the eyes of a man who could
easily kill you as soon as look at you. He was dressed mostly in black, and was
sporting a long coat that seemed to whip around him like a cape whenever he
moved.
In either hand, he was holding a disruptor. In a rather flamboyant
gesture, he crisscrossed his arms in front of himself, putting the disruptors
at odd angles to one another, and then he started shooting. He did so with such
precision that Darg couldn't quite believe what he was seeing.
The instinct when a mob is bearing down upon one from all sides is
to fire blindly into the midst of the crowd and try to take out as many as
possible. But that wasn't the case with the newcomer. Instead he was targeting
one person after another, blasting out precision strikes mat were taking
opponents in the shoulder or upper arm or thigh. They weren't even being
knocked unconscious. They were simply being incapacitated.
"Not the most elegant of weapons," said the newcomer in
what seemed an almost conversational tone. "Very restricted settings.
There's 'kill' and 'kill some more.' One has to be precise if one doesn't feel
like killing. Hold on, please." He fired again and another attacker went
down.
The floor was now covered with moaning, groaning individuals who
were clutching assorted parts of their bodies. Darg nodded, impressed with the
marksmanship. Still, he felt the need to ask, "Why not just kill them
all?"
"And leave a big mess for the owners to have to clean up? I'm
a regular customer here. I don't need to get the owners mad at me. All right,
let's go."
There were still some individuals on their feet, but they were
slow to approach. It was hard to blame them, considering the substantial number
of people who were scattered about, crying out in agony. No one seemed
particularly interested in shoving their faces into the buzzsaw. In fact, a few
were even looking down at Cho's unmoving body with what appeared to be grim
assessment, as if trying to determine whether or not he was worth their risking
their necks for.
One apparently decided that it was, and he tried to pull a weapon.
But the silver-haired man moved so quickly that Darg didn't even see it. All he
knew was that suddenly there was a man clutching his hand and screaming
profanity, while his
weapon lay on the floor. He made as if to move for the weapon with
his other hand, but the silver-haired terror simply said, "I
wouldn't." The wounded man froze.
"As I was saying: Let's go."
Darg glanced around. Kat'leen was nowhere in sight, apparently
having ducked out when the trouble started. There didn't seem to be anything to
be gained by remaining. "I couldn't agree more," Darg said readily.
They moved out back-to-back, the silver-haired man covering their rear while
Darg watched in front of them. Moments later they were out the door and halfway
down the street, the silver-baked man bolstering his disruptors with a brisk
and slightly flashy twirl.
They put a couple more blocks between them and the place before
they slowed down to a casual stroll. Around them were the sounds of music and
laughter, people sauntering about and having a good time. Over just inside an
alleyway, a couple was engaging in the galaxy's oldest pastime with lusty
abandon. The silver-haired man modestly averted his eyes; Darg watched with
unabashed glee for a few moments before turning his attention back to his
unexpected companion.
He stopped walking and said, "What's your name?"
"Kwint," came the reply.
"Kwint. Do I know you?"
"Not to my knowledge. Well... good evening to you." He
turned and started to walk away.
"Wait!" Darg looked at him with open skepticism.
"Why did you help me just now? Because I could have handled them myself."
"I have no doubt that you could have."
"Then why?"
Kwint shrugged. "I didn't like the odds. One of you against
all of them. Didn't seem right"
"What are you, some sort of hero?"
"No," laughed Kwint. "Just looking to enjoy myself.
Get some relaxation." •
"And you do that by getting into fights."
"Sometimes, if the mood takes me."
"And it doesn't matter to you what the fight was about?"
Kwint appeared genuinely puzzled. "Should it?"
-Shouldn't it?"
"I don't see why," Kwint said reasonably. "A fight
is always between two sides, both of whom think they're right. Usually, they
both are... from their point of view. So it really doesn't matter which side
you take, because it's never really about who's right. It's about who
wins."
"Yes. Yes it is." He paused. "You didn't ask my
name."
"You didn't offer, I didn't ask. A man introduces himself or
doesn't Makes no difference to me."
"The name's Darg. Zolon Darg." He waited to see some
flicker of recognition... and got it. "You've heard of me."
"Yes. I have. Weapons runner, correct?"
"Correct"
Kwint studied nun skeptically. "I'd heard you were dead. That
your operation crashed and burned some years back, and you went with it."
"Obviously not. Whereabout did you hear my name mentioned?"
"I worked with a fellow named Gazillo. Secondary distributor.
Bought a shipment of Tolasian night slicers off you about five years
back."
"Yesss... yes, Gazillo." He stroked his chin
thoughtfully. "I heard Gazillo died ugly."
"He did. Because of me."
"You killed him?"
"No," sighed Kwint. "But he wanted to deal with
some people who I knew were going to doublecross him. I tried to convince him
of it. But he wouldn't listen to me, no matter what I said. He smelled money
and lots of it. When he refused to pay attention to what I was telling him, I
walked out on him. Within two days, his body turned up... or at least, what
was still identifiable as his body. If I'd stuck with him, tried harder...
hell, if I'd just shot and wounded him, prevented him from going to the
rendezvous..." He closed his eyes for a moment as if reliving it and then
visibly shrugged it off. "Can't change the past. Well... good evening to
you, Darg."
Once more he started to walk away, and Darg said, "You seem
to be in quite a hurry to leave."
"You served my purpose," Kwint said matter-of-factly.
"I saw an opportunity to even some odds... the opportunity is done... and
I'm out to enjoy the rest of the evening. Unless,
of course," he said, apparently struck by a sudden thought,
"you intend to get into some more uneven fights. Then I suppose I could
just follow you around, save myself some time. Not have to start from scratch
every time."
"It's entirely possible." Darg had to admit it to
himself: he liked this Kwint fellow. There was a remarkable devil-may-care
attitude about him. In some ways, he very much mirrored Darg's own
philosophies, but in others, he was clearly his own man. For one thing, Darg
wouldn't have given a second thought to Gazillo's fate. If the man was fool
enough to ignore sound advice, then he deserved what he got But Kwint still regretted
Gazillo's loss... while at the same time, showing an admirable lack of interest
in such niceties as the righteous high ground. He was a cheerful combination of
morality and immorality. In short, he was someone that Darg could very likely
use.
Suddenly the loss of Shunabo seemed less unfortunate and more an
instance of good timing.
He clapped a hand on Kwint's shoulder and said, "You know,
Kwint There's more to life than fights. Let us not forget that which Argelius
is most renowned for. Why," and he lowered his voice conspiratorially,
"I know a place around here... where the women are sooo ..."
He didn't have to finish. Kwint promptly nodded eagerly and said,
"I know the place."
And they headed off into the night
VI.
"hello, mac. Ready to have the fate of the entire
Federation in your hands?"
Calhoun shrugged indifferently as he sat down opposite Nechayev in
her office. From the corner of his eye, through the large viewing window in
Nechayev's office, he caught a glimpse of the Excalibur just before she
leaped into warp space and vanished. Calhoun had made a practice of being
self-sufficient When one witnessed as much death and destruction as he had, it
seemed the best way to go about keeping one's head screwed on. And yet, as his
ship hurtled away into warp, he had the feeling of someone cut off from their
family.
Family. Is that what they had become to him? How very, very odd.
It was not something he had remotely anticipated, for some reason.
"A shrug? I ask you a question like that, and a shrug is all
I get?" There was an element of teasing in her voice, but there was an
undercurrent to her tone that was deadly serious.
"My apologies, Admiral. It's just that... this came out of
nowhere. I simply never expected to be back in this situation
before." "I know, Mac," she said earnestly,
"and I wish I didn't have
to put you in it. But I think you'll see that, when it comes down
to options, you're our best shot."
"I suppose I should be flattered."
"Don't be. You may very well be sorry by the time this is
done." She paused and then said, "You look well. Command has agreed
with you."
"Well, command and I have had a few arguments along the way.
But I think we've got mutual wrestling holds on each other by this point.
So," and he leaned forward, attentive, "let's not dance around.
What's happened. What's going on."
"Down to business. Good. You haven't changed. All right...
we've received the findings from the Away team that the late Independence left
behind at Daystrom Institute. It appears that whoever our friends are that
attacked the place made off with the Omega 9."
"No!"
"You've heard of it, then."
"No."
She winced slightly. "Walked into that one, I suppose."
She folded her hands on the desk. "The Omega 9 could easily be considered
the next major breakthrough in computerization: A computer that enables its
user to interface with its data base through pure thought alone."
"Thought? You mean like telepathy?"
"The brain sends out electrical impulses, Captain, just like
any other machine. The only difference between the brain and a computer is that
the brain is generally smaller, but the computer is faster and has more
capacity. The Omega 9 is more than simply a computer. It's a gateway, if you
will, that simplifies the communication of mind-to-computer. For all the sophistication
that we've brought to computers throughout the centuries, one barrier has never
been truly broken down. We still have to talk to the damned things, and the
information that we draw out of it is only as good as the questions we put into
it"
"And with the Omega 9, that's no longer necessary?"
"Correct," she nodded. She held up her palm. "The
Omega 9 bypasses conventional speech. Instead .the user simply puts his or her
palm against an interface padd. Sensors, combined with Nannite technology, form
a temporary bond between user and
data base so that the user is able to extract information
literally with the speed of thought, and can also supply instructions to the
computer in the same way. It's taken a long time to perfect the technology. In
the initial stages, there was a tendency for the computer to flood its user
with so much information that the human brain would simply collapse. Poor
devils, those test subjects. They could barely think coherently at all after
their exposure to the Omega 9. Eventually, we—"
"Made them into admirals?" suggested Calhoun.
Her eyes narrowed in her best "we are not amused" expression.
As if he had not spoken, she said, "Eventually, we were able to help them
recover their normal thinking process. But it was a near thing."
"And now the computer is gone."
"Yes. It's not as if the work is irretrievable. Daystrom has
duplicate material at its main headquarters. But building another one would
take time, and besides, that's only the tip of the iceberg.
"You see, the Daystrom raid was not an isolated incident.
There have been a number of thefts in recent weeks, raids on various labs and
such belonging to assorted members of the Federation. The common thread is that
most of them have to do with some aspect of research on AI..."
"Artificial Intelligence, Calhoun said. Slowly his demeanor
changed. He seemed harder-edged. There was something in his eyes that no one
who had an affinity for breathing would want to see aimed at them. "All
right. Go ahead," he said.
"So... there seems to be an excessive interest in artificial
intelligence research, of which the Omega 9 might well be the most advanced.
There has been one individual who has been spotted at the scene of several of
them, however. An old friend of yours: Zolon Darg.
"Darg. You're joking."
"Do I look like I'm joking?' She punched in a code on her
computer and Darg's picture appeared on it It was clearly a picture taken by a
hidden security camera somewhere. Apparently it was the last shot that
particular camera had taken, because in the picture Darg was turning and
pointing straight into the shot No doubt a few seconds later, the observation
camera had been blown to bits.
"No. No, I don't think you're joking at all." He
couldn't take his eyes off Darg's massive form. Darg had hardly been a weakling
when last they met, but he hadn't been the colossus that he was now.
"There had been rumors that Darg had survived our encounter a few years
ago, but I had no idea he'd gone this active again." He considered the
implications of the news. "So Darg is behind these raids—"
"I didn't say he was behind them; merely that he's involved.
We believe that the person who is actually behind them is this
individual..."
A Thallonian whom Calhoun did not recognize appeared on the
screen. It was an older individual, with yellowing beard and a surprisingly
gentle look on his face.
"He is General Gerrid Thul. He's a Thallonian noble. We don't
have any visual proof that he's connected directly to Darg. If he is, then he's
been either too lucky or too clever to be caught on camera."
"Then why do you think he is connected?"
"Because the report came in from an intelligence officer who
subsequently wound up dead."
"Dead." He frowned. "Who?"
"McNicol."
This prompted a gasp from Calhoun. "McNicol. He was good. He
was damned good. He's dead? Are you sure?"
"There was barely enough left of him for a genetic trace, but
yes, he's dead."
The news caused Calhoun to look even more intently at the image of
General Thul which sat on the screen. He could almost imagine a look of
contempt in Thul's expression. Whatever it was that Thul was playing at, a
personal face had suddenly been attached to it: The face of Jack McNicol, a
dedicated and clever agent who had paid the ultimate price in his pursuit of
keeping the Federation safe.
Nechayev, for her part, didn't seem to be giving McNicol any
further thought It was as if she needed to move on to the next crisis
immediately. "Thul has had a rather rocky career. He was imprisoned for a
while on charges of treason and attempted murder, but served his time and was
released. At the tail end of his tenure in prison, he managed to convince the
powers that be that he was a changed man. It's possible he is..."
"People don't change."
"You did," she pointed out.
He fixed a gaze on her. "No, I didn't. At heart, I am as I always
was. I've simply gotten better at covering it, that's all. Watch..."
And just like that, he seemed to relax his guard. Nechayev looked
into his eyes, and there was a world of hurt and anger and cold, calculating
fury, all warring for dominance behind those eerie purple eyes.
Then, just as easily, he "veiled" his eyes once more.
They went to half-lidded, and he seemed so relaxed that he might have been
mistaken for a sleeping man... or possibly a corpse.
"You see?" he said softly. "It's all still there.
M'k'n'zy of Calhoun, the warrior, the slayer of Danteri, the liberator of the
planet Xenex. The barbarian who had no place in Starfleet. I keep him locked
away... for when I might need him. So... my point remains. People don't
change."
"I could still endeavor to argue that, but I don't see the
need right now," she said diplomatically. "You see, in this instance,
I happen to agree with you. I don't think he's changed either. From what we
were able to gamer from McNicol before he was lost to us, Thul has some sort of
personal grudge against the Federation. McNicol was a bit unclear on it, and
didn't have the opportunity to clarify it before he died. But apparently
someone dear to Thul died under unfortunate circumstances which he blames the
Federation for."
"And is he right to do so?" asked Calhoun. "Was the
Federation responsible for the death of this individual?"
"Considering that the whole of the Federation, every world
with sentient races, certainly wouldn't deserve to suffer if that were the
case, do you really think it matters?"
"It might. To him."
"And does it to you?"
Once again mat veiled look passed over his eyes. He didn't answer,
but instead simply said, "What do you want me to do, Admiral?"
She bobbed her head slightly, as if acknowledging Calhoun's
having skipped over a potentially problematic part of the conversation.
"Despite his being an outspoken critic of the
Federation in the past, Thul has now positioned himself as a
supporter of the UFP since the thawing of relations between the Thallonian
Empire and the UFP. He's got a good deal of personal charm; he's managed to
make some rather high-placed friends. And that means I can't use my normal
channels of support in investigating this. You're uniquely qualified for this
situation, Mac. You've had more experience with Thalloni-ans than anyone else
in the Fleet" She paused and glanced at her computer screen. "There's
going to be a reception in San Francisco to launch a week's worth of
festivities in connection with the bicentennial..."
"The one Riker was supposed to attend."
"Precisely. Thul is going to be there; he's on the guest
list. I've arranged with Admiral Wattanbe—who shares my concerns—that you will
be there as well. I want you to get close to Thul, find out what he's up to...
and once you do... stop him."
"You're forgetting something, Admiral: There's the matter of
Zolon Darg. Even if I do manage to work myself close in with Thul, sooner or
later I'll be face-to-face with Darg. He'll recognize me. Perhaps I should go
in some sort of disguise ..."
"Thul's too cautious. If his plans, whatever they are, are
coming to fruition, he might not be so quick to welcome a complete stranger
into his ranks. But you have a reputation as a maverick, Mac. You've had a
publicized 'falling out' with Starfleet before. Dissatisfaction and a
willingness to break the rules will be believable coming from you. The
fortunate thing is, if you do run into Darg, he has no reason to assume that
you were working with SI or had any Starfleet or UFP agenda."
"Meaning I can always pretend I was acting in a freelance
capacity for a rival, so that he won't automatically assume that my presence
now is part of a covert operation."
"Precisely."
"That's all well and good as far as it goes. But even as a
'freelancer,' I did happen to blow his operation to hell and gone. He might be
the sort who carries a grudge."
"Perhaps. But I have every confidence that you'll be able to
handle him."
"I'm flattered."
"Report to research and development, two decks down, room 18.
The Professor will provide you with some specialized tools and weaponry that
might be of use to you."
"It's starting to seem just like old times, Admiral. Of
course, we're both a little older..."
"But probably no wiser, else I wouldn't be sending you into
this." She sighed. "Mac ... be careful. I'd hate to lose you."
"I'd hate to be lost," he replied, and as he started to
walk out, he stopped at her door, turned and said, "By the way... I'll
want my vehicle. And this time I'll want to keep it, rather than returning it
to SI. Signed over to me, so no matter what happens in the future, it will go
with me rather than being part of Starfleet equipment."
"That shuttle isn't your property, Captain."
"That's somewhat the point, Admiral. I want it. Think of it
as an incentive bonus."
"Think of yourself," replied Nechayev, "as a
Starfleet officer who does what he's told."
"I've tried that It doesn't work."
They locked gazes ... and then Nechayev fought to hide a smile as
she said, "Fine. I'll put through the paperwork."
"Thank you, Admiral."
"In all probability," Nechayev added, "the entire
question will be moot, since you'll probably wind up dead as a result of this
mission."
"So you win either way."
"Well," and she shrugged, "being an Admiral does
have its perks."
The room was empty. Calhoun checked the markings just outside to make
certain that he'd come to die right place. There were some counters, table
tops, a few cabinets. But nothing was laid out, and there didn't appear to be
anyone around. "Hello?" Calhoun called out. And when no reply seemed
forthcoming, he called once more, "Hello?"
"You don't have to shout I'm not deaf."
Calhoun turned and looked in utter confusion at the man standing
behind him. He could have sworn that there had been no one else there, but this
fellow had simply seemed
to show up out of nowhere. He was wearing a Starfleet uniform. He
had a somewhat long face, and dark, curly hair, but the thing that Calhoun
noticed the most about him was the singular air of arrogance that hung thick
around him.
"I didn't see you here," Calhoun said. "Are you the
Professor?"
The man looked at Calhoun oddly. "Why do you want to
know?" he asked.
"I'm here to get weapons. That sort of thing."
"The survival of Galactic civilization is hinging upon you,
you know," the presumed Professor told him. He spoke in a rather strange
manner, as if he were lecturing from a very great distance.
"So I've heard."
"Perhaps you have, but I don't think you yet fully appreciate
the magnitude." He shook his head, seemingly amused with himself. "I
must admit to being somewhat intrigued to see where it all winds up, providing
humanity—and the rest of the Federation—is allowed to continue through to its
natural conclusion rather than an aborted one. That would be something to
see."
'1 couldn't agree more," Calhoun said, deciding it'd be best
to humor him. "So... what have you got?"
"Well, there's some interesting things here. There's also
some things that can be improved upon." He started opening cabinets and
pulling out an assortment of materials, looking each thing over and inspecting
it closely. "The trick is going to be enabling you to avoid whatever
weapons detection devices they might have. But such devices are only as good as
their programming. That is to say, if they don't know what to look for, they
won't find it. Here."
He held up what appeared to be a tooth, but when he tilted it,
Calhoun could see that it was hollowed out inside. "Here. Slip this over
one of your molars." Calhoun did as he was told, and then the Professor
said, "Now press the back of it with your tongue."
He did so, and to his surprise, three identical replicas of
himself appeared around him. They did not simply mirror him, however. Instead
each one moved and reacted in its own, individual manner.
"Portable holo-generator. It generates hard-light holograms,
just as you have in holodecks. So not only can they serve as distractions, but
you also triple your manpower in one shot. Push it again with the back of your
tongue to shut it off."
Calhoun did so, and then the Professor handed him a scar. Calhoun
took it and stared down at it. It was an exact replica of the scar on his face.
"It's an explosive," said the Professor. "Hide the
weapon in plain sight."
"Am I risking blowing my head off?"
"Not at all. Nothing can set it off as long as the circuit
isn't completed. You simply take the two ends and twist them around each other.
That engages it, and the chemicals inside it begin to interact and build toward
detonation. Once the chemical reaction has begun, there's no stopping it.
You'll have about fifteen minutes to clear the area before it blows."
Calhoun held the scar gingerly. "Oookay," he said
slowly. He lined it up with the scar on his face and pressed it against it. He
heard a small hiss of air and a seal was promptly engaged, adhering the fake
scar to his face. The metal of the cabinet was highly polished, and he was able
to see in his reflection that the blend was perfect If he himself had not
known, he wouldn't have been able to tell.
"This is almost standard issue by this point," said the
professor. He extended a fairly nondescript ring which contained a round
emblem at one end. "Push it firmly against someone's skin, and it injects
a subcutaneous transponder which sends out a homing signal. You'll be able to
track anyone."
"Convenient. No woman will dare brush me off again."
The professor didn't seem amused. "Now ... this next thing is
a pip."
"What is it?"
"It's a pip." And sure enough, he held up what appeared
to be a standard-issue pip that indicated rank. "If you're not in uniform,
you can still easily attach it to a collar or other article of clothing."
"What's significant about it?"
"Put it on." When Calhoun had done so, the Professor
said, "Now say, 'Activate transporter, right."
"Activate transporter, right," Calhoun said, wondering
why
he was doing so. Then, to his astonishment, he suddenly heard a
familiar hum around him... and an instant later, he was standing on the other
side of the room.
"Short range personal transport device. Moves you ten feet in
whichever direction you indicate you want it to go. Just be careful, though.
You wouldn't want to move into the middle of a solid object"
"Definitely not." He studied the pip. "I didn't
think Federation technology had anything like this."
"Officially, It doesn't. Now ... here. You can probably use
an offensive weapon as well. He produced from a cupboard a pair of boots that
were exactly Calhoun's size. He turned them over and, from the right one,
removed the heel. He proffered it to Calhoun for closer examination, and
Calhoun immediately saw the small, tell-tale barrel of some sort of phaser
weapon inserted neatly into the inner edge of the heel. "Squeeze the
middle with thumb and forefinger top and bottom, that'll produce a stun blast.
Squeeze in at the sides, that'll get you level two power. It will only respond
to your DNA imprint, so you actually have to be holding it."
"You mean I don't have to worry about stepping down too hard
and shooting myself in the foot."
"Something like that," said the Professor. "The
left heel contains a communications device. I'll show you." He tapped the
middle of the heel and a small, palm-size device slid out. He removed it and
held it up. "Under normal circumstances it would only get you standard
range, but I've improved it."
"Improved it... how?"
"Total security bypass."
'Total security bypass?"
"That's correct, yes. Plus its broadcast will piggyback on
any other signals it detects giving it almost unlimited range."
"Oh really." He tapped the comm button and said,
"Calhoun to Admiral Jellico, Starfleet headquarters, San Francisco. Come
in please. Admiral... my men are under attack by a squad of berserk Amazon
women and I can't get them to leave. Please advise."
He smiled wanly at the professor, and then the smile froze as back
over the communicator came the unmistakable, and
clearly irritated, voice of Admiral Jellico. "This is
Jellico. Amazon women? Who the hell is this? Calhoun, is that—?"
Stunned, Calhoun said hi a high-pitched voice, "Sorry," and
shut down the line. Then he gaped at the professor.
There was no smile on the professor's face, not a hint of
amusement or triumph. He simply stared at Calhoun impassively.
"That's very impressive," Calhoun said slowly.
The professor took a step toward him, and hi a low voice tinged
with warning, said, "Yes it is, isn't it? Apparently you have been
selected to be the champion of the galaxy. I've decided to give you a slight
edge. The rest is up to you."
Calhoun stared into those implacable eyes for a long moment.
"Who are you?" he demanded.
"Me? I'm simply the fellow in research and development who
hands out the weapons." With that, he turned and walked out the door.
Calhoun quickly followed him out... but saw no sign of him.
VII.
"I will attend to it, Captain
Riker," Si Cwan said with confidence. The Thallonian noble made a few
more notes as he looked across the desk of the captain's ready room at Riker.
"I have certain . . . avenues ... I can check. If there is a hidden
Romulan base, I might very well be able to get some indication of where it
is."
Seated next to him was Robin Lefler, who was also taking notes. In
addition to her position at Ops, Robin had taken on the additional duty of
personal aide to Si Cwan. Riker felt himself to be something of an aficionado
of the ways in which the human heart moved, and as he watched Lefler try —
perhaps a bit too hard — to be all business with Cwan, he had the funny feeling
that there might be more motivating her than simply trying to be a good
officer or find ways to fill the day. Then again, it wasn't really any of his
business or his place to comment. So, rather wisely, he kept his opinions on
the matter to himself.
"Do you want me to send out the messages?" Lefler asked
Si Cwan shook his head. "No ... no, I think it'd be best if
these came directly from me. Thank you for the offer, though."
"And thank you, Lord Cwan, for your assistance hi this mater,"
Riker said.
" 'Lord' Cwan." He smiled slightly at the title.
"Did I miss a joke?"
"It's simply that I cannot recall the last time I was
addressed with the title. Here on the Excalibur, they tend to address me
simply by my name."
"And you tolerate that?" Riker asked in amusement.
He shrugged slightly. "I tolerate the familiarity. They, in
turn, tolerate my presence. A philosophy of mutual tolerance, I suppose you'd
say."
"I am rather pleased to hear it, Lord Cwan... particularly
considering the rather incendiary nature of our last meeting."
"Incendiary" had hardly been the word for it, as Riker
recalled. The first, and last time, that he had seen Si Cwan was right around
me time that the Thallonian empire was beginning to crack apart. Si Cwan,
exiled but still imperious, had sought out the Federation for aid, and Riker
had been present at the meeting where that aid had been decided upon.
"I have not forgotten, Captain," Si Cwan said with a measure
of respect in his voice, "your contribution to that meeting. You not only
took my side in the discussion... but it was you who recommended the assignment
of this vessel to Thallonian space. If not for you none of mis would have been
possible."
"Someone else might well have suggested it," Riker said,
"but nonetheless, I appreciate the thanks. Although as I recall, your
being posted to the ship was not part of the plan."
"There was a change of plan," Si Cwan said with a
combination of dignity and deadpan.
"Yes, and he changed it," Lefler put in with a slightly
teasing tone.
"I was invited by Captain Calhoun to serve as a sort of guide
and lead diplomat in Thallonian space."
"After he was caught as a stowaway."
Si Cwan turned in his chair and looked at Lefler with something
approaching disapproval. "In my opinion," he said slowly, "you
are deriving far too much amusement from the situation." He turned back to
Riker and said, "I admit, my arrival on this vessel was not the most...
dignified. But I am here now, and there are no regrets." He fired Lefler a
look. "Although I am beginning to have one or two in regards to certain
personnel."
"This is all very interesting, and I would certainly like to
hear all about it at some future date," Riker said readily. "However,
at this point, I do have other matters to attend to..."
"And we shall be more than happy to allow you to attend to
them, sir." Si Cwan rose, and seemed to keep rising. Riker was impressed,
not for the first time, by the sheer presence of the man. He seemed someone who
was genuinely entitled to be referred to by the term "noble." He
bowed slightly, a gesture which the now-standing Riker returned, and then he
turned and left. Lefler, however, remained where she was. "You told me
earlier I should stay after the meeting?"
"Yes. There's a matter I wish to discuss with you. A matter
regarding one of the bridge crew..."
"Shouldn't you be discussing it with Commander Shelby,
sir?"
She had a perfectly valid point. In fact, Shelby was probably the
person he should really be dealing with. The problem was, he wasn't entirely
certain that Shelby would be anything other than defensive, no matter how
diplomatically he tried to handle the matter.
He had no desire to say mat, though. So instead he said coolly,
"Actually, I thought it best to speak with you first since you work with
him fairly closely."
"Ahhh." She sounded as if she knew precisely what was
going to be said. "You're talking about McHenry."
"Yes. That's right. When you and Si Cwan came in here, I
caught a glimpse of McHenry out the door and it appeared he was ...
well..."
"Sleeping. At his post"
He nodded. "Lieutenant, I admit I feel a bit like I'm walking
on eggshells here." That was no exaggeration, Riker still remembered, all
too clearly, the time that Admiral Jellico had taken command of the Enterprise.
Despite the fact that the assignment was purely temporary, Jellico had
wasted no time not only imposing his command style upon others, but going head
to head with the senior staff in a manner that was unnecessarily harsh and
certainly aggravating. At that time, Riker had made a solemn promise to himself
that if he ever found himself in a similar position, for whatever reason, he
would do everything he could not to disrupt the pre-
established routines of the vessel. It was one thing when one was
coming aboard as permanent commander, but Riker was not about to lose sight of
the fact that he was a visitor. Still... when he saw something that so set his
teeth on edge as a crewman displaying total lack of professionalism, he
couldn't keep silent. Delicately, he continued, "I'm aware mat Captain
Calhoun's command style is somewhat different than mine... or Captain Picard's
... or, in fact, anyone that I can think of offhand. Very much a 'live and let
live' philosophy, a tendency to celebrate the little differences in people.
And by all means, there is much to be said for that. But there is also such a
thing," and his voice hardened, "as maintaining at the very least a
bare minimum of acceptable preparedness. And having the helmsman asleep in his
chair simply doesn't fit that criteria."
"He's not asleep," she said with the air of someone who
was not explaining this for the first time. "It only seems that way.
Actually he's just deep in thought but he's completely attuned to everything
that's going on. One hundred percent alert"
"I see."
"Also, I admit.... he's probably a bit worn out. I still
don't think he's sleeping on the job. But his exhaustion is understandable.
He's been through something of an emotional wringer."
"How so? Unless you feel it's none of my business."
"Well, sir... probably it's not your business, no." With
that mandatory disclaimer out of the way, Lefler quickly and eagerly sat down,
elbows propped on her knees.
Riker noted with quiet amusement that she was displaying one of
the oldest mindsets of young humans, stretching back centuries: The slightly
guilty joy of dishing gossip. No matter how advanced humanity became, no matter
how many horizons were explored, no matter how many adventures were pursued,
no matter how great and noble the race aspired to be... there was simply something
irresistible about chattering about people behind their backs. Riker, the
older, wiser, cooler head, was relieved that he himself was above such things
... and then leaned forward so as not to miss anything.
"Okay," continued Lefler, "the fact is that for a
while
McHenry and Burgoyne 172 were quite the couple, if you catch my
drift"
"Not really."
"Well, Burgoyne is a Hermat"
"Hmm. A Hermat." He understood why she said it that way.
Not since the Deltans had there been a race whose sexual mores and practices
had engendered more interest than the Hennats. He stroked his chin
thoughtfully. "There aren't all that many in Starfleet It's somewhat
amazing that two were assigned to this vessel."
"Two?" The tops of her eyebrows knitted together in
quiet surprise and confusion. "What two?"
"Well, the Hermat who is involved with McHenry, and the one
who is involved with your CMO. At least, I was told the father... mother...
whatever... mat that individual is the father of Doctor Selar's child."
"Right. That's Burgoyne. Same person."
Riker stared at her. "The... three of them are
involved..."
"No, no. You see... well, yes, kind of," and she started
ticking off major elements on her fingers. "Burgoyne was interested in
Selar. But Selar wasn't interested in Burgoyne. At least she was trying to
pretend that she wasn't interested, but she really was, but part of it was as
a result of this whole Vulcan biological thing. They don't like to talk about.
There's all kinds of different stories about it It's a personal, private
cultural thing and far be it from me to pry.
"Anyway, Selar apparently changed her mind, but Burgoyne was
involved with McHenry by that point. So Selar approached the captain about
'accommodating' her. Apparently he said okay..."
"He said what?"
"He said okay. Apparently it was part of his Xenexian duty to
be accommodating about something like that." At Riker's shocked
expression, she quickly added "It's a life or death situation."
"Apparently so." For some reason, Riker was suddenly relieved
that Calhoun hadn't been in command of the Enterprise when Lwaxana Troi
had shown up with a quadrupled sex drive. He was sure that Lwaxana would have
convinced Calhoun that hers was a Me and death situation as well. "You
seem to be rather up on everything that's going on around the
ship, Lieutenant."
"A Starship is like a small town, Captain. Everybody hears
everything. Fortunately enough," she said with a touch of irony,
"there's some of us who work hard to make sure that accurate information
is being disseminated."
"Bless you."
"Thanks," she said, with a grin. "Anyway, some
other stuff happened, and Doctor Selar wound up with Burgoyne after all. Now
she's pregnant."
"I see." He was intrigued in spite of himself. "And
how does McHenry feel about all this?"
"Well, he was okay with it, but really stunned when he found
out that Burgoyne was pregnant too."
"What?" He felt his head starting to spin.
"Yeah. At about the same time that Selar announced she was
pregnant with Burgoyne's child, Burgy announced that s/he was pregnant with
McHenry's child. Poor Mark. Passed right out Fainted dead away. Since then,
he's just thrown himself into his work. I don't think he knows quite how to
approach Burgoyne about it. He feels embarrassed about fainting, I know that,
and I sure don't think he was prepared for the notion of being a father."
"Well, he's going to have to deal with it sooner or
later."
"I think
he's angling for later, sir."
"Computer... service record of Burgoyne 172. I think,"
Riker said slowly, "that I very much want to meet Burgoy—." His voice
trailed off as he stared at the screen, and his eyes widened. "Burgoyne is
the chief engineer?"
"Yes, sir."
"Is this individual stable enough?"
"Oh yes," Lefler said cheerfully. "S/he's as stable
as the rest of us."
Riker wasn't sure if that was a good thing or not
They walked out of the Captain's ready room. Shelby was seated hi
the command chair, and made as if to stand up and give way to Riker, but he
waved her off. "That won't be necessary, Commander. Presuming everything
is calm here, Lieutenant Lefler is going to help familiarize me with the
ship."
"As you wish... Captain."
There was just that moment of hesitation, and Riker wondered if
something vaguely insubordinate was meant by it But there was nothing about
Shelby's attitude or deportment that seemed to indicate it, and Riker chalked
it off to his imagination.
His gaze shifted to Mark McHenry. McHenry was exactly as Riker had
seen nun before. He was tilted back in his chair, his eyes closed. He wasn't
snoring. He didn't even quite seem alive. No one else on the bridge, however,
was taking notice of it.
Shelby noticed what had caught his attention, and she smiled
slightly. "I went through the same thing," she said. 'Trust me...
it's fine. He's completely attuned to the ship. Check if you want."
Riker paused, wondering how one could possibly "check"
such a thing. Then a thought occurred to him. He walked over to the tactical
section of the bridge, quietly gesturing for the man on duty there to step
aside. He did so and Riker glanced over the array. He tapped a control... and
the ship's primary defense shields snapped on. There was no signal of an alert,
although there was a slight rerouting of energy that was part of the natural
defense systems process.
The effect on McHenry was instantaneous. He sat bolt upright,
glancing at his board and looking at the main screen at the same time.
"Are we under attack?" he asked.
Riker couldn't believe it He looked to Shelby, who shrugged in a
"told you so" manner.
"He'll do," Riker said after a moment and then walked
out of the bridge with Lefler right behind him, leaving a puzzled McHenry
checking his readouts.
They walked briskly down the corridor, Lefler saying, "Ensign
Beth down in engineering said that Burgy is down in the holodeck, working out.
She checked with Burgy, though, who said we should feel perfectly free to come
by."
" 'Burgy' is what you call him?"
That's what everybody calls Mr. Hennats have (heir own
pronouns. 'Hir (H,I,R)' and 's/he.' ".
He shook his head. "Hard to be—"
Then he stopped as a woman headed down the hall toward
him. She was a dark-haired, older woman, with a rather aristocratic
air about her. And she looked stunningly familiar.
"Hello, honey," she nodded to Robin.
Lefler kissed the woman lightly on the cheek. "Mom... this is
Captain William Riker. He's hi temporary command of the ship while Captain
Calhoun is on another assignment Captain, this is my mother, Morgan
Lefler."
"An honor." She shook his hand firmly and then tilted
her head hi polite confusion. "Is something wrong, Captain?"
It's just that..." He couldn't take his eyes off her.
"You just... you remind me of the mother of someone else I know."
"It's entirely possible, I suppose. I have gotten around
quite a bit"
"Mom's very long lived," Robin said cheerfully.
"Aren't they all," Riker said. He couldn't take his eyes
off her. "I'm... sorry, Mrs. Lefler. It's just... the resemblance is
uncanny."
"Yes, I'm sure it is. Well, you go on about your business;
I'm sure you have far more important things to do than standing around, ogling
me. I'll see you for dinner, Robin," and with that she headed off down the
hallway.
"Incredible," Riker said as he watched her go.
"They could be twins. It's like looking at the same woman. Voice,
attitude, everything."
"Captain—?"
He shook it off. "I'm sorry. I shouldn't allow myself to get
distracted by things that probably don't mean anything."
They chatted about assorted other matters as they walked to the
holodeck. When they arrived, Riker leaned close to the door, frowning. He could
have sworn he heard something that sounded like... growling. "What is
Burgoyne doing hi there?" he asked.
"Let's find out." She tapped the control padd on the
doors and they obediently slid open.
The sight that greeted them upon entering was a rather astounding
one.
Burgoyne was dressed in a skintight workout suit and s/he was
surrounded by a forest environment. There was a vista of trees as far as the
eye could see. The ground was uneven around them, with dirt and gravel that
made traction difficult
At that moment Burgoyne was perched in a tree, crouched on a
branch, and s/he had hir mouth drawn back in a feline snarl like a cornered cat
Below her was roaring a massive creature with thick white fur,
leaping up at hir and swinging its clawed hands, trying to get a piece of hir
and drag hir down from the branch.
"Lieutenant Commander Burgoyne," Lefler said, "this
is—"
Burgoyne leaped from the branch, seeming not to have heard Lefler
or even noticed her presence or that of Commander Riker. Hir speed carried hir
between the outstretched arms of what looked to Riker like a white furred
monster, and drove the creature flat onto its back. They rolled across the
floor together, hissing and snarling at each other. Then the monster braced itself
and twisted, hurting the lighter but more agile Burgoyne back. S/he landed on
hir feet and the way that s/he had her hands poised, s/he looked for all the
world as if s/he had claws.
Riker had had enough. "Lieutenant Commander, I hate to break
hi on your exercise..."
And suddenly Burgoyne was flattened from behind.
What looked to Riker's surprised eyes like a white furred creature
was atop hir, roaring its fury. Burgoyne twisted around within its grasp and
grabbed it by either wrist. S/he managed to get the creature's hands from
around hir throat but apparently it was everything s/he could do to stop it
from tearing hir to pieces.
"Computer, freeze program!" shouted Riker. Burgoyne, intent on hir
opponent didn't seem to hear him.
The creature was straddling Burgoyne, and appeared to be doing its
level best to kill the struggling Hermat.
Believing there to be a holodeck malfunction, Riker didn't
hesitate. He charged toward the creature and leaped onto its back. He braced
himself, putting all his strength into trying to haul the monster off Burgoyne.
It didn't seem to be paying any attention to him at all, focusing all its
efforts on annihilating its chosen prey. For mat matter, Riker wasn't entirely
sure what he was going to do in the event that the monster actually noticed
him, because the odds were that it could kill Riker without any great effort
But Riker was. determined that he wasn't going down without a struggle.
He saw Lefler standing there... and she was shaking her
head, looking more bemused than anything. He couldn't understand
it. Here she was faced with a clear emergency, and she didn't seem to have a
clue how to react. "Security! Get security down here!" Riker
shouted.
"Commander," Lefler began, "this is—"
Burgoyne snarled, trying to fight back, but s/he seemed to be
losing the struggle.
"I gave you a direct order, dammit! Now follow it!"
With a troubled frown, she tapped her comm badge. "Security,
this is Lefler, in holodeck 4A. Get someone down here, fast" But there was
absolutely no sense of urgency in her voice.
Is everyone around here insane? Riker wondered as he redoubled his efforts to haul the
creature off Burgoyne. And if he did manage to accomplish that feat, his only
hope then was that Burgoyne would recover quickly enough to aid him in subduing
the creature. Or at the very least, they could hold out long enough for
security to get there. And why was Lefler just standing around? Granted, she
was rather slight in comparison to Riker and Burgoyne, but dammit, she could
certainly find something to do besides just watching it happen.
Hie doors slid open and a walking land mass entered. The security
guard took up the entirety of the door frame. When he moved, it was slow and
ponderous. He had no neck, his head apparently attached directly to his
shoulders, and his skin in the dim lighting of the holodeck looked like solid
granite.
"Hi, Zak," said Robin.
"Hello. You called?" he rumbled.
Riker couldn't believe it. They genuinely were all insane.
A security officer had just walked into the middle of what was clearly a
life-and-death holodeck malfunction, and he didn't seem quite clear on what had
to be done.
"Stop this thing before it kills someone!" shouted Riker.
The guard called Zak stood there for a moment, taking in die
situation. He didn't move. Instead he spoke four words:
"Janos." Zak shouted, "Janos! Knock it off."
Zak's loud voice almost shook the moon.
The white furred creature stopped in its tracks. Then, with a
sigh, it stood fully upright rather than in the hunched position
it had been using until that point. Riker was still hanging on its
back, dumbfounded.
"Sir? If you don't mind?" asked the creature, and the
question was clearly addressed to Riker. "Apparently, this exercise
period is over." Riker, feeling as if sanity was slipping away from him,
released his grip and dropped to the floor. Burgoyne, for hir part, was
picking hirself off the floor and dusting hirself off.
Zak looked back to Lefler. "Anything else?"
"No, that should about do it."
He inclined his chest slightly, which was his equivalent of
nodding, and then he turned and walked back out the door.
VIII.
gerrid thul was eminently pleased as he looked around the room of
dead men.
That might not have been the most accurate of terms, he reasoned.
Not all of them were men, for starters. A goodly number of males of the
species were there, yes, but there was a vast array of females as well. All
equally deserving, equally titled, equally dead. And to be absolutely, one
hundred percent correct, he would have to admit that none of them were
actually, in point of fact, dead.
Yet.
Never had the word "yet" been so delicious, held so much
promise. Yet Definitely, indisputably, yet.
As he walked through the grand reception hall that hosted the
first of what was intended to be a number of gatherings celebrating the
bicentennial, he couldn't help but be satisfied, and even amused, at the way
that others within the Federation were reacting to him. There were nods,
smiles, a polite wink or two. And many, ever so many requests for "just a
few moments" of his time that invariably expanded into many minutes.
He had been careful, so very careful in making his contacts. And
what had been so elegant about the entire matter was that those poor, benighted
fools in the Federation had a tendency to
side with the underdog. And that was something mat Thul had very
much seemed. A man who was once great, who had lost everything, and who was now
trying to build himself back up to a position of strength and influence. He had
come to people seemingly hat in hand, unprepossessing, undemanding. And he
played, like a virtuoso, upon one of the fundamental truths of all sentient
beings: Everyone liked to feel superior to someone else. It made them
comfortable. It made them generous. And best of all, it made them sloppy and
offered a situation that General Thul could capitalize upon.
Of course, Vara Syndra had helped.
"Where is Vara this fine evening?" assorted ambassadors
and high muck-a-mucks in the Federation asked. But Thul had held her back, and
not without reason. Best to build up anticipation, to get them to want to see
her, ask about her, look around and try to catch a glimpse of her. Vara knew
her place, though, and also knew that timing was everything. She would remain
secreted away until the appropriate time had presented itself, and then he
would send for her.
He had a feeling that the time was fast approaching.
"Thul! General Thul!" came a hearty voice that Thul
recognized instantly. He turned to see Admiral Edward Jellico approaching.
He did not like Jellico. That, in and of itself, was nothing surprising;
he didn't like any of them, really. But Jellico was a particularly pompous and
officious representative of humanity. Thul hoped against hope that he might
somehow actually be able to see Jellico when the death throes overtook him, but
that didn't seem tremendously likely. He would have to settle for imagining it.
Then again, Thul had a famously vivid imagination, so that probably wouldn't
present too much of a difficulty.
"Edward!" returned Thul cheerfully, perfectly matching
the pitch and enthusiasm of Jellico's own voice. He had to speak loudly to make
himself heard over the noise and chatter of the packed ballroom. Furthermore,
all around him the scents of various foods wafted toward him. Thul had a rather
acute sense of smell, and the array was nearly overwhelming to him. Some seemed
rather enticing while others nearly induced his gag reflex, so it was quite an
effort to keep it all straight within him. It is good to see you again, my
friend."
"And you as well, General." He gestured to those who
were accompanying them. One was another human, a tall and powerfully built
human female. The other was a rather elegant-looking Vulcan with graying hair,
and that annoying serenity that Vulcans seemed to carry with them at all times.
"This is Admiral O'Shea," he said, pointing to the female, "and
this is Ambassador Stonn. Admiral, Ambassador, General Thul of the Thallonian
Empire."
"The late Thallonian Empire, I fear," said Thul. He
bowed in O'Shea's direction, and then gave a flawless Vulcan salute to Stonn.
"Peace and long life," he said.
"Live long and prosper," replied Stonn.
One of us will, thought Thul.
"I'm familiar with your good works, Thul," said O'Shea.
"As I recall, you were working just last month to seek more humanitarian
aid for refugees from Thallonian space."
"Actually," Thul told her, "I have been looking
into expanding my efforts. You see, in exploring what needs to be done to help
our own refugees, I have stumbled upon other races that could use aid as well.
Aid... which is sometimes hampered by the Federation."
"Hampered? How so?" asked Stonn.
"It is ... ironic that I would bring this up now," Thul
said, looking quite apologetic. "We are, after all, here to celebrate the
signing of the Resolution of Non-interference, one of the keystone documents of
the entire Federation."
"Yes. So?"
"So, Admiral O'Shea... it may be time to revisit the entire
concept of the prime directive. All too often ... and I truly do not wish to
offend with my sentiments..."
"Please, General, say what you feel," Jellico urged him.
"Very well. It seems that, all too often, the intent of the
prime directive is corrupted. The letter is followed when the spirit is
violated." He noticed that several other people had overheard him and were
now attending his words as well. Superb. The larger audience he had, the
better he liked it. "The fact is that the prime directive was created
specifically so that more advanced races would not harm less developed
races. But too many times, we encounter situations where it is specifically
cited as a reason not to help those races. Starfleet
stands by, watches them fumble about, and simply takes down notes
while observing from hidden posts. Think, my friends. Think, for example, of a
small child," and his voice started to ache with imagined hurt, "a
small boy, dying of a disease ... the cure for which is held by those who look
down from on high. But do they help? Do they produce a medication that will
save him? No... no, my friends, they do not. They bloodlessly watch, and take
down their notes, and perhaps they'll log the time of death. And who knows if
that child might not have grown up to be the greatest man, inventor, thinker,
philosopher, leader of that race. The man who could bring that race into a
golden age, cut off... in his youth. What would it have hurt... to help that
child? And what tremendous benefit might have been gained. Who among you could
endorse such a scenario ... and believe it to somehow serve a greater
good?"
There was dead silence from those within earshot. Finally, Stonn
said, "A very passionate observation, Thul. At its core, there may even be
some valid points. However... interference invites abuse. It was an earthman
who stated that power tends to corrupt... and absolute power corrupts
absolutely. For all of the positive scenarios that you can spin, I am certain that
I would easily be able to create plausible hypotheticals of abuse of that
selfsame power."
"What Ambassador Stonn is saying," said Admiral O'Shea,
"is that if the non-interference directive is, as you postulate, an
error... isn't it better to err on the side of caution?"
'Two hundred years ago, perhaps. I will certainly grant you that.
But of what use is experience if one does not learn from it," replied
Thul. "There are people who need help and don't even know that they do.
Besides, is not human history rife with such 'interference'? Were there not
more advanced members of the human race who went to less-developed,
undernourished or undereducated areas and brought them technology ... advancement
... even entire belief systems?"
"And in many instances did as much harm as good,"
Jellico said. "There was also conquest, to say nothing of entire races of
people who were annihilated by germs and strains of diseases that their own
immune systems were completely unequipped to handle."
"Ultimately, however," and Thul smiled, "things
seem to have worked out for you."
"Yes, because we found our own way."
"Or perhaps in spite of finding your own way. Think, though.
If older, wiser, more advanced races such as yours, and all those represented
in this room were to use their experience, their knowledge of the mistakes that
they themselves made to avoid mistakes in the future..." He shook his
head. "Don't you see. But when there is want and need by other races who
have never even heard of the Federation, and who could benefit so tremendously
by the help ..."
"You're saying that perhaps it's time to abolish or reframe
the prime directive?' said Jellico.
"At this time? On the anniversary the signing of the document
that was its genesis? Yes, that is exactly what I am saying."
There were thoughtful nods from all around, like a sea of bobbing
heads. Finally it was Jellico who said, "You may... have some valid points
there. General. Obviously I can't speak on behalf of Starfleet, and certainly
not the Federation... but perhaps some serious study should be done as to
whether it's time to rethink our intentions and perhaps expand upon—"
"You hypocrite."
The voice had come completely unexpectedly, and the words were
slightly slurred. As one, everyone within earshot turned and saw the rather
remarkable sight of a Starfleet captain, holding a drink and glaring at
Admiral Jellico with as open a glare of contempt as Thul had ever seen.
"You are some piece of work, Admiral. You are really, truly,
some piece of work." He took another sip of the blue liquid that was
swirling about in his glass.
Thul couldn't quite believe the change that had come over
Jellico's face. He had gone from thoughtful to darkly furious, practically in
the space of a heartbeat. "Captain Calhoun ... may I ask what you're
doing here?"
"Listening to you reverse yourself," replied Captain Calhoun.
"The number of times I've had to listen to you pontificate and talk about
the sanctity of the prime directive... of how unbreakable the first, greatest
law of Starfleet is ... and how you've used that selfsame law to second-guess
and de-
nounce some of my most important decisions. But now here you are,
all dressed up at this extremely important gathering," and he added
exaggerated emphasis to the last three words, "and this... person..."
and he waved in a vague manner at Thul, "... suggests the exact same thing
that I've been saying for years now... and suddenly you're ready to listen. You
act like this is the first time you've heard it."
"Perhaps General Thul simply has a way of expressing his
concerns that is superior to the belligerent tone you usually adopt,
Captain," said Jellico. Quickly he said to the others around him,
"General, Ambassador Stonn, Admiral O'Shea... I'm terribly sorry about
this. I'm not entirely certain what this officer is doing here..."
'I'm here because I was ordered to be here," Calhoun said. A
number of other guests were noticing the ruckus, which wasn't difficult since
Calhoun's voice was carrying.
"That's strange. My office should have received a memo on
that," Jellico said, his eyes narrowing with suspicion.
"Really. Perhaps someone simply forgot Or perhaps you were
too busy getting ready for this little get-together that you didn't have a
chance to stay current with your memos. Look, Admiral," and Calhoun swayed
ever so slightly. Thul could tell that this rather odd individual had clearly
had a bit too much to drink. "Make no mistake. I'd rather be on my ship.
But I was ordered to be here because I'm supposed to be representing the
Federation's interests in Thallonian space. One of the new frontiers that we
brave individuals are exploring and protecting. Here's to us," and he knocked
back more of the drink, leaving about a third of it in the glass.
"Of course," said Thul hi slow realization.
"Captain Calhoun ... of the Excalibur. Am I correct?"
"Correct."
"I am very aware of your vessel's humanitarian mission. It is
also my understanding that Lord Si Cwan is among the person-ad of your brave
ship. I met him once, when he was a very small child. I doubt he would remember
me."
"Captain Calhoun was just leaving," said Jellico,
"weren't you, Captain?"
"Oh, was I?" Calhoun smiled lopsidedly. "But
Admiral, this is a party. Why are you so anxious to have me leave?"
"Captain," O'Shea spoke up, "I'm well aware that
you have some ... issues... with Admiral Jellico. But I submit that this is
neither the time nor the place..."
"Or perhaps it's the perfect time and place," Calhoun
shot back. Thul quickly began to reassess his opinion. Calhoun wasn't a bit
drunk. He was seriously drunk. Not in such a way that he was going to fall
over, but certainly whatever inhibitions he might have about speaking the
truth were gone. "The fact is that the good Admiral here has had it out
for me for years now. Just because he got it into his head mat I was some sort
of super officer, and then I didn't live up to the place that he'd set for me.
I saved his Me, you know," he said in an offhand manner to Thul.
"This man would be standing here dead if not for me."
"And because of that, I protected you as long as I
could," Jellico said, his body stiffening. "But you're the one who allowed
the Grissom incident to get to you, Calhoun. Accidents happen, bad
things happen to good people. True leaders manage to rise above that."
"And leave their consciences behind?"
"I didn't say that. Look, Calhoun," said Jellico, his
ire clearly beginning to rise, "you said you're here because you were
ordered to be here. If you're actually obeying orders, it's going to be the
first time that I can recall in ages ... perhaps ever. That being the case,
here's another order: Get the hell out of here before you embarrass yourself
further, if that's possible."
"Gentlemen," Stonn said, "perhaps you might wish to
take this conversation into a private area..."
It seemed to Thul that, at that point, everyone hi the place was
watching them. He also saw several men dressed in UFP security garb threading
their way through the crowd.
"I'm sure he'd like that," Calhoun said. "That's
how his kind best operates: In the dark, hi private, alone, like any
fungus."
"That's enough," said Jellico, the veins on his temples clearly throbbing.
"You sway with the wind, Jellico," said Calhoun. 'To
your superiors and your pals, you say what you think they want to hear. And to
the rest of us, you step on us like we're bugs. That's all we are to you. And
you can't stand me because I actually stood up to you. Stood up! That's an
understatement. I
flattened you. I flattened him," Calhoun said to O'Shea.
"One punch. I resigned from Starfleet, he tried to get in my way, I warned
him, and one punch, I took him down."
"It was not one punch." Jellico looked around, clearly
embarrassed. "Not one punch."
"It was. One shot to the side of the head, and you went down
on your ass, right after you grabbed my arm..."
"All right, that's it. Security!" called Jellico ...
... and he grabbed Calhoun by the arm.
Calhoun's smile went wolfish, and to Thul it seemed as if all the
inebriation, all the fuzziness about the man, dissolved in a second. Whatever
the man might have had to drink, he was able to shunt it aside in a split
second. His fist whipped around with no hesitation, and caught Jellico squarely
in the side of the head. Jellico went down amidst gasps from everyone
surrounding him.
"That will suffice," said Ambassador Stonn, stepping between
Jellico and Calhoun. At that moment, despite the superior strength of the
Vulcan, Thul would not have wanted to place bets on just who would win an
altercation between the Vulcan and Calhoun.
But Calhoun didn't display the least interest in fighting off
Stonn. Instead he simply grinned and said, "See? Told you. One
punch."
"Get out of here!" Jellico said, rubbing his head. His
eyes weren't focused on anything; Thul could practically hear Jelli-co's head
ringing right from where he was standing.
Calhoun seemed to be enjoying Jellico's disorientation immensely.
"One-Punch Jellico, they should call you. That's all it takes,"
Calhoun called. "That's all it takes to puncture a pompous windbag."
O'Shea helped Jellico to his feet, asking after his health
so-licitously, but it didn't seem as if Jellico even heard her. In-stead,
across the room that had now become completely
ashed, Jellico shouted, "I'll have your rank for this,
Calhoun!
Do you hear me? This is the last straw! I don't care who your
friends are! I don't care what you've accomplished! I don't
care if Picard backs you up! I don't care if the words, 'Calhoun
is my favorite captain' appears on the wall at Starfleet
head-quarters in flaming letters twelve feet high! You are gone! You are
finished! Do you hear? Finished!"
"I hear you, Admiral!" called Calhoun as he stormed out
of the room. "And I heard you when you said it years ago! And I came back,
didn't I? I keep coming back!" He turned and walked out of the room.
"Not this time, Calhoun! Not this time!" Jellico shouted
after him.
There was a long silence after Calhoun left from the room. Jellico
was flushed red in the face, clearly utterly chagrined at the turn of events.
"You've nothing to be embarrassed about, Admiral," said Thul
consolingly. "Obviously he was a madman."
"I could tell you horror stories, General, I really
could," said Jellico. "Mackenzie Calhoun represents... I'm sorry, I
should say 'represented'... everything that's wrong with the 'cowboy' breed of
captain. No respect for rales or for authority. No respect for the chain of
command. No..."
"No respect, period?" offered Thul.
"Yes. Yes, that's exactly right He left the fleet once
before... went freelance... did dirty work for whomever would pay him. The only
reason he was brought back into the fleet was because he had well-placed
supporters, but after this debacle, even they won't back him. Believe me, we're
stronger without him."
"And he certainly seems to have no love for Starfleet... or
even perhaps the Federation," Thul said slowly.
"The Mackenzie Calhoun's of this world love only themselves
and care about their own skins, and that's all. We were speaking of abuse of
power before, General? He's exactly the type that the prime directive was
created to ride herd on. Good riddance to him, I say." Jellico rubbed the
side of his face. "Let him be someone else's problem."
"Excellent idea," said General Thul. "A most
excellent idea."
Mackenzie Calhoun sat at curbside outside the great hall. From
within, he could hear the music and voices building up to their previous
levels.
He shook out his hand and squeezed it into a fist. It hurt. That
was very annoying. His hand shouldn't be hurting. And it seemed to him that
Jellico had fallen much faster, and bounced much harder, when he'd struck him
years earlier.
"I hope I'm not losing my punch," he said to no one.
"I hope not, too," came a sultry voice, indicating that
he had not quite been speaking to no one as he had previously thought.
He turned and looked up.
She was, quite simply, the most beautiful Thallonian woman he had
ever seen. She had absolutely no hair, except for two delicate eyebrows that
were carefully sculpted. Her neck was long and elegant, her bosom in perfect
proportion to her hips. Her legs seemed to go to somewhere up around her
shoulders, and when she smiled it was incandescent.
Calhoun automatically rose to his feet.
"Hello," she said.
"Hi. I'm..." He thought for a moment, then recalled the
information. "Mackenzie Calhoun."
"I'm Vara Syndra," she purred, displaying a remarkable
facility for recalling her own name. "Gerrid Thul is interested in
speaking with you."
"Will you be merer
"Yes."
"Then so will I."
IX.
"apologize, ensign. right now. You too, Burgoyne."
They were in the conference lounge. It was Shelby who had just
sternly addressed Burgoyne and Ensign Janos, while a somewhat chagrined-looking
Robin Lefler looked on. Riker's face was expressionless. Janos had changed to
the Starfleet uniform that he usually wore, albeit uncomfortably, when he was
on duty.
"My apologies, Commander," Janos said sincerely.
"When... exercising... my Hermat friend and I can get quite intense. We
simply did not hear you call for the program to freeze. Then, when you attacked
me, we thought you were joining us. Captain Calhoun does, on occasion."
"My apologies as well," Burgoyne put in.
"Well, then," Riker said, smiling, "a simple
mistake. No hard feelings."
, "Thank you, sir," Janos said. "But... permission
to speak freely?"
"Of course," Riker said.
"I am aware that my appearance can be quite startling, even
frightening, to those unprepared for it."
"All right," Riker suddenly spoke up. His face was still
inscrutable. "I see where you're going, and you're right. I shouldn't
have made assumptions about you... even a 'hologram' of you, based solely on
your physical appearance. We in Starfleet are supposed to be above the concept
of making judgments based on surface impressions. Therefore, Janos... I
apologize for jumping to the conclusion that you were a threat and not a
Starfleet officer. Perhaps if you were wearing clothing..."
"I was, a white jumpsuit."
"I didn't notice. Again, my fault, I apologize."
"Thank you, Captain."
"Sir," Robin Leffer put in at that moment, "I
apologize for not taking firmer control of the situation. I could have done
what Zak did. I should have been more take-charge, instead of allowing myself
to be carried away by the avalanche."
"Yes, you should have," Riker said. "Just try to be
a little more aggressive in the future."
"Aggressive. Yes, sir."
"Well, that wraps that up," Riker said, smiling again.
"Oh, one more thing. Burgoyne, I understand that you're pregnant. Is
exercise of this nature a good idea?"
"Wait, wait a minute," Burgoyne said. "Where did
you hear I was pregnant? I'm not pregnant."
Lefler looked utterly confused. "But you are, aren't
you?"
"No, I'm not. I think I would know that."
"But... you told McHenry ..."
"What, in sickbay the other day? That was a joke! He knew I
was joking."
"Uh oh."
Now both Riker and Burgoyne was staring at Lefler. In uni-son,
they said, "Uh oh?" Janos and Shelby looked at each other in
confusion.
"Well... McHenry didn't know," said Lefler. "You
weren't there when he came to, after he passed out."
"Yes, I know that. While he was unconscious, that's when I
was called down to engineering. Worked the eighteen straight hours, as I said.
When I finally got back to my quarters, though there was a message from him. We
got together and I let him know it wasn't true. That it was just intended to be
a
"You told him that?"
"Yes. A few hours ago."
"Uh oh."
"Why does she keep saying 'uh oh'?" Burgoyne asked Shelby.
Shelby shook her head, not knowing the answer.
"Well... the thing is, you see... McHenry told me. And I sort
of told, well..." She shifted in her seat, looking extremely
uncomfortable.
"You just sort of told, well... who?"
Wincing as if she were preparing to duck back from a punch, she
said, "Uh... everybody."
"What?"
"Yeah, I'm afraid so. How the hell was I supposed to
know?" she said defensively.
"You mean everybody on the ship?"
"No, everybody hi the quadrant," she shot back.
"Yes, on the ship. And not really everybody. Just... a lot of
people."
"Perfect. That's just perfect," moaned Burgoyne.
"One casual remark, and suddenly ..."
At that moment, the doors hissed open and Si Cwan entered.
"Excellent," said the Thallonian noble. "I'm glad
you're all here."
"Ambassador, could this possibly wait... ?" asked
Shelby.
"Narobi II."
Shelby and Riker exchanged looks. "Pardon?" asked Riker.
"I've received word from one of my sources that the Romulans
are going to be attacking Narobi II. He's reasonably sure that it's the same
pack that you're talking about The Renegades we'd hoped they return to Romulus
to help rebuild after the Dominion War."
Instantly everyone at the table was alert "How does he know
this?" Riker asked.
"He's the type of individual who makes it his business to
know such things. In this instance, someone with whom he was connected
apparently aided in repairs on one of the vessels that the Independence engaged
in battle. And this individual happened to hear about one of the next intended
targets."
"I'm not sure I like this. It's too pat," said Shelby.
"I agree," Riker said.
"Perhaps. Perhaps not," said Si Cwan. "When you
deal with a large operation... and this apparently seems to fit that description
... there's large numbers of people who let things slip. In any event, Captain,
you wanted me to try and bring you information. If you're going to dismiss it
out of hand, then why am I bothering?"
Slowly Riker nodded. It was, he thought a valid enough point
"Narobi II. Tell me about it."
"It's a rather unique world in Thallonian space. It's populated
entirely by a race who has converted itself into beings of a sort of living
metal. They created ultra-durable bodies for themselves that last for hundreds
of years. In essence, they've made themselves immortal. They are utterly
peaceful, but fully capable of protecting themselves should they be under
attack. I'm not entirely certain why the Romulans would choose to target
them."
"Neither am I. But we can't afford to let the possibility go.
Commander... set course for Narobi II."
"Aye, sir."
As they got up from the conference table, Si Cwan suddenly turned
to Burgoyne and, to hir surprise, placed a hand on either side of hir face.
"What are you—?" s/he began to say.
Si Cwan proceeded to utter a lengthy chant, the performance of
which stopped everyone in their tracks. Cwan had a surprisingly melodious
voice which floated up and down the register. It was so lovely that no one
dared to interrupt as Cwan continued that way for about forty-five seconds,
murmuring, chanting, and swaying back and forth slightly as he did so. Then he
lowered his hands and smiled.
"What was that all about?" demanded Burgoyne.
"That" Si Cwan said in a booming voice, "was the
ancient Thallonian prayer for a smooth and uncomplicated pregnancy, which can
only be delivered by one of the Noble house upon an expectant mother.
Congratulations, Burgoyne. May you have a child which brings glory to your
name."
"I'm not pregnant" Burgoyne said testily, and s/he
walked out of the conference room.
There was silence for a moment and then, non-plussed, Si Cwan
decided, "Well... it's probably for the best. It's been a while, and I was
out of practice. Instead of the pregnancy chant, I may have accidentally prayed
for hir not to contract root rot."
"Smashing. So the odds of it being effective just went way
up," said Janos cheerily.
I've got to get off this ship, thought Riker.
X.
zolon darg was rather pleased with the turnout
The place that he had chosen for the rendezvous on Argelius was
somewhat out of the way, well off the beaten track of most of the places of
entertainment and merriment which drew in most of the tourists. Darg, for the
get-together that he had been busily arranging, had selected a rather disreputable
place which was in violation of at least three Argelian health codes.
He was also drawn by the name of the place: "Kara's," in
commemoration of some hideous event which had occurred on Argelius nearly a
century ago during which a number of women were slaughtered... rather nastily,
at that
Kwint was looking around with open curiosity. They had been out
drinking much of the night but Kwint didn't seem particularly daunted by the
amount of alcohol they had been patting away. Zolon Darg was impressed by that.
As a Thallonian, he was more than capable of imbibing considerable mounts of
alcohol without displaying, or even feeling, the ill effects. Kwint was
obviously just a human, yet he didn't seem 10 be displaying any ill effects at
all. Darg wondered if one of Kwint's limbs wasn't actually hollow, enabling him
to store vast quantities within.
There was a permanent layer of dirt on the walls of Kara's.
Many of the chairs seemed rickety, and the tables weren't much
better. There was a large mirror behind the bar. It was cracked. There were
also signs that there had been a fight in the bar not too long ago. Darg
wondered absently what had started it, who had won... and if anyone had
actually survived. Behind the bar, a surly Tellarite bartender named Gwix
poured out drinks. Gwix wasn't the type of bartender one poured their heart out
too... at least, not unless one was a masochist. Gwix had little patience for
anything except serving the drinks, getting me money, and closing up for the
night. Nonetheless, even Gwix was aware when Darg came in, and tilted his
pig-like head in acknowledgment.
"Nice place," Kwint said at length. "Come here
often?"
"Often enough."
"You want to tell me what's going on?"
"You'll find out soon enough. Come here." He moved
around one of the tables and indicated that Kwint should sit. Kwint did so.
Darg, however, continued to stand, and as he leaned on the back of one of the
chairs, it was quickly evident why. Just leaning on it would have been enough
to break it.
Darg seemed to be assessing Kwint for a long moment, stroking his
chin thoughtfully. Finally he said, "You have a lot on the ball, Kwint.
I've seen that tonight. First with the way that we met. Then we went to that
gambling place, and you immediately nailed the guy who was trying to cheat us.
Then we went to the brothel, and you immediately nailed—"
"What are you saying, Darg?" Kwint asked, cutting him
off.
"I'm saying that I think you have potential in my organization.
An organization that's only going to let larger." He glanced over Kwint's
shoulder. "Ah. I see some of our guests have arrived."
They were filing in, one at a time, regarding each other with
obvious distrust. Then again, that wasn't all that surprising. The dozen or so
beings who had shown up at Kara's were not accustomed to trusting anyone or
working together, for they were all from races who were outside of the
Federation. Races who, for whatever reason, considered the alliance of the UFP
to be suffocating to their own interests. There was an Orion... a Kreel... a
Tan'gredi, all ooze and nictating membranes ... a Capitano, growling deep in
its chest, its eyeless
face gazing around with its internal radar taking in the parameters
of the room... an assortment of others.
"Thank you all for coming," Darg said once everyone was
settled. He was all too aware of the suspicion that focused on him from every
direction. That was perfectly fine. He could handle that "Since this is a
matter of some delicacy, I know that I can count on all of you for your
discretion."
"We're not interested in your compliments or your kudos to
our discretion, gun runner," said the Kreel. "We all have other
matters to attend to. Say what you have to say."
Darg didn't reply immediately. He'd learned that some extended
silence could often be more useful than simply leaping straight into discourse.
So he allowed die quiet to hang there a short time before he said, "All of
you have grudges and difficulties with the Federation. They, and the races
that they represent, have stifled you, interfered with you, operated in
manners that are contradictory to your interests. And I'm not speaking of you
as individuals, of course—although that much is certainly true—but also for
the races that you represent"
There was that slightly nauseating "slurping" sound that
always preceded a Tan'gredi before it spoke. "Races do not operate as
whole, Darg. There are always different factions. Some of my people—the
radicals—speak of joining the Federation at some point."
"True enough," Darg said smoothly. "But let us say
that I have contacted you—singled you out as individuals—because I thought that
you would be most amenable to the cause I represent"
"What cause is that?" The Orion was idly stabbing the
table top at which he was seated with his curved dagger.
"The cause that involves... a new time to come. A new era
that we mink of as the post-Federation era."
"Who is 'we'?" The Kreel, as quick-tempered as most of
his type, clearly wasn't interested in vagueness. "And what exactly will
make this era of yours 'post'? The Dominion war is over; the Federation is not
going anywhere anytime soon."
"I... choose at this point not to focus on the
specifics."
There was a skeptical groan.
"What I am here to tell you," continued Darg as if they
had not made a sound, "is that there will come a time—soon—
when the Federation will not be a consideration. At that point,
it's going to be a whole new galaxy... and whoever has the greatest technology,
the most formidable weapons, and the strongest allies ... will come out on top.
What we—those I represent—are seeking are those who are interested in buying
into our vision."
" 'Buying in.' Here it comes," said the Kreel, sneering.
"And what exactly does that entail?"
"One hundred thousand bars of gold-pressed latinum from each
of you... on behalf of the races that you represent."
There was a roar of mixed laughter, disbelief, and outright
contempt. Through it all, Darg simply stood there, taking it in, his face
immobile, his manner patient. He acted as if he had all the time in the world.
"And if we don't buy in?" asked the Capitano in that remarkable
voice that seemed to originate from somewhere in the ground beneath his feet.
"Then you will die."
It was not Darg who had spoken, however. It was Kwint. The
attention promptly switched to him, and even Darg was clearly surprised to hear
the relative newcomer speak so boldly.
"Is that a threat?" asked the Kreel quietly. Kwint
half-smiled and walked in a slow circle around the gathering. "If someone offered
you safe haven from a supernova... and you displayed lack of interest... and
that someone informed you that you were going to die... is that a threat? Or is
that simply a prediction?"
"Does this human speak for you, Darg?" inquired the
Orion. He had stopped sticking the knife into the table, his interest caught by
the shift in the atmosphere.
Darg sized Kwint up for a long moment. In point of fact, he had
told Kwint absolutely nothing about the plan. Kwint was speaking entirely from
conjecture, bluff... and attitude. It was, however, an attitude that Darg found
most intriguing. "He speaks for himself," Darg said slowly, "but
I choose not to contradict him. Make of that what you will."
Apparently feeling that he'd been given a tacit endorsement to continue,
Kwint promptly did so. "Yes ... I am human, as you noted. And there have
been any number of times hi human
history where people were offered an opportunity by those who had
vision... and the will, drive and resources to bring that vision to life. At
the time that these visionaries presented their views of things, there were
always those who were skeptical or derisive. Who would gladly turn their back
and walk away, not realizing that they were leaving greatness behind. Zolon
Darg is connected to that vision. He has seen the dream. He sees a place where
there is a galaxy that is unstifled by the rules of the Federation, striving
ceaselessly to create a perfect reality that exists only in the minds of those
who have an interest in maintaining the status quo. You deserve to come into
your own... and Zolon Darg, and those he represents, are the ones who bring you
there."
There was silence for a long moment. And then the Kreel
representative stepped forward and said, 'I'm out"
"As am I," said the Orion, "although I'll have
another drink first... if our generous host doesn't mind."
"Of course I don't mind," said Darg calmly, but his
attention was focused on the Kreel. "My friend... I understand your
concern. And I wish you well in your future endeavors."
He gripped the Kreel by the forearm and nodded firmly. The Kreel
eyed him suspiciously, apparently tensing for Darg to make some sort of sudden
move. But then Darg stepped away, nodded and said, "Good-bye," and
then turned to the others. "I would ask you others to consider die matter
a bit more carefully and deeply than our Kreel friend here."
As the Kreel headed out the door, the Capitano rumbled,
"You have to at least meet us halfway here, Darg. At least give us some idea of just why you are so
certain that you will be
able to dispose of the Federation in such a—"
There was a sudden scream from just outside the bar. The voice and
tone was unmistakable. It was the Kreel, and to say that he sounded in distress
would have been to understate it.
There was a rush for the door. The only ones who didn't move in
that direction were Zolon Darg and Kwint, the latter
glancing at the former in silent query. Darg simply nodded and
became extremely engrossed in studying his fingernails.
as the others peered out the door, there were gasps of disbe-lief, a number of profanities, several quick
prayers offered up to respective
gods, and the sound of the Tan'gredi becoming
physically ill... although considering the somewhat disgusting
noises they customarily made, it was admittedly hard to distinguish.
What they saw was the Kreel representative, collapsed on the
ground and trying with all his might just to stand up. His skin had become a
distinctive shade of green, and gaping pustules had opened up all along his
body.
And then the Kreel slumped forward, hit the ground once more and
fell silent. His body twitched spasmodically, but that was all.
There was deathly silence in Kara's. Then Darg moved among them,
handing out small rectangles with coordinates engraved in them. "If you
are interested in learning more of what I've said... if you are interested in
participating... and if," and he glanced at Kwint in acknowledgment,
"... if you are someone of vision... then show up at these coordinates
precisely five Federation Standard Days from today. We might as well use their
units of time measurement," he added in amusement, "for as long as
they're vaguely applicable."
"What did that to the Kreel?" the Tan'gredi burbled.
"I've seen fast-acting poisons before, but—"
"That wasn't a poison... was it," said the Orion slowly.
"That was some sort of... of virus. A disease. You gave it to him somehow.
What was it? Have you passed it on to us somehow?"
"My dear fellows," Darg said soothingly, "I assure
you that you are perfectly safe." And then he added, rather significantly,
"for the time being. As Kwint stated, those supernovas can be rather
vicious, and I would hate to see any or all of you incinerated."
The Capitano looked at the coordinates and growled, "I know
this section of space. There's nothing at these coordinates. Nothing at
all."
"There will be," Darg said with a small smile.
"There will be."
And with that, Darg made it quite clear that the meeting was over.
One by one, the assorted representatives departed, stepping rather gingerly
around the remains of the Kreel. "Worry not," Darg said with
remarkable cheer, "he'll be attended to shortly enough. I wouldn't advise
getting too close for the time being, though." The representatives took care
to attend to his advice.
"Well," Darg said once he and Kwint were alone.
"That went about as well as could be expected."
"You suspected that someone was going to doubt you... to walk
out... didn't you," said Kwint.
Darg shrugged. "There's always one. Frankly, I was hoping it
would be the Kreel. Insufferable race." Then he regarded Kwint more
closely. "You spoke out of turn."
"Yes, I did. I considered your proposal intriguing, and seeing
skeptical and even disrespectful looks from those... individuals ... was
bothersome to me."
"And if something strikes you as bothersome, you feel an
obligation to do something about it. Is that it?"
Kwint nodded slightly. "Something like that."
" 'Something like that.' I see." Darg looked Kwint up
and down. "You know, Kwint... you have potential."
"Potential as what? You mentioned bringing me into your
organization before..."
"Part of what I was doing during this meeting was keeping an
eye on you. Trying to determine what one can expect of you. But you know... I'm
still not sure. Your speaking up was not particularly wise on your part... but
on the other hand, it took nerve. I suppose you simply felt you had to
'equalize' things once more."
"In a way."
" 'In a way' is another means of saying 'something like
that.' Yes, Kwint, definite potential. If you seem worthwhile, you might
definitely be in line tor my number two man."
"Me?" Kwint looked like he couldn't believe it.
"But we've only known each other for a few hours. Are you sure?"
"I work
on instinct a good deal, Kwint That's how I judge people, and most of the time,
I'm right."
"What happened to your previous number two man?"
"I killed him."
"Oh." Kwint didn't seem to know what to say. Darg, for
his part, couldn't have cared less. "I said most of the time, I'm
pretty reliable. Everyone has setbacks." And suddenly his hand was on
Kwint's chest, and he was
lifting the smaller man up and slamming him against a wall. The
pressure on Kwint's chest was such that, not only had the wind been knocked out
of him, but he couldn't get any air into his lungs. He pulled in futility at
Darg's immovable hand.
"Have a care," Darg said quite softly, "that you do
not have a setback of your own." Then his hand opened wide and Kwint slid
to the ground, coughing violently as he gulped down air. "Do we understand
each other?"
Kwint nodded, still coughing.
"Now... you can attend to your first duty as a member of my
organization." And he handed Kwint a large sack and a thick pair of
gloves. Kwint, having managed to recover his breath, looked in confusion at
Darg. Darg simply pointed in the direction of the remains of the Kreel.
"Kindly clean that up. That is the first rule of my organization: We pick
up after ourselves."
Kwint looked none too thrilled.
"Setbacks," Darg reminded him in a slightly singsong
voice.
Kwint promptly did as he was told.
XI.
nice night to be seduced, thought Calhoun.
Indeed, it was a splendid night, one that seemed to be filled with
promise. However, Calhoun couldn't be entirely sure just who was going to be
seducing whom, or what precisely was going to be promised.
This "Vara Syndra" was unlike any woman he'd ever encountered.
She was pure sex. Calhoun found it difficult to concentrate on the matter at
hand, or even remember what the matter at hand was. But that wasn't what he
needed to do at all. He had to stay focused, remember what his—
Grozit, look at those hips. The sway of them, and the arch of her
back. ..the way she swivels when she walks...
He nearly had to slap himself across the face to try and bring himself
back in line with what he was doing.
Vara Syndra was talking as she walked, and he came to the abrupt
realization that he hadn't heard a word she said. At one point though, she
smiled at him in a way that seemed to indicate that she not only knew the
effect she was having, but that die was accustomed to it. He wondered why she
was suddenly so much further ahead of him, and suddenly noticed that he'd
stopped walking. He was just standing there and admiring her.
Stop it. This isn't funny, he snarled at himself, and forced
his feet to go back into motion. It was incredible to him that
this female appeared to be an associate of General Thul. One wondered how in
the world the man got any work done. Then again, she was certainly eminently
capable of making slacking off appear to be the single greatest pastime known
to man.
They had been strolling about, apparently aimlessly, for more man
an hour. But now they had arrived in a section of San Francisco that had been
restored to much of the late twentieth century architecture. It was an
architecture which had made that city so unique before the massive earthquake
and fire had practically levelled the place in the first half of the
twenty-first century. Vara Syndra was guiding him to one of those townhouses.
It had an old-world elegance and charm to it, but at the same time it also had
an air of dark foreboding. Calhoun allowed the possibility that he might just
be projecting his own concerns upon it. There was the further possibility
that, when compared to the vision that was Vara Syndra, everything had
an air of dark foreboding.
"In here," she said, stopping at the door and gesturing
that Calhoun should precede her.
Calhoun had a fairly reliable sixth sense for danger. So if there
was an ambush of some sort waiting inside, for whatever reason, he would likely
have been alerted to it. Then again, considering how distracted he was by Vara
Syndra, it was possible that an entire regiment of Danteri nationals,
thirsting to avenge themselves against the fabled liberator of Xenex, were
concealed within and Calhoun still wouldn't know the difference. Still, mere
was enough of the cautious and experienced warrior about him that he was
prompted to say, as suavely as he could manage, "After you, Vara."
"How very gallant," she said, and entered without
hesitation. Calhoun followed a moment later.
There wasn't a single Danteri, or other such soldier, in sight.
There was, however, a full-size portrait of Vara Syndra decorating
the portico, and she was gloriously nude hi it. She was also discretely
positioned, but still...
"Oh," said Vara Syndra in a teasing voice as she saw
where his gaze was drawn. "That old thing. Do you really think it captures
me?"
"I don't think a hundred big game hunters could adequately
capture you," said Calhoun.
"Aren't you sweet." She ran a finger teasingly under his
chin, and then sashayed up a long, winding flight of stairs. Calhoun took them
two at a time.
At the top of the stairs she went through a door that Calhoun
followed her through, which in turn led to a large suite of rooms. And seated
rather comfortably in the elaborately furnished suite was General Thul. He was
holding a drink, swirling the contents around casually, and he gestured to a
cart nearby which had an assortment of beverages arrayed on it in assorted
decanters. "Greetings, Captain Calhoun... or is it accurate to call you
'captain' anymore?"
"Simply 'Calhoun' will do for the time being."
"Really. Your friends, so I understand, address you as 'Mac.'
I was hoping that we might become friends."
"Interesting that you should be aware of that. Been checking
up on me, have you?"
"It wasn't all that difficult, Calhoun. After your rather
unceremonious eviction from the gathering, you and your past 'antics' were
very much the talk of the parry for some time afterward."
"Indeed. I'm flattered."
"You needn't be. Much of it wasn't particularly complimentary.
Still," and he stroked his yellowed beard thoughtfully, "even those
who were less than flattering clearly had a measure of grudging respect for
your... curious talents."
Calhoun said nothing.
"M'k'n'zy of Calhoun," continued General Thul. "A
young Xenexian who watched his father beaten to death in the town square by
Danteri oppressors, and was inspired by that incident to free his home world
from Danteri rule. By the age of twenty, he had accomplished this rather
remarkable feat, achieving the rank of warlord and becoming possibly the most
admired man on his world. All of Xenex was at his feet, but he instead walked a
different path at the behest of one Jean-Luc Picard. He joined Starfleet, developed
a reputation as an independent thinker whose sheer bravery and resourcefulness
got the job done, and then resigned after an incident that resulted in the
death of his commanding officer aboard the Grissom.
Spent a number of years doing whatever jobs he could for whomever
he could before rejoining Starfleet and being assigned command of the Excalibur,
presently on extended assignment to my dear Thallonian space. And now...
?" He waited, but Calhoun still said nothing. "Now... what, Calhoun?"
"I don't know," Calhoun admitted. "I wasn't
expecting this to happen. Then again, in retrospect, I suppose it was inevitable.
Starfleet and I have never exactly been a smooth fit."
"I've thought as much myself." General Thul rose from
his chair and slowly walked in a circle around Calhoun. Calhoun, for his part,
simply stood where he was, his hands draped behind his back. "I may be
able to make use of a man like you."
"Give him my regards."
"Who?" Thul seemed momentarily puzzled.
"The man like me."
The confusion remained for a second longer, and then Thul allowed
a smile. "Very witty. That was very witty, Calhoun."
"Not really. But my head's a bit foggy. Give me about three
hours, I'll have reduced you to helpless giggles."
"What do you think of this one, Vara?" Thul said.
Vara had draped herself over a nearby chair. Calhoun suddenly
found that it was all he could do not to jump out of his skin. "I think a
good deal of him, General."
"So do I. Then again," and he returned to his seat,
"caution is always to be preferred. These are, after all, dangerous
times."
"Not for you, I'd think," said Calhoun. "General
Thul, doer of good works. Darling of the Starfleet upper rank. What danger
have you to fear?"
"Oh, I'd rather not speak of such things. After all, we wouldn't
want to upset Vara. Would we, Vara?"
Vara Syndra fanned her face with her hand as if she were a
southern belle fighting off an attack of the vapors. "I should certainly
hope not," she said.
Every movement, every gesture she made, even the rising and
falling of her chest as she breathed, was alluring to Calhoun. / must be
losing my mind. She must be doing something. But I have no idea what. Moreover,
I don't care all that much, which is even more disturbing. "What
things," he forced himself back on track, "should we speak of,
then."
Thul didn't answer immediately. Instead he strolled with slow,
measured steps toward a skylight that provided a splendid view of the starlit
sky. He stood under it and gazed heavenward. "I have a small matter that
I need attended to. You may very well be just the man for the job, and it would
fulfill an old debt."
"I see," Calhoun said neutrally.
"You see, I've recently managed to track down a certain individual
who is a 'guest' of the Andorian government." The contempt was evident in
his tone. "They're holding him on trumped-up charges of espionage."
"But certainly a well-connected individual such as yourself
would be able to have him freed through the use of your considerable
contacts."
"I have my friends, Calhoun, but make no mistake: My influence
is not quite as wide and all-encompassing as you obviously think it is.
Andorians, you see, are members of the United Federation of Planets, and the
UFP will not involve itself in how member worlds conduct themselves. However,"
and now he turned back to face Calhoun, "I was hoping you might be able to
aid this individual's ... recovery."
"You want me to break him out of wherever it is the Andorians
are holding him?"
"Nothing goes past you, I see, Calhoun. That's very comforting
to know. You should be aware, though, that participation in this matter will
likely be the end of your association with Starfleet, particularly if they
learn of your involvement."
"That association doesn't appear too promising at the moment
anyway," said Calhoun.
Thul openly scoffed. "You mean that business with Jellico?
Calhoun, I have enough contacts to know that Jellico has not earned himself
quite as many friends as he would like to think he has. There are some who
would probably applaud that you struck him. Although serious black marks on
your record might appear as a result of the incident, that wouldn't necessarily
spell complete doom for your career. My mission, however, likely would. So the
question is, do you worm your way back into Starfleet? Perhaps apologize to
Jellico in the hopes of smoothing matters over? Or do you acknowledge where
your talents would best be suited?"
"And when I accomplish this mission of yours ... 7"
" 'When.' Not 'if.' 'When.' Very confident, aren't you."
"When it seems warranted. If I didn't go into risky
situations confidently, I'd never come out of them."
"Very well... when you accomplish the mission... then you and
I shall speak again. We shall speak of things of... great importance. So...
what say you, Calhoun?"
Calhoun found himself staring at Vara Syndra once more. She wasn't
even looking at him at that point. Instead, in rather leisurely fashion, she
was trailing her fingers along the curve of her leg.
"What does the job pay?" asked Calhoun.
"A man after my own heart," Thul said with a smile.
"What would you consider to be adequate compensation for your time?"
Calhoun looked at Vara. Vara looked at him. Thul looked at both of
them, and his smile widened.
"Everything," he said, "is open to negotiation."
XII.
burgoyne burst onto the bridge, which was an unusual enough event in and
of itself since s/he didn't tend to hang about the bridge all that much. Even
more unusual, s/he went straight to Shelby and stood in front of her, hands on
hir hips. "May I speak with you, Commander?" s/he asked.
Shelby was a bit surprised at the urgency to Burgoyne's manner.
Granted, s/he was one of the more flamboyant individuals aboard the ship, but
s/he never displayed the sort of outright consternation that s/he was now showing.
Also, Shelby couldn't help but notice that McHenry was making a determined
effort not to look in Burgoyne's direction. The normally near-comatose helmsman
suddenly seemed extremely interested in checking over his instrumentation.
Riker, who'd been standing next to Zak Kebron and going over
tactical relays in preparation for possible battle, looked up in confusion.
"Is there a problem, Burgoyne?" he asked.
"Nothing that Commander Shelby can't handle, sir."
Riker took a step down from the upper ring of the bridge.
"Indulge me. What's the problem?"
"All right," Burgoyne said after .a moment's
consideration. "I want to know why I just got a reassignment."
"What?" Riker said, glancing at Shelby. Shelby shrugged,
not knowing what Burgoyne was referring to. "Are you no
longer chief engineer?"
"Oh, I'm
still that, yes. But I've been rotated to a desk job. Instructed to remain in
my office or work at the engineering station here on the bridge."
"But why...?"
"I don't know why," said a clearly exasperated
Burgoyne. "I got the message over my computer, and the computer simply
said it was orders. I thought they were yours." Some of the ire was being
replaced by simple confusion. "Because of... you know..."
"Payback, perhaps," suggested Riker. "For our
little misunderstanding in the holodeck?"
"The thought did cross my mind."
'1 don't operate that way, Lieutenant Commander. I had nothing to
do with this reassignment."
"Lefler," Shelby called to Robin at ops, "run this
one down, would you? See what's going on?"
It took Lefler only a few brief moments to track down the origin
of the orders. "Captain Calhoun," she said, punching up the transfer
records at her station.. "It came from Captain Calhoun."
"What?" said a stunned Burgoyne.
"Hold on. There's a notation here... oh," Lefler said
after another moment's checking. "According to his log, he was concerned
about keeping you in engineering, in proximity to potentially high levels of
radiation. Because of, well..." She cleared her throat"... you
know."
"No, I don't know."
"Because of you being pregnant."
"I'm not pregnant," Burgoyne waved hir arms about
in clear exasperation.
"Well, yes, but the captain didn't know that when he put in
for the reassignment. Apparently he did it right before he left, and there
hasn't been the opportunity to clear it up yet."
"Perfect," sighed Burgoyne. "Just perfect Mark,
tell them I'm not pregnant" When McHenry didn't answer immediately,
Burgoyne repeated, "Mark?"
Shelby couldn't help but notice how strange McHenry's voice
sounded when she spoke. Usually the most carefree-sounding of individuals, this
time he came across as a bit
stressed. "So you've told me, Lieutenant Commander. Then
again, you also told me you were pregnant in the first place. I guess even in
this high-speed age, it's hard to keep up."
Quickly Shelby stepped in. "I'll expunge the orders immediately,
Burgoyne. Sorry for the confusion."
"That... would be appreciated, Commander," said Burgoyne,
but s/he was looking with open curiosity at McHenry. "I hope I didn't come
across as too belligerent."
"No, not at all."
"Mark," Burgoyne continued slowly, "is there
something you wish to discuss?"
The entire bridge crew was watching, but McHenry didn't give any
indication that he was aware of the scrutiny. If he was aware, he didn't seem
to care. "No, Burgy. Nothing at all, thanks. If you'll excuse me ... I'm
kind of busy..."
Without missing a beat, Burgoyne turned to Shelby and said,
"Commander, I have a few navigational issues that need to be attended to.
May I borrow Mr. McHenry for a few minutes?"
"That sounds like it might not be a bad idea," Shelby
said readily.
McHenry turned in his chair, looking slightly betrayed.
"Commander..."
But Shelby simply said, "Go," and her tone of voice made
quite clear that no dispute was going to be welcomed in the matter. With a
heavy sigh, McHenry rose from his station and headed into the turbolift.
"Commander, a moment of your time, please," Riker suddenly
said. Shelby frowned, because it was clear to her from his tone of voice that
something was bothering him. She nodded and followed him into the ready room.
Once they were inside, he didn't sit, but turned to face her and said, "I
don't know if you've noticed, but there's a tendency among the crew to speak
directly to you on all matters."
"No, I hadn't noticed," said Shelby.
"I doubt that, Commander, although perhaps you're just being
too tactful to say so."
"I try not to let tact stand in the way of doing my job,
sir."
"In mat you succeed admirably,"iRiker said
drily. "The point remains that I've been noticing it repeatedly, on all
matters great and small. And it's something that you've been encouraging."
"Encouraging? You mean I've been answering questions and
dealing with problems? Is that your definition of encouragement?"
"You could, on occasion, make a point of consulting me, instead
of acting as if I'm not even on the bridge."
"Permission to speak freely, sir," Shelby said stiffly.
"If I said 'no,' would that stop you?"
"Probably not."
"Permission granted, then."
"This isn't about the crew, Captain. This is about your ego.
You're the cock of the walk on the Enterprise and you feel that now, as
captain here, you're entitled to get the same sort of treatment."
"What I am entitled to get, Commander," he said hotly,
"is the respect that is due the rank."
"A rank you've made no effort to obtain. You've practically
had to have it shoved down your throat," retorted Shelby. "Will
Riker, the reluctant captain. How is anyone here supposed to take you
seriously."
"You listen to me, Shelby," Riker shot back. "I've
been through enough battles, through more life-and-death situations than you
can even begin to count."
"Not with us. I've been here. You haven't. Besides, how do
you expect this crew to warm to you? You make it clear that you think they're
all vastly inferior to the Enterprise crew."
"I've done no such thing."
"Oh, please!" she rolled her eyes. "With gestures,
with looks, with tone of voice. You make it clear just how second-rate you
think this crew is. Well, I'll tell you something, 'Captain,' this is one of
the best crews I've ever dealt with. And they deserve better than to be
condescended to."
"Don't tell me you've never felt separate from this crew
yourself, Commander," Riker said. "That you weren't accepted, that
you didn't fit in, weren't respected..."
"I don't know what you're talking about."
"Your log clearly stated—"
"My log?" That stopped the conversation dead. "My
log?" she said again. "I never said anything like that in my public
log. Only my ... personal log ... when did you read my personal log?"
"It..." Riker suddenly looked a bit uncomfortable.
Falling back on regs, he said, "Captains and chief medical officers reserve
the right to review all records of their command staff."
"That doesn't give you the right to read my personal
log." She felt her cheeks starting to flush.
"Actually, it does. I was trying to familiarize myself with
this crew and with all the pertinent attitudes. If I'm going to be leading you
into potentially hazardous situations, I want to know where everyone's mind is.
So a few hours ago, I reviewed entries relevant to—"
"You bastard," said Shelby.
"Watch it. Commander," Riker said. "Speaking freely
or no, you're pushing it The bottom line is that you've had a serious attitude
problem with me for years, and I can't be in a position of having to
tolerate..."
"Position? What do you know of positions?" she demanded.
"The only position you know is standing in the cooling shade of Jean-Luc
Picard's shadow. What is it with you, anyway? Getting in behind him and staying
put. What are you, just lazy?"
"Not that it's any of your damned business, Commander, but
have you considered that, after the Enterprise, command of another ship
might be something of a come-down?"
"Nice little theory... except the Enterprise you were
aboard for over half a decade blew up. So what's the new excuse? Oh, I know,
maybe it's the name. Or maybe it's just mat Picard fills some sort of need in
your life that you didn't get elsewhere. What is he, some sort of father figure
that you've just attached yourself to and can't let go, no matter what, because
you'll feel like you're abandoning him or something ... ?"
Her voice trailed off as she saw Riker's face become more darkly
furious than she'd ever seen. For a moment, just the briefest of moments, she
actually thought he might haul off and belt her.
"At least I've been offered command of my own vessel,"
Riker said with barely contained rage. "Perhaps before you start analyzing
my problems, you might want to turn that piercing vision of yours
inward and see just why it is that you haven't been given the same
opportunity."
Then, slowly, through sheer force of will, he composed himself.
He drew himself up to his full height and, as if speaking from high on a
mountain, he told her in a flat, even voice, "Until further notice, all
decisions and matters that are put forward in my presence are to be addressed
to me. I will not be treated as if I'm not there. Is that clear,
Commander?"
"Crystal," said Shelby.
"Turbolift, all stop."
The turbolift that had been carrying McHenry and Burgoyne came to
a halt in immediate compliance with Burgoyne's directive. McHenry looked
around, mildly puzzled. "This is going to make it take much longer to get
to engineering."
"Okay, Mark, what's going on?" Burgoyne faced him, arms
folded across hir breast. "You've been avoiding me."
"No, I haven't."
"Yes, you have."
"No, I haven't."
"Yes, you..." S/he shook hir head. "This isn't
getting us anywhere."
"Yes, it is."
"No, it isn't."
"Yes, it is."
"No, it... nyarrrh!" snarled Burgoyne. "Stop
it! Just... stop it! You're trying to make me crazy!"
"How am I doing?"
In the question, in the attitude with which it was asked, there
was a flicker of the puckishness that had always characterized McHenry in the
past. Burgoyne was extremely relieved to see it, if only for an instant.
"You're doing quite well," s/he admitted. "Mark... is this
about Selar and me? Because you said you could take it in stride. Nothing fazed
you, is what you said. You said you were happy for us."
"Yeah... I know."
"What, was that true?" . "It was when I said it."
"But now... ?"
He leaned back against the railing of the turbolift. "I don't
know."
"What don't you know?" S/he put a gentle hand on his
shoulder. "Mark, above everything else, we've always been
able to communicate. I don't want to lose that."
"I'm just..." He sighed heavily. "Look... Burgy...
the truth is that I'm not in touch with my feelings, okay? If you know anything
about me, you should know that. There's just so many other things to think
about, and wonder about... and if I have to start putting everything through
the filter of how I 'feel' about it, I'll go kinda crazy. So I sort of like to
live for the moment."
"All right. But it would be nice if, every once in a while,
it was somebody else's moment as well. You do tend to go off into your own
world, Mark... and it's hard for anyone to know what's going on in there."
"I know. It's ..." He seemed to steady himself, and then
the words all came out in a rush. "It's just that... I was very angry with
you. There. I said it. Don't hate me."
"Hate you?" s/he said, bemused. "Why would I hate
you? What were you angry about? Because I made a joke to see if I really could
throw you off kilter, and it worked more than I could have hoped?"
"No, that's not it. It's that... well... after I came to, I
had plenty of time to think about the whole idea before you wound up telling me
it wasn't true. And during that time, I just... well... I got to like the idea.
It seemed fun ... and... I dunno... grounding, somehow. And that didn't seem to
be such a bad thing... particularly the notion of having one with you, because
you're so..."
"Maternal? Special? Intelligent?"
"I was going to say 'weird,' but those others apply too, I
guess." He shook his head. "And you know me, I start thinking... and
I just go off in my own world, and think of things, and I was building up this
whole life together. I even had mis whole weird family unit built up in my
head, with you and Selar and that baby, and me and you and that baby, and maybe
even the three of us working together..."
"Now that would be weird."
"I know. That's what I kind of liked about it. But that's not
going to happen anymore. I mean, when it was just you and Selar and you guys
having a baby, I had no trouble with that. I could handle that, accept it, even
step aside. But for a while
there, I just saw something different, and kind of liked it, and
now it's gone, and I'm back to being an outsider again."
"Oh, Mark... you'll never be an outsider with me. You—"
"But I'll never be her," McHenry said with a sad smile.
"I'll never be Selar. I was always a second-place choice to her, I understood
that. And I thought that was okay. And it should be. But for a while I...
Ohhhhh ... never mind."
"Mark, you keep saying 'never mind' and shutting things
off..."
"Yeah, I know. That's the way I am. I kind of like me that
way."
"Do you?"
They looked at each other levelly for a moment that seemed to
stretch out for quite some time. Finally he said firmly, "Yeah. I do. Turbolift,
resume."
The turbolift promptly started up once again, and the two of them
rode the rest of the way down to the engineering deck hi silence. Burgoyne
turned to McHenry. He didn't move. "I assume you didn't really need me
down in engineering."
"No. Not really. But I do need you to be a friend—"
"Always. Well, I guess this is your stop then," he said
a bit too quickly to sound sincere.
"I guess it is."
S/he disembarked, then started to say something to him, but he put
up a finger to shush hir. "It's okay. Relationships are like turbolifts.
Sometimes you just have to know when to get off."
"Yellow alert," Riker ordered. "All handles, battle
stations."
As the Excalibur approached Narobi II, Riker stroked his
chin as he contemplated the scene before him and came to two conclusions:
First, Si Cwan's "tip" might have been groundless. And second, he
really, really missed his beard.
"No Romulan vessels detected, sir," announced Zak Kebron
from the tactical station. "But if they're cloaked, they're harder to pick
up."
From the science post, science officer Soleta said, "Sensor
scan to pick up emissions will take time."
"Understood," Riker said. "Proceed with scan.
Hailing frequencies, Mr. Kebron?"
"Open, but we're not getting a response from Narobi."
"That could be a definite indicator of a problem," said
Riker thoughtfully.
Abruptly Soleta looked up from her science station. 'Two vessels
with cloaking devices detected uncloaking, at 352 and 367 Mark 2."
She was absolutely correct On the far side of me Narobi homeworld,
two Romulan warbirds wavered into view.
"That," Shelby observed, "could be an even more
definite indicator of a problem."
"Red alert. Shields up," Riker ordered crisply.
"Weapons systems?"
"We are at weapons hot," Kebron said. "Good to
go."
'Try to hail them. Warn them off." He leaned forward in the
command chair, fingers interlaced, trying to determine what it was the Romulans
were up to.
"Attempting to do so now, sir. No response. It is my belief
that the warbirds are jamming transmissions from the planet."
"I suspected as much. Mr. McHenry, target bom warbirds.
Report on warbird readiness?"
"They are running weapons hot... but they are not target-big
us, sir," said Kebron.
Riker turned to Soleta. "Can we confirm that?"
"Confirmed," Soleta said without hesitation.
"They're ready to shoot if need be, but they're not doing so."
"Some sort of Romulan game," Riker said thoughtfully.
'Trying to make us guess what they're up to."
"I don't like this," said Shelby.
"What's to like?" muttered Kebron.
"Bring us in slowly, Mr. McHenry," said Riker.
"Let's get them to move off. I want them clear of that planet"
"Sir," Shelby said, turning to face Riker,
"something's wrong here."
"Specify."
"They're just sitting there, as if they're daring us to get
closer. Why would they do that?"
"Romulans are like cats, Commander. They like to arch their
backs and hope that larger and more formidable enemies will be thrown by
it," Riker told her confidently. "They have men-weapons on line, but
they won't target us because they know
that'll provoke us into firing. They want to see if we'll hesitate
to engage them. If we don't hesitate, if we don't show fear, they'll move off.
If we do ... they're that much more likely to attack. Except that most likely
the ones they will attack will be the planet in an attempt to strong-arm us
into surrendering. No hesitation, Commander, and no fear. It's all based on an
old earth game called 'chicken.' "
"Captain, as much as I appreciate the assorted barnyard
analogies, I maintain that something doesn't seem right. I suggest we hold our
position. Make them come to us."
"I've had a lot more dealings with Romulans than you, commander,
with all due respect," Riker said firmly. "I know how they
operate."
"What if they've changed their method of operation?"
The eyes of the bridge crew were going back and forth, from Shelby
to Riker and back, as if they were watching a tennis match. McHenry, meantime,
operating on his last instructions, kept the Starship moving forward.
"Sir, I'm telling you, they're up to something. I can feel
it," Shelby said.
"And how would you suggest we find out just what it is
they're 'up to,' Commander?" Riker tried to keep his voice even, but it
was difficult to refrain from sarcasm.
"For what it's worth," offered McHenry, "we may be
able to ask them face-to-face. At this course and speed, if they don't back
down, we're going to collide with one of them in two minutes, ten
seconds."
"It won't come to that," Riker said. "Even if they
open fire, it won't be with anything our shields can't handle. We'll do far
worse damage with return fire. They can't afford a pitched battle. They won't
want to, either. It's not the Romulan way."
"Captain..." Shelby said, with clear exasperation in her
voice.
But the more annoyed Shelby got, the calmer Riker felt.
"Commander... we're not going to run from two Romulan vessels who don't
even have us targeted. That would send a message that none of us wants to
send. Understood?" he said in a tone that indicated no further discussion
would be appreciated.
Shelby straightened up in her chair, moved her gaze solidly to the
screen, and without looking at Riker, said, "Aye, sir."
The Excalibur drew closer, closer still. And still the Romulans
weren't moving.
"Contact, one minute," McHenry said.
"Fire a warning shot across the lead ship's bow."
Kebron promptly did so, a phaser lancing out and narrowly missing
the lead Romulan warbird's bow section. Still, the vessels didn't move.
"Attention Romulan vessels," Riker said firmly over the
open hailing channels. "We are not turning off course, repeat, we are not
turning off course. You are instructed to vacate the area immediately. If you
do not, we will fire, repeat, we will fire. Reply."
"Sir!" Soleta informed him. "The ships are moving
off. They are powering down their weapons."
McHenry, who was not particularly looking forward to the prospect
of slamming the Excalibur into a Romulan warbird, let out an audible
sigh of relief.
Riker turned to Shelby and said, "I would have to say that
constitutes a reply, wouldn't you, Commander?" But Shelby said nothing in
response. Riker could only chalk it up to being a poor sport. All-business,
Riker turned to McHenry and said, "All right, Lieutenant... let's remember
mat the purpose of this is to track them to whatever base they may be operating
from. They'll likely go into warp, and that's when we'll have to—"
And that was when McHenry's board shut down completely.
McHenry gaped at the sudden loss of his instrumentation. It wasn't
as if he needed it, but nonetheless the fact that it had abruptly gone south
was disconcerting. "Uhm, sir... we may have a problem..."
'Tactical systems down," Kebron announced.
"All sensors, all scanners down," Soleta said.
"Lefler, what the hell is going on with shipboard?"
Riker demanded.
Lefler desperately tried to make sense of it, but the answer she
was coming back with was virtually incomprehensible. Her ringers flew over the
control padds, but nothing was coming back at her. "Sir..." she said
with a tone of pure incredulity, "our computer's crashed."
"What?"
The entire bridge was promptly plunged into total blackness. The
front viewing screen went blank. Moments later, die emergency lights came on,
giving the ship's command center an eerie Halloween-esque glow. Riker was on his
feet, leaning over Lefler's ops station. He couldn't believe it "Our power
is done ...?"
"Not a power loss, sir. Power's all still there. But the computer
routes everything, unless we tell it otherwise," Lefler said. "The
only thing that's functioning at the moment is the emergency life support
system. That's a bottom line fail safe. But otherwise we're dead in space. No
guidance systems, no weaponry, no shields... nothing!"
"Find a way to get us out of here," Riker ordered.
"Quick, let's crack out the oars," suggested McHenry.
"Stow it, lieutenant!" Shelby said, also out of her
chair. "We have got zero time before the Romulans move in on us. Lefler,
try to reroute via manual..."
Suddenly the air in the bridge began to shimmer, and an
all-too-recognizable hum sounded within the confined area. And Riker knew, even
before they materialized, what he was going to see.
A Romulan raiding party, fully armed and ready to annihilate
anyone who opposed mem, appeared dead center of the bridge. And standing
foursquare in the front, with her finger on a trigger and a smirk on her face,
was Sela.
"Hello, Will," she purred. "Miss me? Because this
time, I won't miss you." And she aimed her phaser straight at his face.
XIII.
lodec looked at his reflection in the polished wall and barely recognized
himself.
Naturally he still possessed the bronze skin that marked him as
one of the Danteri race. But his hair was dirty and matted, his beard thick and
scraggly. Oddly enough, it may have been that, even more than his imprisonment
itself, that was the most depressing thing with which he had to contend. For
Lodec had once been a soldier, and his training, his very essence, cried out
for a neat and trim presentation to the world. Servitude, lack of freedom...
these he could handle. But being reduced to looking like a slob? It was more
than he should have had to bear.
Somehow, though, he suspected that those who were running the Andorian
prison ship that he was being held upon weren't going to be sympathetic to his
plight.
Lodec coughed again, but none of the other prisoners who were in
the cramped barracks with him paid any attention. He felt a deep rattling about
in his throat and would have been most grateful for some sort of medication to
ease the congestion before it grew into something far worse. But nothing was
forthcoming from the Andorians.
Gods, did he hate the Andorians.
The blue .skin was almost hurtful to his eyes, it was so glaring.
When they spoke, the Andorians did so in a sort of whisper that almost made
them seem the most polite of races. But the ones who were running the vessel
were among the most sadistic bastards that Lodec had ever had the opportunity
of dealing with. They would deprive the prisoners of food for days on end, and
when they did give them sustenance, it was so wretched that it became almost
impossible to hold it down. In many instances it was, in fact, impossible, and
the stench of the heaved food would hang in the air of the cells for ages until
the hideously slow filtration system finally expunged them.
The worst thing of all was that there was really no need for the
transportation of the prisoners to take so damned long. The transport was
equipped with warp drive, and could easily have gotten to its destination
within a few days. Instead, it was taking its own sweet time, proceeding
mostly on impulse drive, utilizing warp only every so often when proceeding
through areas of space where prolonged travel might result in jeopardy to the
crew (since the crew didn't give a damn about the cargo). There were a couple
of theories among the prisoners as to why it was taking so damned long. One was
that the prison for which they were bound was overcrowded, and they were
waiting either for prisoners aboard the transport or prisoners at the receiving
end to die in order to free up space. Another theory was that it was simply
part of the softening-up process. Prison officials didn't want to have to deal
with prisoners who might have some fight left in them. So their spirits were
battered and broken along the way, making them nice and malleable when they
arrived.
And so one day stretched out into another for Lodec and the others
who had been luckless enough to transgress against the Andorians.
He lay on his bunk in the cramped quarters that he shared with a
number of other prisoners and murmured to himself, This is not how my life was
supposed to turn out"
Suddenly the door to the quarters slid open, the glare of light
from the hallway outside nearly blinding as his eyes tried to adjust Standing
in the doorway was Macaskill, the transport commander who was exceptionally
softspoken—even for an Andorian—and exceptionally ruthless—even for an
Andorian.
He was an older Andorian, his skin a more pale blue than the
others, but that made him no less deadly.
"I'm looking for volunteers," he whispered, so much so
that Lodec had to strain to hear him. As the prisoners blinked to get the sleep
from their eyes, Lodec glanced around and then pointed at several in rapid
succession: "You," he said, "and you... and you. And you."
And one of the ones he chose was Lodec.
Slowly, Lodec sat up. He rubbed at his wrists which, as always,
had the electronic manacles secured to them. He let out a long, unsteady sigh,
but knew better than to ask what was so important that they had to be rousted
from bed at that time of night. He wasn't likely to get any sort of answer in
any event, and far more likely that he'd simply get a major shock pounded
through him. That was certainly not aggravation that he needed. Besides, when
one got right down to it, what did it matter if he knew what was going on or
not? He was still going to have to do what he was told anyway. His life was not
his own, and had not been for some time.
Then, to his surprise, one of the other prisoners asked the very
question that he hadn't seen fit to risk punishment over: "What's this all
about?" It was a Pazinian, a very small and harmless-looking species, with
a perpetually wistful look on its vaguely avian face. His voice was
high-pitched and reedy.
To his even greater astonishment, Macaskill answered without
hesitation. "We've come upon a small freighter hi distress, and will be
requiring your volunteered aid to unload its cargo," he said. "We are
not in the salvage business, of course. But it turns out that the pilot's
carrying a shipment of gold-pressed latinum. Naturally, in good conscience, we
could not turn away from a sentient being in need."
"Or from the latinum?" asked the Pazinian.
"Naturally," Macaskill said. "That goes without
saying." Macaskill then tapped a small control device on his wrist... and
energy lanced through the Pazinian, his arms flying out to either side as if
he'd been crucified. He let out a shriek and collapsed to the ground, quivering
and spasming as Macaskill continued calmly, "On 'that basis, you probably
should not have said it.
He then turned to another prisoner, pointed and indicated
that he should take the Pazinian's place. "The freighter is
presently in our main bay. We're drafting you to help unload it May I safely
assume there will be no further questions?"
It was an eminently safe assumption. And as they filed out, Lodec
couldn't help but wonder if the Pazinian had simply been that anxious to get
out of helping with the shipment. It seemed a rather extreme thing to do just
to get out of some work. On the other hand, as the Pazinian lay there
insensate, Lodec mused upon the fact that at least the Pazinian had gotten to
go back to sleep.
They trudged down to the mam bay in silence, several Andorian
guards falling into step alongside mem. In point of fact, they weren't really
needed. The manacles were more than enough to keep the prisoners from fighting
back or even, absurdity of absurdities, escaping. But their presence helped to
pile on the feeling of hopelessness. Talking was actively discouraged, under
all circumstances. The Andorians had means of eavesdropping even when the
prisoners were by themselves. The captors didn't want to take any chances that
the captives might put together some sort of breakout strategy. Lodec tried at
one point to stifle a loud yawn, but was unable to do so. This got him a fairly
fierce scowl from one of the guards, but no further recriminations, and he
considered himself extremely lucky.
They arrived in the main bay, and sure enough, mere it was: A
reasonably small freighter. There was nothing particularly impressive-looking
about it. In fact, it seemed rather old and worn out, the hull distressed and
pockmarked with years of service hi the harsh vacuum of space. The obvious
captain of the ship was standing just outside the main door of the freighter,
engaged in what appeared to be a fairly animated discussion with one of the
Andorian guards.
The freighter captain turned and looked at Lodec with what
appeared to be bottomless purple eyes. In a heartbeat, Lodec knew the man was a
Xenexian. Then he saw the scar that ran • down the side of the man's face...
... and he knew exactly which Xenexian it was.
He had absolutely no idea how to react. He had heard many
conflicting reports about the life of the rebel outlaw who had broken Xenex
from the control of Danter. Lodec had never had
the opportunity to come face to face in battle with M'k'n'zy of
Calhoun, but he had certainly heard enough about him. Moreover, he had lost a
number of friends to Calhoun's fabled sword, strength and resourcefulness.
Ostensibly, he had heard that Calhoun had then left Xenex once
freedom was established and joined Starfleet. But his awareness of Calhoun had
eroded over the years. There had been rumors that he had left Starfleet, that
he had taken up an aimless, freelance life. It seemed a rather pathetic
existence for one who had once been the warlord of Xenex and one of his
people's greatest heroes. Lodec had always thought, though, that people such as
M'k'n'zy were simply destructive types at their core. When they turned their
destructive tendencies outward, they could accomplish amazing feats that left
enemies stunned. But when they had no opponents before them, that selfsame
destruction often wound up turning inward, and they would slowly diminish
themselves until their greatness faded to nothing.
And now here was evidence that all that he had heard was true. The
great M'k'n'zy of Calhoun, reduced to being a common freighter pilot. Probably
an underhanded one at that, transporting gold-pressed latinum. For all Lodec
knew, Calhoun was even in the process of stealing it.
Macaskill had stridden up to M'k'n'zy, and in his customarily
soft voice, he said, "So... I understand your name is Calhoun."
Calhoun nodded. Obviously he wasn't going by an assumed name. How
very foolish.
"I am Macaskill... your savior."
"I appreciate the help," Calhoun told him. But there was
an expression in his face that indicated he knew that the help would not come
without a price. Sure enough, he said, "So... I assume that you'll be
seeking some sort of finder's fee."
"We did find you," agreed Macaskill. "We have taken
the time to expend our resources in aiding you. Your ship is not functioning;
you will require us to repair it, I trust."
"How much are we talking about?" asked Calhoun, clearly
resigned to the inevitable.
"Does ten percent seem fair to you?"
Calhoun looked surprised. "It... does indeed. I have to
admit, I thought you'd be looking for much more than that. But a ten percent
commission seems more than fair."
"No... you don't understand," Macaskill said. His smile
displayed a perfect row of white teeth. "Ten percent of your cargo... is
what you will be left with."
"What!" Calhoun clearly couldn't believe it. He stomped back and forth a
few feet, shaking his head and gesticulating wildly. "What!" he
said again. "Look, you don't understand! This isn't my latinum! I'm
just transporting it! A ten percent loss, at least I can cover that by giving
up a portion of my fee... grozit, probably all of my fee. But if you
walk off with ninety percent of the cargo, the people I'm supposed to be delivering
it to aren't going to be happy! To be specific, they're going to be rather
angry, and they'll be taking out mat anger on me! If you gut me that much, I'm
dead!"
"No. If we toss you into space, you're dead," the
Andorian politely corrected him. "If we fix your ship and leave you ten
percent of your cargo, we are giving you a fighting chance. But if you do not
wish to have that chance..."
And be extended a hand hi die general direction of the airlock.
"I will give you precisely two standard minutes to make up
your mind," said the Andorian, "although I strongly suspect what your
answer will be."
Calhoun, looking stunned, walked hi the general direction of the
prisoners. He was shaking his head in disbelief, clearly unable to deal with
what had happened. The pity that Lodec felt for him grew and grew. Poor devil,
indeed, to have fallen this low.
And then, as Calhoun drew within a few feet of the prisoners, his
gaze shifted—ever so slightly—in Lodec's direction. And something seemed to
come alive in his face, an almost fearful determination that Lodec had no idea
how to interpret
Then Lodec saw Calhoun's mouth move silently, addressing the mute
question to him: Lodec?
Lodec nodded imperceptibly. He had no clue as to what to expect.
Calhoun mourned two more words: Hold on.
At which point, Lodec forgot himself. Out loud, he said,
"Hold on? To what?"
The confused comment drew a puzzled look from Macaskill.
"Prisoner... who told you you could speak? Calhoun ... it's time for you
to admit the hopelessness of your situation. If you will cooperate, perhaps we
can be generous and provide you with an additional five percent of—"
Calhoun turned to face Macaskill, and his attitude had completely
changed. He was standing straighter, more determined, and utterly confident And
he called out, "Freighter! Execute offensive preprogram one!"
"What are you—?" Macaskill demanded.
He didn't get the entire question out as the freighter—which had
previously been thought dead in space—roared to life.
From the sides of the vessel, white mist blasted out hi all directions.
Lodec stared, still not grasping what hi the world was happening, and suddenly
Calhoun was at his side. He was slapping some sort of unit on Lodec's face, a
breathing device with goggles attached. Calhoun already had an identical device
affixed to his own face. "Come on. We're leaving," Calhoun told him
curtly.
"But—" Lodec had no idea what to say, no clue as to what
was going on. Something screamed a warning though in his mind, and the warning
said, The deadliest Xenexian who ever lived is trying to make off with you. To
Lodec, there could only be one reasonable conclusion. For whatever reason,
M'k'n'zy of Calhoun had decided to hunt down, kidnap and murder Lodec of
Danter.
It wasn't as if a prison world such as the one that Lodec was
being transported to was any great place to be, but at least he would be alive
mere, and where there was life, there was hope. But if Calhoun got away with
him, he'd have no hope at all.
Blind panic seized Lodec, and as Calhoun tried to drag him
forward, Lodec abruptly began to struggle. "What are you doing?"
demanded Calhoun. "Will you come on!"
All around mem, people were dropping. Macaskill, who had been
closed to the ship, went down first Others were tumbling just as fast As they
lay on the ground, Lodec saw that they were virtually frozen hi position. They
weren't frozen in the sense of people covered with ice. Rather, they were
paralyzed, every muscle hi their bodies apparently completely taut.
Lodec struggled all the more, trying to claw the mask off
Calhoun's face. "You idiot!" snapped Calhoun, and he
punched Lodec just once on the side of the head. Lodec sagged, not lapsing
into unconsciousness, but the fight momentarily knocked out of him. From that point
on, he had no choice at all. Calhoun half carried, half dragged him to the
freighter. The engines of the freighter were roaring to life; obviously the
entire business about the ship being helpless had been a ruse.
"Let me... go ... you'll kill me ..." Lodec managed to
get out, although his voice was muffled by the mask.
"Fool! If I wanted to kill you, I'd just do it here and now!
Snap your neck and rip your head off as proof!" Calhoun said angrily as he
approached the freighter. The main door automatically swung open and Calhoun
shoved Lodec into the main cabin. Calhoun continued, "I wouldn't be going
to all this trouble if your murder was my only concern!"
"Oh..." The panic was beginning to slip away from Lodec,
even though he still didn't comprehend just what was going on. "That...
hadn't occurred to me."
"I bet it hadn't. Hard to believe your kind ruled my world
for years."
The door slammed shut as Calhoun swiftly operated the computer
interface on the control panel. "What are you doing?" asked Lodec.
"Ordering the transport's computer to open up the bay
doors.... there!"
The massive main bay doors of the transport ship began to open
wide. The stars beckoned as the freighter lifted off.
Then Lodec heard shouting from outside, and several shots ricocheted
off the freighter's hull. "Damn," muttered Calhoun.
The doors began to slide shut again.
"Hold on," Calhoun said, and gunned the ship forward.
Lodec gasped. The doors were closing far too fast, and there was
absolutely no way that the freighter was going to make it. He looked to
Calhoun... and saw what he could only describe as a demented grin on Calhoun's
face. Either the man was utterly suicidal... or else he simply really loved a
challenge.
With astounding dexterity, Calhoun manipulated the controls and
the freighter leaped forward even faster, half-turning sideways and sliding out
just before the bay doors slammed shut.
"You did it!" shouted Lodec. "That... that white
stuff! That mist! What was that?"
"Gyro-mist Put them into temporary suspended animation ...
uh oh."
"Uh oh? What is... uh oh?" Lodec asked, scrambling to
the front of the freighter.
Then he saw it. There, tracking on the screen, were two plasma
torpedos, coming in fast. They'd been launched by the prisoner transport, and
they were going to overtake the freighter in no time.
Calhoun didn't appear to be the least bit concerned. Instead he
flipped open a panel and tapped a blue square inside.
The freighter shuddered slightly and an alarmed Lodec said,
"Are we hit?!"
"If we'd been hit," snorted Calhoun, "you wouldn't
be here to ask that question. Those were torpedo counter-measures. Watch,"
and he tapped another panel.
The viewscreen showed a rear view of the vessel, and me transport
was clearly hi evidence. And then, to his astonishment, he saw the plasma
torpedos that had been pursuing them... streaking straight back toward the
transport. "There's something small... leading mem..." Lodec said
after a moment
"You've got good eyes," Calhoun admitted. "That's
the counter-measure. It's a false beacon. Draws the torpedos away from the
intended target and toward one that I far prefer. Such as..."
The torpedos slammed into the rear of the transport. The ship
shuddered under the horrific impact The transport had shields which it had
barely managed to get up in time, but it was not designed to be a combat vessel
and the shields were minimal at best. The first of the torpedos didn't get
through, but it did damage the shields sufficiently that the second one blasted
into the hull. Plasma tore through the bulkhead, and the ship sparked
furiously. All along the transport vessel, the lights went out and within
seconds the entire ship was dark.
"That should take them some time to repair," Calhoun
said calmly. "If it's repairable at all, that is. In the meantime, they'll
be the ones who are floating in space. Let's hope that anyone
who comes upon them will be a bit more generous than they were
going to be with me."
"There was never any latinum on this ship," Lodec said.
"That's right."
"And you were never actually crippled. This ship, I mean. It
was a lure to get aboard the vessel."
"Also right. You pick up things quickly."
"So all of this ... was to get me out of there." He
paused and then asked, with a sense of dread, "Why?"
"Because someone wants you out. That's all you need to know
at the moment. That, and the fact that we rendezvous at Wrigley's Pleasure
Planet."
"A desirable rendezvous point if ever I've heard one."
The freighter, under Calhoun's guidance, surged forward and leaped
into warp space, leaving the crippled prison transport far behind.
Out of range of the transport, the manacles were no threat to
Lodec. He looked around the interior of the freighter with interest. "Is
this your ship?"
"It is now," said Calhoun. "I've used it from time
to time, but it's been out of commission for a while. It's good to be back,
though." He patted the console in what almost appeared to be the type of
gesture that a person would use with a pet.
"Listen ... I suppose I should—"
"Don't." As if reading his mind, Calhoun briskly cut him
off. "Don't thank me. Don't give me gratitude. I don't want it, I don't
need it. I know who you are. What you are. Just as you know who and what I
am."
"M'k'n'zy the Destroyer," Lodec said softly.
"M'k'n'zy the monster."
"Those and many other names," Calhoun agreed readily.
"I'd like to think I earned them all. And I do not suggest you press me
about old times, because I assure you the years have not made me think more
kindly about your race. There's little forgiveness in my heart."
. "In your
heart?" scoffed Lodec. Part of him screamed a warning, that engaging in
discourse with this man could result in a very quick and painful death if
Calhoun were so inclined. But Calhoun was clearly operating on someone else's
behalf, and it was obviously in Calhoun's interest to bring Lodec back
in one piece. That gave Lodec a certain amount of boldness.
"In your heart? You were personally responsible for the deaths of
friends of mine. Good friends, good men, who deserved better than to die on
some damnable foreign planet at the hands of barbarian heathens. Do you think
that we ..."
"What?" Calhoun cut him off, and there was danger in his eyes. "Do I
think what?"
Lodec laughed softly to himself and shook his head. "Do you
think... that we wanted to be there? Most of us didn't give a damn about Xenex.
We did what we were told. We followed orders."
"The oldest excuse in the universe."
"It works for Starfleet officers."
"Yes. It does. Notice that I'm not one," Calhoun pointed
out.
Lodec's back was against one of the bulkheads. Suddenly feeling
all the strength ebbing from his legs, he allowed himself to slide to the
floor. Drained, he said, "It was all... a very long time ago. And I
suppose none of it matters anymore."
"No," said Calhoun. "I suppose it doesn't."
And then, after a long pause, Lodec said, "Thank you anyway.
For getting me out of there." And after a hesitation, he added, "You
don't have to say 'you're welcome.' "
Calhoun didn't.
XIV.
the situation in the engineering room of the Excalibur had not come close
to panic ... but it wasn't all that far away from it, either.
Burgoyne 172 and Ensign Beth were sorting through the isolinear
chips with a finely controlled franticness. Throughout the engine room, the
rest of Burgoyne's people were checking every circuit, every possible route
that might explain what in hell had just happened to cause the ship's computers
to come tumbling around their ears.
S/he held a stack of the thin, hard chips in hir hand. "These
things are useless ... useless," Burgoyne said, the "s"
in "useless" extending to a snake-like hiss. "The only way we're
going to get things back on line is to bypass the computer altogether.
Everything's got to be done manually." S/he glanced in the direction of
the warp core. The power emanating from it was still comfortingly humming
away. "At least power still exists in the ship. Thank the Great Bird for that.
If the engines were out and we had to do a cold start..."
"If there's power, then why isn't it getting to the rest of
the systems?" Beth said, her frustration mounting. Even as she complained,
though, she was rerouting systems to get around
the stalled computer. "Henderson! Camboni! Punch this pulse
through subsystems AI through A7!"
"It's like a body that's had a stroke" Burgoyne said as
s/he started reracking the isolinear chips in hope that s/he could find some
sort of short cut s/he hadn't spotted before. "The brain is functioning
fine. The rest of the body may be in perfect shape. But the connectors have
been cut. If we can—"
Suddenly they heard the sound of transporters. And there,
materializing not ten feet away from Burgoyne, were four Romulans, heavily
armed and clearly ready to take possession of the engine room.
Burgoyne had no weapons on hir. S/he hadn't been expecting
trouble. The Romulans, for their part, looked prepared to start shooting the
moment they finished their materialization. Immediately what came to the
forefront for the Hermat was concern about the safety of hir ship and the
safety of hir people. Hir crew, hir engineers who looked to hir for guidance
and leadership. And these no-good Romulans were going to show up and wreak havoc
in hir engine room?
Not bloody likely.
At first glance, Burgoyne did not look particularly daunting. One
would not readily appreciate hir strength and speed until one found oneself in
a dire situation... which was more or less what the engineering crew of the Excalibur
had on its hands. Burgoyne, however, did not hesitate.
S/he snatched an assortment of isolinear chips from their receptacles.
And the moment that the Romulans materialized, s/he let fly, one after the
other, in rapid succession.
Several years ago, Burgoyne had seen a magician, a card master who
billed himself simply as Jay, entertaining at a local pub during one of hir
pubcrawling expeditions. His mastery of simple pasteboard cards had been
nothing short of astounding. Claiming to be descended from a long line of
master cardsmen stretching back centuries, the most impressive stunt mat he had
pulled was hurling playing cards with such velocity that they had actually
lodged in solid objects, such as fruit. Burgoyne had been incredibly fascinated
by the stunt, and with hir long ringers and quick-snap wrists, had long felt
that s/he would be eminently capable of imitating the act. And so s/he had
taken up card flipping as a hobby, developing superb accuracy so
that s/he had been able to hit a target from a reasonable distance
away.
S/he had never, however, been able to get sufficient velocity for
the cards actually to pierce anything... even a fruit. However, s/he had never
had quite the incentive that s/he had at that moment. Furthermore, isolinear
chips were harder and nastier than playing cards.
Consequently, as s/he tossed the chips with a vicious sidearm snap
of hir wrist, the things shot across the distance like bullets, and had about
the same devastating effect. The chips were relatively harmless when they were
stationary. When they were hurtling at high speed, however, they were
astoundingly nasty.
One Romulan took one square in the base of the throat. He choked
on his own blood while the second turned and got one right in the eye socket,
and went down, shrieking. The third took a step in Burgoyne's direction while
bringing up his gun, which proved to be a mistake... not the motion of the gun,
but the movement toward Burgoyne, because the increased proximity resulted in
the thrown chip literally cleaving straight into the Romulan's skull. He went
down without a whimper. It had all happened to fast, all within split seconds,
that the fourth Romulan's jaw dropped open in amazement. This proved to be a
spectacular blunder as the chip sailed through his open mouth and lodged in the
back of his throat. He went down gagging.
Four appeared, four dropped, in less time than it took for the
engineering staff to fully comprehend that they were under attack. Beth turned
pale as she saw the Romulans piled up, one atop the other on the floor. The
only one who was still alive was the one with the chip in his eye, and then he
stopped moving a moment later, apparently dead from shock.
Burgoyne regarded them with remarkable calm and then glanced at
the chips remaining in hir hand. "Hunh. I was wrong. These things were
useful after all." Then, without hesitation, s/he shouted, "Shields
and warp drive, first and second priorities! We want to stop these bastards
from beaming on, and we want to get the hell out of here! Move!"
The largest raiding party, composed of about twenty Romulans, had
materialized in deck 10. There had followed a furious
pitched battle with an Excalibur security team which had resulted
in casualties on both sides. The security crew, which had been far outnumbered,
had managed to whittle the Romulans down to twelve, but the Excalibur team
was hurt far more badly, and with only three of them still alive, had gone into
full retreat. The Romulans, sensing victory, had gone in pursuit, and the trio
of badly wounded, barely alive security guards had been certain that their time
was up.
They had rounded a corner, hearing the pounding of the Romulans
right behind them... and then they had come upon Si Cwan. The Thallonian noble
was simply standing there. His palms were pressed together, his eyes closed,
and he looked as if he were delving deeply into some sort of inner strength.
"Go," he said softly. "I will hold them."
The security team was in no shape to argue. One of them tried to
thrust his phaser into Si Cwan's hands, but Si Cwan waved it off. "I don't
like weapons," he said. "One tends to rely on them too much. Go. I
will be fine."
Moments later, the attacking Romulans came around the corner, and
Si Cwan was still standing there, just as calm as he'd been moments ago. The
fact that a dozen Romulans had weapons angled squarely at him did not seem to
bother him particularly.
He put his hands over his head in complete surrender. "I'm
not one of them," he said, walking slowly toward the Romulans. "I'm
just a passenger. In fact, I'm..." he started to stammer. "I'm a rich
passenger. Rich and influential. See? I've... I've no weapons. No way of
hurting you. Please... don't kill me ... please... take me prisoner..."
"Romulans," said the foremost one in the group,
"don't take prisoners." And he aimed his weapon at Si Cwan.
Si Cwan, hands over his head, was still several feet away. It did
not, however, matter. He leaped straight up, swinging his legs upward as he did
so. In one smooth movement, both of his feet caught the closest Romulans
squarely in the pits of their stomachs. They doubled over. He had barely landed
before he jumped again, this time nailing them squarely in the face. Both of
their weapons flipped into the air, and Si Cwan caught them on the way down. He
criss-crossed his arms and opened fire.
* It was true. Si Cwan generally preferred not to use weapons. However,
he prided himself on his adaptability.
Within seconds, six more Romulans were lying strewn about the
floor. The remaining half dozen opened fire on Si Cwan, but he grabbed up die
fallen body of the nearest Romulan and used it as a shield. A disruptor shot
disintegrated the top half of the Romulan, and then Si Cwan hurled the
remainder of his carcass, knocking down two more of the Romulans.
And then Si Cwan laid into the remaining Romulans. They fired at
him, point blank... and missed. He scrabbled across the floor, moving like a
gigantic spider, and then forward-rolled and came up with his feet planted in
their faces. Just that quickly he was back on his feet, and he snapped the neck
of another without slowing down, grabbed yet another and smashed him against
the wall with such force that his face was little more than a red smear.
Blood jetted from his opponents as Si Cwan waded into them. His
hands like spears, his movements economical and with machine-like precision, he
bobbed and weaved through the increasingly frantic—to say nothing of
diminishing— crowd of Romulans.
When Sela aimed the phaser at William Riker, she did not for one
moment think that there was any question of missing.
She was also under the impression that the four Romulans she had
with her would be able to handle matters. They were, after all, heavily armed.
The average bridge complement was usually less than a dozen, and only one of
them—the on-bridge security guard—was ever armed. Plus, she was all too
familiar with the ways of die Federation. They liked to talk, to discuss, to
debate. When they appeared on the bridge, "What do you want!" would
be die first defiant words to leap from the throat of the ship's commander—in
this case, as delightful luck would have it, Will Riker himself. After that
would follow a dialogue, a back and form, vituperation, sneering and cutting
remarks, and so on.
A substantial threat, though? That truly didn't cross Sela's mind.
That was why she knew that she could execute Will Riker with impunity. The
boldness, the viciousness of her act would be enough to completely paralyze the
battle-unready
crew. As his lifeless body tumbled, so would their resistance. She
was absolutely positive of mat.
Which was why it was all the more confusing to her when she heard
the sound of tearing metal. She had no idea what the cause was. She didn't have
long to wait to find out.
As hard as it was to believe, she had not noticed the Brikar when
she had arrived on the bridge. He had been crouched behind his tactical board.
For a large individual, Zak Kebron had a surprising way of coming across as
less substantial than he truly was. Now, however, he made no such effort. He
emerged from behind his station, gripped the hand railing that ran across the
upper section of the bridge... and pulled.
The railing tore out of its moorings. It took the Brikar no more
than an instant to be clutching the massive piece of metal, and the instant the
Romulans were turning to see what in the name of the Praetor had caused that
ear-splitting racket, Kebron was already swinging the railing like a baseball
bat.
Sela saw it coming and ducked. The Romulan standing directly
behind her was far less fortunate. The railing struck him squarely in the head.
The humanoid neck is actually one of the weakest links in the body, the
flexibility of the neck coming at a high price. Romulans snared the same
weakness as humans. Consequently the Romulan's head was sent flying from his
shoulders. Sela jumped back, emitting a most un-Romulan shriek, and even as the
horrified Romulans tried to react, Kebron took a step forward and shoved the
jagged-ended metal railing squarely forward into the chest of another Romulan.
A third Romulan let out yelp that was actually higher-pitched than Sela's as
the impaled Romulan crashed into him.
It had all happened within seconds, and Sela had been so
distracted that she had actually forgotten about Riker. But she had a forceful
reminder as Riker lunged forward, grabbed her gun hand and shoved the phaser
straight up.
He was strong, but she was no slouch either. Giving as good as she
got, the two of them struggled hand-to-hand, and then with a grunt, Riker
shoved Sela back. She tripped over one of the fallen bodies, sprawled... and
that was when Riker spotted what appeared to be a small comm device on Sela's
wrist. He noticed that all of them were wearing similar equipment. "Get
that thing off her!" shouted Riker.
At that
moment, the fourth Romulan managed to open fire with his disruptor. He nailed
Zak Kebron squarely in the chest. Kebron rocked back on his heels and then
announced, "Ouch," before getting the Romulan to drop the gun through
the simple expedient of crushing his hand so that he couldn't hold it ever
again.
Shelby, meantime, moving with remarkable speed, literally hurled
herself atop the fallen Sela. With a snarl, she got a grip on Sela's arm and
received a punch in the head for her trouble.
"Ha!" shouted Sela right in her face.
In response, Shelby slammed her fist down against Sela's head. She
heard a satisfying crunch of bone; it would have been far less satisfying had
it actually been her own bone.
"Ha!" Shelby shouted right back, and tore the comm
device from Sela's wrist. "Zak!" she shouted as she tossed it in
Ke-bron's direction. It landed on the floor at his feet, and Zak simply
stepped on it The Romulan communications device... and her locator for
beaming... crunched rather pleasingly beneath the massive foot of the Brikar.
The other Romulan who remained alive had already hit his comm
device, and he was shouting, "Get me out!" As Kebron tried to grab at
his comm link as well, the other two Romulans, along with the corpses, vanished
in a haze of molecules. Sela, without her communicator link which would have
enabled them to home in on her, didn't go anywhere.
But she was hardly finished. From the folds of her tunic, she
pulled a long-bladed knife and lunged straight at Riker. At that moment, a slim
hand clamped down upon her shoulder. Sela's head snapped around, her eyes
rolled up into the top of her head, and she sank to the floor without a sound.
Standing directly behind her, Soleta simply shook her head. "If you had
simply allowed me to get close enough to apply the nerve pinch," she said
to Shelby and Riker with mild reproof, "we could have terminated this
violence far more quickly."
"Captain!" Lefler suddenly called from her station. To
her credit, she had never budged from it even as chaos had unleashed itself on
the bridge. "We've got shields back on line... and engines, too!"
Riker, who was envisioning the warbirds moving in on the still
blind and weaponless Starship, allowed a quick sigh of re-
lief. "Bless you, Burgy!" he called to the engineer who
obviously couldn't hear him. "McHenry, take us out of here!"
"We can't set coordinates," McHenry replied.
"That's run through the computer. Of course, I could probably ..."
The ship suddenly shuddered under a blast to her starboard, and
then another to port. Obviously the warbirds were moving in, and it was
impossible to fire back. Although shields were back on line, that was hardly
going to save them for an extended period of time.
"McHenry, I know we'll be flying blind, but at this point if
we wind up in the middle of a supernova, we won't really be much worse off than
we are!" Riker told him.
'True enough," admitted McHenry. "Hold on."
He closed his eyes. Riker found that disconcerting for a moment,
and then realized that it didn't make all that much difference. Not only did
they have no instrumentation, they didn't even have the viewscreen.
The warp engines flared to life, and seconds later the wounded,
but still active, Excalibur leaped into warp and was gone.
"We were set up! That's got to be what happened!" Shelby
said furiously.
Shelby, Riker, Soleta, Sela, Lefler and Kebron were in the
conference room. Kebron was there mostly to keep Sela in line, and he did so
through the simple expedient of keeping one hand firmly on her shoulder with
his hand on her. The handbinders were simply a formality. This was more
effective than one might have thought, because every time Sela tried to stand
or shrug Zak's hand away, she failed utterly. She had, by that point, given up,
and was just sitting in place with a rather irritated expression.
"Set up," Shelby continued, and she looked angrily at
Lefler. "Si Cwan should have known."
"We don't know that we were 'set up,' Commander, and even if
we were, there was no way that he could have known. He's only as good as his
information," Lefler said defensively.
"Then his information should have been better," Riker
said, no happier about the situation than Shelby. "Mr. Kebron, where is Si
Cwan?"
- "Intraship communications are still down," rumbled
Kebron. "I've sent a security team to find him and bring him to this
meeting, since you said you wanted to see—"
The door slid open. Lefler's gasp could be heard immediately. The
others contained themselves, but just barely.
Si Cwan was covered with blood, and since it was for the most part
green, it obviously wasn't his. Blood on his tunic, on his face, and on his
hands. He had clearly been in a massive pitched battle with the Romulans.
Seeing all the Romulan blood on him, Sela visibly paled.
Riker half rose from his chair. "Lord Cwan... are you all
right?"
Si Cwan seemed puzzled that Riker would even have to ask. "Of
course. Why?"
"Uhm..." Riker hesitated a moment, looked at the others
in the room who nodded silent assent with what was clearly going through his
mind. "Why don't you head back to your quarters... get cleaned up,
relax... you've... clearly had a rough time..."
"You said you wished to see me. You sent a security guard to
escort me here for that purpose."
"We'd heard that you'd been in a fight, that's all,"
Shelby said quickly.
"That is true. Is mat all you wished to know?"
"Yes," said Riker.
"Very well." With that, he turned and left the
conference lounge.
Somewhat more sedate in her tone, but still with no less
conviction, Shelby continued, "These Narobi natives... Si Cwan said they
were machine beings. And our computers went down. That certainly
suggests..."
"That it was not a coincidence," Soleta agreed. "I
have been doing further research since Si Cwan brought them to my attention.
Their cybernetic make-up would appear to give them some sort of affinity for
computers. That would put the odds of their involvement, and a possible
alliance with the Romulans, at 83 percent"
"I had heard that 92 percent of all statistics are made
up," Kebron observed.
This small attempt at levity actually drew smiles from sever-
al people in the conference room which, considering the circumstances,
was quite the achievement. But then, turning serious once more, Riker turned
to Sela and said, "It's more than that, isn't it, Sela. A lot more."
"Scamper back to the Enterprise, Riker," Sela
said contemptuously. "Without Picard to show you how it's done, you're no
threat... and certainly of no interest to me."
Riker didn't rise to the bait, keeping his cool. "You're
going to tell us, Sela. You're going to tell us everything that's going on.
About the Romulan involvement, about the raid on Daystrom ...
everything."
"Over my dead body, Riker."
And there was something in Riker's voice that caught Sela's
attention as he said very deliberately, and very menacingly, "If
necessary, Sela. Only if absolutely necessary."
XV.
there were few worlds in the galaxy that were more of an assault
on the senses than Wrigley's Pleasure Planet. Actually, Calhoun really couldn't
think of any, now that he put his mind to it.
They walked through streets that were in perpetual celebration.
Lights garishly flickered on and off all day and all night, loud music blared
from buildings all around them. Calhoun couldn't help but wonder when the
natives slept, and came to the conclusion that the likely answer was
"never."
Wrigley's Pleasure Planet was entirely a manufactured world,
bought and paid for by one Horatio Wrigley several centuries ago and run by his
family after his death... a passing, it was rumored, that resulted from an
extended stay upon his own world. Supposedly he went with a smile on his face.
There were certainly, Calhoun reasoned, worse ways to go.
Ostensibly, Wrigley had taken the hedonistic lifestyle that he had
found on such worlds as Argelius and Risa and decided to heighten it, jack the
level up to an unprecedented degree. Wrigley's was the only world where you
could see spotlights shining while hi orbit.
Calhoun and Lodec were not exactly allowing themselves to be swept
up in the perpetual celebratory mood. Calhoun ob-
served the gaiety around him as if he were watching from outside
himself. It didn't seem to have anything to do with him or with his life. What
underscored that the most for him was that he was walking down the street with
a living reminder of the oppression his people had suffered under. A Danteri,
right there, right next to him, and he himself had freed him. He would just as
soon let him rot, and yet he had risked himself to set the man free.
It was all., .a very long time ago. And I suppose none of it
matters anymore.
Those had been Lodec's words, and the thing was, Calhoun couldn't
help but wonder if Lodec was correct Two decades. Could it have been that long?
Two decades since he had spearheaded the liberation of Xenex. He hadn't really
dwelt on what that passage of time meant, not really. Twenty years. There were
Xenexians who were adults now who had absolutely no recollection of a time when
Xenex had been anything other than free. For whom the name M'k'n'zy of Calhoun
was simply a name in a history book (plus a name attached to several statues
which dotted the Xenexian landscape, none of which he thought looked a damned
thing like him). Indeed, there were Xenexians to whom the Danteri meant nothing
in any threatening sense.
The fact was mat the leadership which had come in after Calhoun
had itself made many inroads and wound up working quite closely with the
Danteri—a leadership that had been spearheaded by Calhoun's own brother. That
alliance, mat willingness to work with their former oppressor, had driven a
wedge between Mac and his brother that continued in force more or less to the
present day.
Do you think... that we wanted to be there? Most of us didn't
give a damn about Xenex. We did what we were told. We followed orders.
... And I suppose none of it matters anymore...
That wasn't how he wanted to think of the Danteri. It didn't fit
into his view of the universe at all. The Danteri were uniformly oppressive
monsters who wanted nothing but to reestablish their chokehold on Xenex and
hated all things connected with that world. They were heartless bastards who
would just as soon kill Calhoun and his kind as look at them.
They weren't allowed to come across as simply... mortal. Fallible
mortals, tired of fighting, or perhaps grateful to a Xenexian, or even
friendly... it simply wasn't allowed.
None of it matters...
Should it? Should it matter? Was there a statute of limitations
on hatred? Was Calhoun being unreasonable, intransigent? Truthfully, Lodec
seemed a decent enough sort. Once he'd gotten rested, cleaned up, he actually
came across as a man of quick wit and ready tongue, a man who took a slightly
skewed view of the universe.
And his crime against the Andorians? If he was to be believed ...
and he had, at that point, no reason to lie... it had nothing to do with crimes
of violence, or spying, or anything mat one would normally have expected in
such a situation. No, Lodec had made the hideous mistake of having an affair
with the wife of an Andorian high government official. He had not taken kindly
to being cuckolded, and when he'd learned of the involvement, had Lodec brought
up on charges of high crimes against the state. Lodec would have been more than
happy to tell his side of the story, had he not had an electronic gag slapped
across his mouth during the trial. And so a casual tryst by Lodec, who had just
been passing through the homeworld of the Andorians, had turned out to be the
beginning of a fifteen-year prison sentence. Granted, absconding with the affections
of someone's wife was hardly an act that warranted having a medal pinned on
you, but losing one's freedom for fifteen years because of it seemed a bit
excessive. Even Calhoun had to admit that. But part of him wanted to feel that
anything bad which happened to any Danteri was deserved and not to be mourned.
That any ill fortune which befell any Danteri was something he had coming to
him...
Except... that didn't hold up, either. After all, if there were
Xenexian adults who had never been the slaves of Danteri, men it was also an
inevitable conclusion that there were Danteri who not only had never been
party to the oppression of Xenex, but had no inherent interest in Calhoun's
world in the first place. Hell, if one could believe Lodec, he never "gave
a damn" about Xenex to begin with. Of course, he didn't know for sure just
how much he could believe Lodec, for the Danteri had been deliberately
vague about what he himself had done
during the war. He had basically admitted to being involved on a
military level, but he had not gone into specifics. As near as Calhoun was able
to determine, militarily Lodec was not much above a grunt
None of which explained why in the world he was of such interest
to General Thul.
Then Calhoun suddenly became aware of the fact that several
Thallonians were following them.
Mentally he chided himself. That had been unforgivably sloppy. He
had no idea how long they had been behind him. Had they just shown up? Were
they there for several blocks? No way to tell. And he had been too wrapped up
in bis own musings to pay attention.
His first instinct was to confront the Thallonians following him.
If nothing else, the notion pleased his ego. The thought of anything believing
that they could tail Mackenzie Calhoun without his knowledge was galling to
him.
But then he reconsidered. The fact was that they weren't making
any aggressive moves against him. Furthermore, Thul had given Calhoun an
address to which he was supposed to bring Lodec. It was possible that the
Thallonians were there simply to observe, and report any questionable behavior
back to Thul.
If one were to follow that reasoning, one would also assume that
anything construed as being on Thul's side would likewise be reported.
With that notion in mind, Calhoun abruptly draped an arm around
Lodec's shoulders. Lodec was clearly startled, and looked at Calhoun in
surprise. "Is something wrong?" he asked.
"You're right It was a long time ago," Calhoun said.
There's no need to hold grudges."
Lodec let out an obvious sigh of relief. "You can't believe
how glad I am to hear you say that," he told Calhoun. "You've seemed
to be wrapped up in your own thoughts since we got here... I have to admit I
was getting worried. I felt as if you were trying to figure out the best way to
kill me or some such."
"No, no," and Calhoun laughed heartily. If one had
looked closely, one would have seen that there was no touch of humor reflected
in his eyes, but Lodec didn't look closely at all. "No,
that's just my way. I've just been considering the situation, and
concluded that there's nothing to be gained by obsessing about the past. We
should only be concerned about the future, correct? That is, after all, where
we all intend to live."
"I know I do," said Lodec, and he laughed. The noise was
almost painful to Calhoun's ears, but he maintained his outward appearance of
good humor, anyway. He took pains not to glance back at the Thallonians who
were pacing them, since he didn't want to take any chance of giving away to
them that he knew they were there.
They arrived at the prescribed address, and were promptly escorted
upstairs to a private suite. There, in somewhat the same environment as he'd
seen him on earth, was Thul. He was dressed far more festively than he had been
on earth, much more in keeping with the general atmosphere of Wrigley's.
Vara Syndra was also there. Draped alluringly across a chair,
winking at Calhoun, she was wearing an incredibly skintight yellow...
No. She wasn't. Calhoun's eyes widened. She was wearing body
paint. That was it.
He promptly zoned out of the first minute and a half of the
conversation, and only managed to re-enter it through sheer force of will as
Thul was pouring drinks for all of them. Calhoun, cautious as always, mimed
sipping from it but actually left the contents intact. Thul and Lodec were
seated opposite each other, and appeared to be catching up on old times. At mat
moment, Thul was busy speaking directly to Calhoun. It was fortunate that he'd
managed to get his head back on track, as it would have been rather
embarrassing if Thul had asked him a question and Calhoun had been too busy
staring at the thimbleful of paint which constituted the entirety of Vara
Syn-dra's present wardrobe to answer.
"Lodec here was a close friend of my son, Mendan Abbis,"
Thul was saying. "As such, I had promised Mendan that Lodec would remain
under my protection. Up until recently, that promise was merely words, as Lodec
here," and he patted the Danteri's knee, "had always been more than
capable of taking care of himself."
"Oh, yes," Lodec said with amused sarcasm. "I
certainly
was doing a wonderful job of caring for myself, wasn't I. If it
hadn't been for you and Calhoun, Thul, I'd still be en route to the Andorian
prison world right now."
"Everyone needs assistance from time to time in their lives,
my dear Lodec," Thul said.
"The thing is, Thul... poor Mendan is gone," Lodec said,
and there seemed to be genuine sorrow in his voice. "If you had not
assisted me... if you had left me to my fate... then Mendan would never have
known."
"Granted," admitted Thul. "But I, General Gerrid
Thul, made a promise to my son nonetheless, and our family name has always
stood for integrity. Whether Mendan Abbis is alive or not, if my word is not to
be trusted, then truly, what kind of Thul am I?"
'True. Very true." Lodec held up his glass after a moment and
said with quiet conviction, 'To Mendan Abbis."
'To Mendan Abbis," echoed Thul, and so did Calhoun.
"So," Lodec continued, "what now? You have obtained
my freedom for me. Your debt is fulfilled..."
"Hardly," laughed Thul, although there was an odd undercurrent
to that laugh. "If my promise of protection is to be seen through, then I
am personally going to have to attend to your safety in the times ahead."
"The times ahead? What is that supposed to mean?"
"It means, good Lodec, exactly what it means. I am going to
assure that you survive all that is to come." He rose. "Attend,
then... we will pass the night here, enjoying the hospitality this world has to
offer. Tomorrow we will depart, rendezvous at my headquarters... and all will
be made clear. Calhoun ..." and he extended his hand. Calhoun shook it
firmly as Thul continued, "You have done well. Extremely well. No one
could have done better. Vara," and he inclined his head toward her,
"will see you to your room. I can count on you to depart with me tomorrow?"
"Absolutely," Calhoun said. And as he shook Thul's hand,
his ring implanted a transponder directly into Thul's palm. Calhoun was taking
no chances; the last thing he needed was for Thul to depart during the night,
leaving Calhoun high and dry.
The next thing Calhoun knew, Vara Syndra was hanging on
his arm. "Come along, Mackenzie," she whispered softly
in his ear. "Let me take you to your... room..."
At which point every hormone hi his body completely stopped paying
any attention whatsoever to whatever it was that Thul wanted to do or had in
mind. Without hesitation he followed Vara out the door.
The moment they were in the hallway, out of sight of Thul, she
began to kiss Calhoun. He did nothing to stop her. It was doubtful he could
have done anything to stop her. He returned the kisses with equal passion, and
hungrily locking lips with one another, they sidled down the hallway to the
room mat had been reserved for Calhoun. They eased in through the door, which
obediently slid shut behind him.
It was a perfectly serviceable room, although nowhere near as
opulent as Thul's. Somehow, though, opulence was not at the top of Calhoun's
concerns at that particular moment. All he was concerned about was whether or
not the place had a bed. Actually, it didn't matter all that much. The odds
were sensational mat the room had, at the very least, a floor, and the way he
was feeling, that was all that he was going to need. But as luck would have it,
mere was indeed a bed there, large enough for an entire security team to
wrestle with Vara, were such needed.
He ran his hands along the length of her body as they tumbled
onto the bed, kissed her hungrily. Then he stopped long enough to look her in
the eyes and say, "Why? Why me?"
She smiled at him. "Why not you? Don't you deserve it? Aren't
you brave and heroic? Aren't you," and she ran her hands across his chest,
"aren't you remarkably handsome?"
"And it doesn't have to mean more than that?"
"Of course not. Do you mink it has to?" She actually
seemed amused by the notion.
"No. No, it doesn't." He kissed her again, and his
entire body was screaming at him to just get on with it already, she was
wearing body paint and she was ready, willing and eager, how long should
this possibly take. She pulled his shirt over his head. Naked from the
waist up, he pressed against her. He groaned as she ran her tongue under the
line of his chin, and he whispered her name ...
"What's an 'Eppy'?" she asked.
He stopped, stared at her. "What?"
" 'Eppy.' Just now." There was laughter twinkling in her
eyes. "You said, 'Eppy.' "
"I... said I was... happy. I whispered the word 'happy.'
"
"Oh. Okay." She shook her head and chuckled once more.
"Thul said you would be an interesting one. He had no idea, though, did he?"
"Thul. You're... here because Thul told you to be here,"
Calhoun said slowly.
"I'm here because I want to be here," Vara Syndra said
firmly. "I'm here for my own reasons. Thul is part of it, yes. But
you," and she fondled the lobe of his ear, "you are the main part of
it You rescued Lodec. You rescued... so many people, I'm sure."
"Yes. Yes, I did. I have."
She ran her fingers down his back, and he trembled from her touch.
"Thul kept talking about how important it was to save Lodec. Kept talking
about how he'd met Mendan Abbis, back in the days when Lodec worked for some
man... Faulkner, I think, or Falcon, something like mat... they'd stayed so
close, and when Lodec was captured, Thul just knew that you'd be the man to get
bun out Just like I—" She gasped. "You're hurting me!"
And he was. Because he'd had his hand on her wrist but suddenly he
was gripping it tightly.
"I'm... sorry." He let go of it immediately. She sat up,
looking far more irritated than seductive. "Falkar?"
"What?"
"The man he worked for... was his name Falkar?"
She frowned a moment concentrating, and then her eyes widened.
"Yes!" she said, eager and cheerful, the momentary pain on her hand
apparently forgotten. "Yes, that's right Falkar. He worked for a man
called Falkar. Lodec was apparently his main lieutenant did all the tough jobs
for him. That sort of thing."
His mind reeled as he sagged back onto the bed.
"Mackenzie? Are you all right?" She looked down at him
with genuine concern. "Do you know this 'Falkar' person? What's happened?
What's wrong, you seem so upset..."
Slowly, absently, Calhoun ran a finger down the scar on his
cheek. The scar that a Danteri general named Falkar had left
there, as if it were a gift to wish him luck as an adult. And in his mind's
eye, he called up images long buried, recollections of his father, strapped to
a post in the public square, being beaten by a Danteri officer at Falkar's
direction.
Twenty years unravelled in an instant, and he put a beard on the
men-beardless youth with the whip, and he aged him in his mind's eye...
"Mackenzie!" she called loudly.
Before, it had taken him tremendous effort to focus on anything
besides Vara Syndra. Now it was a formidable task to concentrate on her.
"What?" he said in confusion.
"What's going on? Can you tell me what's going on?"
"I..." He couldn't find the words.
No. No, he knew the words. That man I rescued... that man I
almost started to like... that man who was a friend of Thul's son... that man
executed my father. He beat him to death in the town square, and the man who
ordered the beating is long dead by my hand, but the man who actually did the
job is right down the hallway, tossing back drinks with your boss and if you'll
excuse me now, I've got to go kill him...
He started to rise from the bed.
"Mackenzie," and for the first time, there was a sound
of warning in her voice. "I don't appreciate the notion of men walking out
on me. It's never happened before. It had better not happen now."
He turned his attention back to her and realized that the last
thing he needed was Vara Syndra complaining to General Thul mat the merest
mention of Lodec or his former employer was enough to send Calhoun over the
edge. He was trying to get himself on Thul's good side, after all. Besides, what
was he going to do? Kill Lodec? Run in there screaming his father's name,
announce that Lodec would pay for his deeds, rip out his beating heart and show
it to him? The idea had some merit, granted, but ultimately it was
counter-productive. Calhoun still had no true idea what it was that Thul was up
to, and no certainty of where he was hiding, what it was he was hiding, or who
it was he was hiding it from.
The only thing he knew for sure was that if he didn't give
Vara Syndra what she wanted, it was going to look bad for him.
Very, very bad.
So he looked at her for a moment as if appraising her, and then he
forcibly rolled her onto her back and brought his mouth ruthlessly down upon
hers ... and then proceeded to give her what she wanted.
But he didn't enjoy it.
Not especially, at any rate.
XVI.
"I WILL
NOT DO IT."
There was nothing in Doctor Selar's attitude that suggested she
was going to change her mind anytime soon. Nonetheless, Riker did not appear
remotely prepared to back down. Standing with him in Selar's office were
Shelby and Soleta. Soleta kept her face, as always, impassive, while Shelby
looked concerned and uncomfortable. She was no more happy with what Riker was
proposing than Riker himself was, she had made that quite clear. But, to her
credit, she was there as a sign of support for the commanding officer.
"Doctor," Riker began again, "it's not as if
we have a great deal of choice here."
"You, Captain, may not have a choice. I, however, do."
She shifted her gaze to Soleta, and there was a hint of disapproval in her
eyes. "And you have agreed to this... proposal?"
"It is necessary," replied Soleta, sounding rather
formal. "The Romulan woman, Sela, knows information that is potentially
of great importance. The Romulans are not in the habit of acting in a
capricious or haphazard manner. The raid on the Daystrom Institute, their
presence in Thallonian space, their possible alliance with Narobi... they are
pieces of a puzzle that Sela apparently knows."
"And mat gives you the right," Selar said to her,
"to forcibly thrust your mind into hers?"
"No," Soleta admitted. "It does not give me that
right. It does, however, make it an obligation."
"If you must do this thing, and are committed to this deplorable
course, then that is your own consideration," Doctor Selar said. "But
to seek to involve me in the matter is adding insult to injury..."
"I have performed initial probes into her mind. Very mild.
However, I can already sense that she has had training in psychic
combat."
"So you believe that you alone cannot accomplish the
job?"
"That is correct."
"And you would have me disgrace myself because you are
incapable of doing so yourself."
"Doctor," Shelby said impatiently, "it is not a
'disgrace' to do something on behalf of a greater good. Furthermore, when
you're in a service, such as Starfleet, it's your duty."
"Duty. Duty." Selar shook her head. "Commander...
throughout history there have been those who were presented with situations
where they were asked to make a choice that was morally repugnant to them...
usually during a war when they were 'serving' the interests of their country in
some way. More often than not, they went ahead with those repugnant efforts,
even though they knew them to be wrong. Even though the cost may have been the
purity of their very katra... their soul. And the excuse they invariably
fell back upon was that it was their duty. The duty I attend to, Commander...
Captain... Soleta... is the duty to do no harm. As a doctor, that is not only
my first priority, it is my only priority. I will not force myself into the
female's mind. You will have to find another way, or Soleta will simply have
to do it alone. But that is my final word on the subject. Now, will there be
anything else?"
"Doctor," Soleta said slowly, "a moment of your
time... alone? If you please?"
"Lieutenant..."
"It will be all right, Commander," she said to Shelby.
Shelby seemed no more thrilled man did Riker by the situation,
but finally she nodded and she and Riker walked out of the room, leaving Selar
and Soleta alone.
"Do you desire to have me talk you out of this course?"
Selar asked calmly.
"Doctor... there was a time some months ago when you needed
me. I am telling you now that I need you."
"Soleta..."
Soleta leaned forward on the edge of Selar's desk, and the careful
reserve that she maintained, with effort, slipped somewhat. " 'I believe
I am ill. Mentally ill. And I require your services to ascertain that.' That
is what you said to me, Selar, when you needed my help. When you were so
convinced that you could not possibly be undergoing Pon Farr that you asked me
to help you. No... no, you begged me. You asked me to grant you succor, you
were so wretched..."
"I know that," Selar said. "I was there. I know
what I did. I know what I went through. And you helped me, and for that I shall
be forever grateful. But this is a different situation..."
"It would be, to you. I'm the one asking for help this time.
Selar," she said in a lowered voice as if someone were eavesdropping,
"I am not full Vulcan. You know this. I am impure, my mother Vulcan but my
father a Romulan. They are expecting me to meld with a half Romulan woman,
against her will, who is quite likely capable of resisting me. And she has had
training... what if she turns it back against me? What if she uncovers my
background? The risk to myself, the—"
"You are scared." Selar almost sounded sympathetic.
"Yes. I admit that freely. I am afraid of what I am being asked
to do."
"Then do not do it I am refusing."
"The difference is," Soleta said, "that you are
refusing based upon moral principles. If I refused, however, it would be predicated
purely on fear."
"Not necessarily. When you granted me succor, realized that it
entailed a mind meld that you did not wish to perform, and further realized
that I was just desperate enough to force you to do it anyway, you were morally
and ethically repulsed by the notion. You felt that forcing one to perform a
mind meld was repellant."
"Yes. I did. I still do."
"Then that is the basis upon which you can refuse. For is it
not a small step from being forced to perform a mind meld, to
having one forced upon you. The woman, Sela, does not want to have
her mind probed. On the basis that such matters are best left to personal
choice, you can and should refuse."
And then, to Sela's complete astonishment, Soleta let out a low
roar of fury and, with a sweeping gesture, knocked everything off Selar's desk
and sent it scattering to the floor. The clatter grabbed the attention of
everyone in sickbay, and whatever anyone was doing came to a complete halt as
all eyes turned to Selar's office.
Selar's eyes were wide with astonishment; not even her Vulcan
training could repress that. As for Soleta, she was gripping the edge of the
desk and trying to restore her breathing to normal. "Have you lost your
mind?" Selar asked her, recapturing her customary calm.
"I need you," she said in a low voice. "And I need
Starfleet. I am an impure bastard offspring of a violent rape. I have nowhere
else to go in this universe where I can be at home except Starfleet."
"You are not limited or defined as a person by the circumstances
of your birth, Soleta..."
"Yes. I am. And I have been asked by Starfleet, by my commanding
officers, to do this thing. They believe that there may be something very
terrible at stake, and Sela holds the key. I care about Starfleet. I care about
people possibly being hurt or killed by the machinations of this woman. I have
asked for your help. When you asked for mine, I provided it; as much as it cost
me, I provided it. The short-term result was your coming to terms with, and
understanding, what was happening to you, and the long-term result is the baby
you carry in your belly. You owe me," she said in a low and angry voice.
"You owe me, Selar, and if you won't help me, then to hell with you."
Selar did not even hesitate. "I cannot help you. It is a question
of principle. For what it is worth, however... I am sorry."
Soleta drew herself up, her facade of reserve firmly back in
place. "No. You're not sorry at all. What you are... is Vulcan."
She turned and walked out of Selar's office.
Shelby and Riker were standing in the corridor just outside
sickbay, and Shelby was saying, "I don't know about this. I'm ...
uncomfortable about it."
'Truth to tell, I'm not happy with it either."
"Really?" Shelby seemed surprised. "I wouldn't have
known it If you ask me, you seem perfectly sanguine about it."
"I know I do. If there's one thing I've learned, it's mat
whether you make a good decision or a bad decision, what's just as important—if
not even more so—is making a decision and sticking to it You can't be a
commanding officer and not be committed to your commands."
"Yes, well... that would explain why some of the CO's I've
worked with should be committed."
They both laughed at that and then Riker turned to Shelby with
mock astonishment and said, "Why, Commander. Did we just have a moment
mere?"
"I don't think it was a whole moment sir. Maybe half a moment"
"Half."
"Three quarters at most"
"I see." He paused. "You were right about the
Romulans."
"I know. But then again, in retrospect so were you."
He raised an eyebrow. "What do you mean?"
"I mean ninety-nine times out of a hundred—hell, maybe nine
hundred ninety-nine times out of a thousand—the way you played it was
absolutely right. Who knew that they had some bizarre scheme or ability to
break into our entire computer system and cause the kind of havoc that they
did?'
"You knew."
She shook her head. "No. I guessed. I had a gut feeling...
which, I have to tell you, is damned peculiar for me. I've always been
by-the-book, follow-the-rules."
"Perhaps you've been hanging around with Captain Calhoun too
long. You're starting to pick up some of his seat-of-the-pants method."
"Perhaps. Or perhaps it was just with you here, my inclination
was to second-guess what you were doing. Maybe... that's my basic nature. I've
never thought about it before, but maybe it's the way I operate. When Mac is
here and being all gut-feeling, I'm all rules and regs. When you're here, doing
things by the numbers, I'm suddenly advocating acting on impulse.
Maybe..." and she sighed deeply. "Maybe that's why I've never gotten
command. Maybe I don't have my
own command style, but instead I simply react to other people. But
a captain needs to be a leader, to set the tone. Maybe I just don't have that
in me."
"Nonsense," Riker said. "You're selling yourself
short, Shelby. Way short."
"Oh really. And why do you say that?"
He grinned readily. "Call it instinct. Hey ... even I have to
go by it sometimes."
She returned the smile, but before she could reply, Soleta walked
out into the corridor. She had never seen the Vulcan science officer look quite
that deliberately stone-faced before. "Soleta... ? Are you all
right?"
"I am perfectly fine, Commander... Captain," she took in
both of them with a glance.
"Is Selar going to help you? Give you back-up?" asked
Riker.
"No. And I will endeavor to respect her decision. So... let's
get this over with." And she headed toward Sela's cell.
Soleta didn't like the look of things from the moment she got to
the cell.
Sela was sitting there looking infinitely smug and infinitely
composed. There wasn't the slightest flicker of fear in her eyes. "Well,
well, little lieutenant... going to take a shot at visiting the dark side, are
you?"
Riker and Shelby were standing on the other side of the security
field, as was Zak Kebron. But for all that their presence mattered, they could
have been on Mars. The struggle, on all levels, was purely between Soleta and
Sela.
"I will give you one last chance to cooperate," said
Soleta.
"That's very gracious of you," Sela replied in a throaty
voice. "Ever so gracious. But I don't need your chances."
"You may not have as much luck with resisting a mind probe as
you think you will," Soleta warned her. "You are, I understand, half
human. That will hamper you."
"And you are a fool, so that will hamper you."
Soleta did not rise to the obvious bait. Instead, she nodded her
head in Kebron's direction as she extended her hands in preparation. "I
feel it necessary to warn you that if you resist my making physical contact,
Lieutenant Kebron will enter this
room and hold you down. That will be most uncomfortable for
y—"
"Resist? Why? What possible reason would I have? Do you think
I'm afraid of you?"
"I am simply..."
Sela was on her feet, and in two quick strides she was directly
in front of Soleta. She grabbed Soleta's wrists and, with that confident grin
of hers, said, 'Take your best shot." And she slammed Soleta's hands onto
either side of her own head.
For the briefest of moments, Soleta hesitated, but she knew mat
way lay utter defeat So she cast away her doubts and plunged headlong into
Sela's mind.
Sela had not overspoken when she talked of walking on the dark
side. Soleta felt completely overwhelmed by darkness. Darkness all around her,
impenetrable and chilling. Somewhere deep in the distance, she was sure she
heard Sela laughing at her. The contempt irritated Soleta, fired her forward,
and she plunged further, further on.
Run while you can, little Vulcan, came the warning, but still Soleta moved
forward. All round her reality shifted and twisted, because there was no
reality, there was only the subjective aspects of what she was perceiving
within Sela... and within herself. For a meld was not simply a one-way
connection. She was risking making herself as vulnerable to Sela as Sela was to
her...
... except Sela didn't seem vulnerable at all.
Soleta crashed into something.
It was huge and black and unmoving, and now the laughter was
coming hi from all around. She pulled back, withdrew her perspective, and she
saw it in her mindscape. It was a gigantic image of Sela, a mile high it
seemed, her face reflected in some sort of gargantuan mirror. The world twisted
and turned back on itself around her, and still the image of Sela loomed over
all. The blackness with which she had collided was the gaping maw of Sela's
mourn, wide-open and laughing at her.
There was no delicacy, no finesse to Soleta's probe. She simply
hurled herself with brute force against the image of her opponent. She slammed
into it and she felt a painful shudder throughout her body, except of course
she had no true body there, the pain was all in her mind and somehow mat made
it
worse. But she could not go back, nor could she go around, she had
to go through.
Having problems, Lieutenant? The image of Sela sneered at her, and then added, Here
come a few more problems.
Black tendrils seemed to expand from all around, wrapping
themselves around Soleta, and she did everything she could to shake them off.
For a moment she was free and then once more she crashed into Sela's massive
face, and once more there was the pain of collision, and once more she got
nowhere, and this time she was a bit more tired, a bit more frustrated, and
even a bit more
Frightened? Are we having problems, Lieutenant? What's frightening
you? The prospect of failure? Or the prospect of something more? Her voice was everywhere, not just all
around her but inside her, inside her head, there was nowhere to go, nowhere to
escape.
Escape? Is that your concern? Why would you want to run away? Is
there something you are concerned I'll learn? Come, come, Soleta, you wanted to
find out my secrets. You should be willing to trade some of yours in turn. This
is just girl talk, after all...
And the tendrils were back, and this time there was no shaking
them off. Sela's training had been too thorough, and it was more than just
training, she burned, she burned with a dark and fearsome intensity that was
painful in and of itself. And Soleta tried to pull away, tried, but Sela was
everywhere now, penetrating and violating her, and she was thinking of what
her mother must have suffered except she didn't want to think of that because
mat way lay madness, and there was Sela's face as huge as a star, filling up
everything...
... and suddenly Sela's face changed. It went from smug triumph to
alarm. Soleta didn't understand at first, but as the tendrils slipped away from
her, she saw the first cracks appearing in the mirror image of Sela.
And a voice said, Calmly, Soleta. Calmly. That is what is
needed here. Calm and focus.
She did not see the image of Selar next to her, did not perceive
her in that way. But she sensed her, sensed the steadying presence.
Sela discerned the cracks that were appearing in her image,
and a snarl of animal fury that carried psychic repercussions
blasted out from her. Get out! Both of you! Get out while you can!
Are you with me, Selar? Soleta asked.
/ am here. My hands are upon your brow. Our minds have merged.
Do as you need.
GET OUT! Sela
howled, and that howl translated into winds so massive, so deafening, that they
threatened to blast Soleta right out of the mindscape.
But she drew strength from Selar's presence, drew focus. And more,
she began to draw upon herself. For she knew that Sela's heritage was hers too.
The fires of fury that burned within Sela raged within her as well. It was
that pure, raw, fierce emotion that she drew upon now. Not calm, Selar, she
thought, not just calm. You bring the calm. ..but it's the calm before the
storm,
And she summoned that rage, then, the rage and pure emotion that
was part of the Romulan make-up, the rage that she felt over the circumstances
of her own birth, the rage from the confusion and frustration and sense of
desolation and separation that she had carried with her for year after year.
All that she pulled to her, clutching to herself, and then she hurled herself
forward straight toward the mirrored image of Sela.
Sela screamed in protest, but it was too late, far too late as
Soleta smashed through. The image, the psychic shield that Sela had created,
cracked and splintered and fell completely apart. And it poured out, it all
poured out, images, awareness, facts, tumbling one over the other, and Sela was
desperately trying to prevent the strip-mining of her thoughts; however, not
only could she not slow it down, but Soleta was enjoying it with a primal fury
that was terrifying to perceive.
Tell me what I want to know! Show me! You have no choice!
GET OUT!
Tell me, you Romulan bitch!
And it was there, everywhere, the Thallonian and the plan and the
location and she just needed a few more details to help it all fit together and
then she saw a horrible, horrible landscape, bodies, bodies piled up in
mountains stretching so high that they blotted out the sun hanging in the sky,
except it wasn't the sun, it was something glistening and metal...
And men the world crashed in around Soleta.
Her body collapsed, and the only thing mat stopped her from
hitting me ground was Selar. It wasn't that Selar caught her; Selar also
collapsed, but as it turned out, Soleta fell on top of her so that her fall was
slightly cushioned.
There was nothing to prevent Sela from hitting the ground, though,
which she did with all the elegance of a sack of rocks.
Shelby and Riker were through the door in a heartbeat, Riker
helping up Selar while Shelby attended to Soleta. "Soleta... are you all
right?" she called to her.
Soleta stared at her, trying to focus her eyes. "You don't
have to shout, Commander. I'm right here."
"Oh, thank God. I... I heard this shriek... and..."
Shelby turned to Riker. "Did you hear it, too... ?"
He nodded. "In my head. Nothing spoken."
"Psychic backlash," Selar now spoke up. Riker was
helping her to her feet "Even those who have no telepathic leanings can
sense such an event"
"What happened to her?" Although Shelby was propping up
Soleta, she was now looking at Sela. The Romulan was lying flat on her back,
staring up at nothing. Her eyes were glazed over. "Doctor... ?"
The doctor was already tapping her comm badge. "Selar to
sickbay."
"Sickbay," came Maxwell's quick response.
"We need a team up to the brig, immediately." She was
checking Sela over briskly even as she was speaking to Maxwell. "Blood
pressure, vital signs all appear minimal but within safety limits..."
"What's happened to her?" demanded Riker.
"Brain fried," Soleta said tonelessly. They all looked
at her, and she noticed that Selar was nodding. She continued, 'To put it in
human terms... we strip-mined her. Forced our way in, took what we needed. She
fought... valiantly... but realized mat she was losing the fight. So she...
burned herself out"
"You mean deliberately?" said Shelby, appalled.
"In a manner of speaking, yes. It wasn't that difficult
really. Everything that she was turning outward for the purpose of resisting
us ... she turned inward instead. Like burning the crops so that the attacking
forces can't use the food."
"Will she recover?"
"I... don't know," Soleta said. "I've never
actually seen this technique used. I've heard whispers about it, stories of
people who had done it to themselves as a sort of mental suicide out of extreme
depression ... but I've never witnessed it myself. I have absolutely no idea of
what to expect in terms of her recovery."
"And as long as she's like this ... we can't find out
anything from her?" asked Riker.
Selar shook her head. "It would be like trying to read a book
with blank pages. She has done to herself what her people did to us: She has
crashed her computer."
"Which leaves us right back where we started."
"No, Commander Shelby," Soleta said. "Not quite.
I... learned some things. Some terrible things. Saw visions of what's to
come... saw those involved, or at least some of them..."
"Do you know where they are? Where to find them?" asked
Riker.
She nodded, but then added, "What I don't know... is whether
we can do a thing about it."
XVII.
calhoun stared our at empty space and tried to figure out
what in the world it was that he was supposed to see.
In his freighter, he had arrived at the designated coordinates at
the same time as General Thul, who was piloting his own vessel, a sleek
mini-cruiser that looked as if it was more than capable of handling itself in
most combat situations. Truth to tell, Calhoun had been concerned if, once he
was out in space, he might be subject to some sort of sneak attack or ambush
arranged by Thul or his minions. That was why he was somewhat relieved that
Vara Syndra was with him.
She was wearing something a bit more substantial than body paint
this time, but the clothes were still extremely tight and rather revealing. She
positioned herself in the co-pilot chair in such a way mat he wondered if he
would ever be able to look at anyone else sitting there in quite the same way.
"Why are we sitting here?" Calhoun said after a brief
time. "There's nothing out here. What's the point?"
"Oh, you'll see. The General likes to be mysterious,"
and she said the word 'mysterious' in a deliberately dramatic manner. "That's
just his way. You know" and she leaned forward, displaying her ample
cleavage, "instead of simply complaining, I can think of ways in which we
could pass the time."
He looked at her, regarded her thoughtfully. He'd had a lot of
time to think about her. When he had woken up in the middle of the night, she
had been lying on his shoulder, snoring softly. He had studied her for some
time, giving matters a good deal of consideration. He knew himself. He knew
what others were capable of. And he had come to some rather interesting
conclusions.
"Pheromones," he said.
He got precisely the reaction he was hoping he would get:
Startled. He'd said something that she had not remotely anticipated.
"Wh-what?"
"Pheromones. You generate them in such a way that I, and any
other male, couldn't help but be affected by them. You can regulate it however
you wish, 'turn on the charm,' as it were. You can crank it up to high heat,
which is what you did with me, depending upon what it is that Thul wants you to
do. Problem is, you did too good a job on me. You made it so that I couldn't
think straight. Except I can always think straight."
"I... don't know what you're talking—"
"Yes, you do." When he interrupted her, he did so with
no rancor. Indeed, he sounded a bit sad. "I don't know whether you come by
it naturally, or if it's somehow been implanted into you. Don't know, don't
care, really. The most depressing aspect of all is, I have absolutely no idea
whether I would have been attracted to you just because of you yourself, or
whether you need something Like being able to artificially stimulate male
hormones in order to function. If I had to guess, that's probably a bit
depressing for you, too. Not to know, I mean. Considering the way you look,
it's somewhat sad to think that you would have to depend on something chemical.
Or... do you really look that way ... ?"
She turned away from him, then. "Here's my back," she
said with far more anger than he would have thought she was possible of
generating. "Just stick a knife into it and be done with it" .
"Vara," he said softly, "listen—"
"No," she snapped, looking back at him. "God,
you're all the same. The surface is all that matters to you. And you know what?
I thought you were different. I thought you'd know me. That you, of all people,
would know me. But you don't know
anything. You know what I wanted to do after you fell asleep last
night? Leave. That's what I usually do. But not with you, no. With you, I
stayed. I totally, totally let down my guard with you..."
"Why?" he asked.
"Because I thought I could. Because I thought we had connected
on a deeper level than simply the physical. Because ..." A tear trickled
down her cheek and she wiped it away angrily. 'It doesn't matter," she
said finally. "None of it does, I guess."
"Why are you hooked up with General Thul?" he asked.
"Look what he's doing to you. He uses you."
She stared at him with eyes that were glistening. "And I use
him. Everyone uses everybody else, Mackenzie. And anyone who says otherwise is
probably one of the biggest users of all."
"Vara..."
Suddenly Calhoun's ship-to-ship comm channel flared to Me.
"Calhoun. Are you still with us?" Thul sounded particularly jovial.
"I'm here, yes. Although I'm wondering why, exactly. Is there
some deep, hidden meaning to the fact that we're sitting here?"
"Just being cautious. I generally Like to do a detailed scan
of the area before going home, just to make sure that there's no one about who
shouldn't be here. But I'm pleased to report that the area is clear."
"It's certainly clear of anything that could possibly be
called 'home,'" Calhoun observed
"You should not always believe what your eyes tell you,
Calhoun. First appearances do not necessarily mean anything."
"Yes, I think I've heard that occasionally," he said
with a sidelong glance at Vara. She was looking resolutely away from him.
"Welcome to my home, Calhoun."
Calhoun still had absolutely no clue what Thul could possibly be
talking about
And then, hi the near distance, space began to ripple. At first
Calhoun thought it was something dropping out of warp space, but then he
realized it was a ship dissolving its cloaking field. His immediate instinct
was to prepare for battle, for when Ro-
mulan vessels dropped their cloak, it meant that they were about
to open fire.
Then he realized that the dissolution field was too wide. It
wasn't just one ship, it was a fleet of ships. A huge fleet... but... there was
no space between the ships ... it was one, big, solid, wavering mass ...
"Grozit," whispered Calhoun.
It was a gigantic sphere, massive beyond belief. The thing could
have contained the entirety of Starfleet within itself and had room left over
for the Klingon fleet and a few others as well. It blotted out everything.
Calhoun had his viewscreen on maximum reverse magnification, and he still
couldn't make out the whole thing. He prodded the freighter into reverse.
"Don't run away, Calhoun, it won't bite," came Thul's
voice.
"I'm not running away," said Calhoun, "I'm just
trying to get a better view of the thing."
Within moments he'd backed up far enough away so that he could see
it in its entirety. "It's a Dyson Sphere," he said.
"I believe that is what terran technology refers to such a
structure as, yes. Call it what you will. As I mentioned, I call it home."
"But it's impossible! Cloaked? How can you possibly cloak
something that big?"
"I've been working with the Romulan empire for some time now,
Calhoun. You would truly be amazed what a few people with determination,
resources, and sufficient hatred for the Federation can accomplish. Follow me,
if you please."
Thul's ship moved toward the sphere, and Calhoun fell in behind
him. The closer he got, the bigger it got. His instrumentation gave him
readings as to the size, but knowing it intellectually and seeing it up close
were two entirely different things. "How did he build it?" he asked
Vara. "How long did it take? How—?"
"You can ask him," Vara Syndra replied. "I'm just
here for my looks."
Calhoun rather wisely decided not to press the point
They moved through the massive entrance bay, passing through to
the interior of the sphere itself. It was, to all intents and purposes, hollow.
This hardly meant that it was empty, however. For starters, there were dozens,
perhaps hundreds of
ships, parked within. Furthermore, the walls of the sphere itself
were lined with walkways, residences, work areas. Toward the top and bottom of
the spheres, Calhoun spotted hydroponics growing fields where fresh food was
being cultivated. And straight down the middle of the sphere was a huge,
pulsing device that Calhoun immediately recognized as an infinitely larger
version of a Romulan cloaking device. He saw that it was feeding off a core
that was a modified version of a warp core. The Dyson sphere had no means of
propulsion, however. It simply utilized the combination of matter and
anti-matter explosions to feed its energy needs. He also saw workers casually
walking vertically along the outside of the core, getting from one point to the
other, and he realized that the sphere was creating an artificial gravity by
the simple expedient of rotating on an axis.
"Incredible," he breathed.
"Follow me, please," came Thul's voice over the comm.
"You'll see a docking beacon flashing. That will guide you in."
Calhoun did as he was told. It wasn't particularly difficult
maneuvering, really. If it had been remotely difficult, they probably would
have had a computer come on line and handle it for him. As it was, he followed
Thul's lead across the vast interior and locked into position at a docking bay
on the far side.
Moments later Vara and Calhoun had exited the freighter and were
in what appeared to be a large reception area. People were walking briskly
about on their business, but every single one of them paused in their stride to
nod and acknowledge Thul's presence. It was an impressive variety of races
represented there... and Calhoun noticed that the vast majority of mem were
not members of the Federation. Of those individuals who were, Calhoun
recognized a number of them from records that had been circulated to all
Starfleet captains, warning about individuals who posed a hazard to life and
liberty.
"This way," said Thul. Lodec was next to him, and as
Vara and Calhoun joined them, they made their way to what appeared to be some
sort of turbolift.
As they walked, Calhoun found it more and more difficult to so
much as look in Lodec's direction. Every time he did so, he risked betraying
the depth of fury that the merest proximity to the Danteri provoked within him.
One of the few things that
Calhoun had never been able to accomplish was to learn from the
Danteri government the name of the individual who had wielded the whip that
killed his father. Intellectually, he had always known that it was Falkar who
had ordered the deed. That gave him the responsibility, and that scale had been
balanced. But part of Calhoun had always wanted to crush the throat of the man
who had actually done the deed. He longed to feel that pulse beneath his
ringers, struggling and beating its last before falling forever silent.
And now, after all these years, he had the motherless scum at
arm's length. But he couldn't touch him. The object was to stay hi Thul's good
graces, and slaying the best friend of Thul's late son was hardly going to
accomplish that goal. Calhoun was anxious to learn what it was that Thul was
up to, and determined to stop it But now he had an additional incentive,
something mat—perhaps not surprisingly—gave him something more personal at
stake than simply the entirety of the Federation's survival.
At one point, Lodec seemed to sense that Calhoun was eyeing him.
He glanced in Calhoun's direction, but by that point Calhoun was looking off
somewhere else. Lodec shook his head slightly, as if endeavoring to sort out
his imagination from reality, and Calhoun simply watched him through
half-lidded eyelids, like a great cat waiting in the high grass.
They stepped into the turbolift car. The doors hissed shut as Thul
said, "General Thul, command level." The turbolift immediately
started moving, sliding noiselessly toward the instructed destination. The lift
was situated on the inside wall of the Dyson Sphere, which meant that they had
a dazzling view of the entirety of the place as they moved downward.
"What do you think of my little endeavor, Calhoun?" he
asked. "I noticed you studying some of the other residents of my home
quite carefully."
"Well... if you're really asking me..."
"Oh, I am. I am," Thul said sincerely.
"As near as I can tell, a goodly number of the individuals
here are... how should I put this delicately..."
"Scum?"
"Yes. Thank you. That's the word I was looking for. And the
problem with filling a place with the scum of the galaxy, with
some of the least trustworthy individuals around, is that you're going to have
a hell of a time watching your back."
"I could not agree more, Calhoun," Thul said readily.
Calhoun could feel the lift slowing to a stop. "On that basis, I've taken
great care to have the best people watching my back. Here's one of them
now."
The doors slid open and Calhoun stepped out, looking around.
Zolon Darg was standing there.
Clearly he had been waiting for Thul to show up. Perhaps Thul, in
a rather perverse bit of amusement, had requested that he show up and meet them
there. Whatever the occasion might have been, the fact was that Darg was there
and it took nun all of two seconds to recognize Calhoun.
For his part, Calhoun couldn't believe how massive Darg looked.
Bigger, wider than when Calhoun had last seen him, with arms, legs and chest so
thick that one could only conclude that he had rippling muscles beneath his
clothes, the likes of which no one had ever seen.
"Darg, this is—" began Thul.
That was as far as he got. With a roar of inarticulate fury, Darg
charged forward and grabbed Calhoun by the front of the shirt. He slammed the
Starfleet officer against the far wall with such fury that Calhoun felt every
bone in his body rattle. His eyes felt as if they were ricocheting off his
brain.
"Miss me?" he managed to get out.
Darg howled again and threw Calhoun to the floor. When Calhoun
crashed into it, he barely managed to absorb the impact with his arms. If he
hadn't pulled it off, the impact would likely have broken his neck.
Calhoun couldn't believe his strength; it surpassed understanding.
Darg would have given Zak Kebron a run for his money, and perhaps even beaten
him. Then there was no time to think as Darg drove a boot straight down toward
Calhoun's face. Calhoun barely managed to roll out of the way as Darg's foot
crashed down where Calhoun's head had been moments before.
"I'll kill him!" Darg shouted, which was the first
coherent thing he had managed to get out since he'd first seen Calhoun.
All things considered, it was a somewhat wasted pronouncement.
His actions had already spoken far more loudly.
"Stop it, Darg. Right now," said Thul, and there was an
iron sense of command in his voice that snagged even Darg's attention.
Darg rounded on Thul, and he looked like a barely contained
nuclear detonation. "He's mine, Thul! Mine to kill! Mine!"
"That's enough, Darg. The idea! Throwing a guest of mine
around," and he helped the shaken Calhoun to his feet "Are you all
right, Calhoun?"
Calhoun was woozy, his knees starting to buckle. "Well...
fortunately, I'm still alive. Except... that might be a bit unfortunate, too,
because I don't really feel like being alive at the moment."
"I'll remedy that!" snapped Darg, and he started to advance
on Calhoun once more. " 'Calhoun,' eh? So that's the name you're going by.
I've never known it... but by God, your face has been seared into my memory
long enough! And I'm—"
"/ said enough!" and if there was any doubt until
that moment as to who precisely was in charge, that strident bellow more or
less demolished it. Darg froze where he was, in mid-step, as he had been
advancing on Calhoun.
"I warn you, Darg. Do not cross me on this matter. Calhoun
has done me a great service. Because of that, he is not to be harmed."
"He nearly killed me," Darg said slowly, as if
addressing a child. "He... tried to kill... me..."
"Yes, he did. And the only reason that you're still alive is
because of me," Thul reminded him. This appeared to be getting through,
and he continued, "Because of Calhoun, Lodec stands with me now."
"I could have gotten Lodec for you," Darg said with contempt,
as if the feat of freeing Lodec was a simple conjuring trick that could be
performed by the average eight-year-old with a home starter magic bag.
"You were busy elsewhere. You cannot be everywhere, Darg, and
I need others I can count upon."
"You would put... that..." and his finger quavered as he
pointed in Calhoun's direction, "... that... thing... on the
same level with me? You would depend on both Calhoun and myself
equally? That is madness!"
"Grow up, Darg," Thul said, and he certainly sounded as
if he meant it. "What is past is past. Reliving grudges and offensive
acts taken toward one another is a fool's errand. And I am no fool. Now...
Mackenzie Calhoun... Zolon Darg ... you will work in tandem with each other, in
a spirit of cooperation. I do not want to hear rumors of either of you trying
to kill the other one. That would be unacceptable. And a mysterious midnight
poisoning... ? That would be unacceptable as well." Calhoun wasn't sure,
but he thought perhaps that Darg had looked a bit crestfallen upon learning of
the further edict. "You will work together. You will trust each other as
much as can possibly be expected. If there are any disputes, they will be
mediated through me. And gentlemen... think of it this way..."
"What way?" Calhoun asked, still rubbing the parts of
his body that had been badly bruised while being tossed around.
"It will be in both your best interests to lead a long,
healthy and productive life here in the Thul Sphere. Because if either of you
dies, I will automatically assume that the other had something to do with it,
and act accordingly."
"Wait a minute," Calhoun said, "you can't hold us
responsible in such an open-ended manner. What if one or the other of us dies
of natural causes?"
"That might be almost impossible to determine," Thul
said reasonably. "There are too many drugs and poisons that can simulate
demise from a certain cause... and the poisons themselves are undetectable
within minutes after doing the job. Therefore, we would likely err on the side
of caution, decide that the means of death was actually murder, and act accordingly."
"You can't do that!" protested Darg.
"Darg... Calhoun," Thul said slowly, with tremendous
warning in his voice, "this is my place. I cannot suggest strongly enough
that you do not tell me what I can and cannot do. Understood?"
Calhoun and Darg looked at each other. Calhoun did not think for a
moment that Darg was going to let it drop quite that easily, and was fully
aware that he was going to have to watch
himself every waking minute—and, even more importantly, those
minutes when he was not awake. Still, he simply nodded and said,
"Understood."
"Understood," muttered Darg.
"Good. That's settled then."
"Mackenzie Calhoun," Darg said slowly. "I know that
name. You are with Starfleet I've heard your name bandied about in Thallonian
space. There are some who worship you as a god."
Calhoun shrugged indifferently. "Some. I don't encourage
it."
"You're not wearing a Starfleet uniform. What is a Starfleet
man doing here, anyway?"
"He is late of the fleet, Darg," Thul assured him.
"This is a place where new lives are started. All I care about is what a
man brings with him, not what he leaves behind. Now then, Darg... the
recruitment drive on Argelius. How did that go? We are running short on time,
and are rapidly drawing to the 'now-or-never' moment"
"It went quite well, actually," said Darg, casting one
more sidelong glance at Calhoun before continuing his comments to Thul.
"Of the twelve representatives I met with, nine showed up in force several
hours ago, bringing the required payment along with the people they represent
The population of the Thul Sphere has increased exponentially."
"Perfectly acceptable," smiled Thul. "That is
perfectly acceptable. The resources of the sphere have been carefully built
up. You see, Calhoun," he continued, turning back to the officer,
"this has hardly been an overnight project. I have labored many years to
bring this to fruition."
"You must be very proud."
"Very, yes. And who is this?"
Calhoun didn't understand the question, and then realized it
wasn't being addressed to him. Someone else was walking toward them from
behind him, joining the group. It was Darg to whom Thul had been speaking.
"This fellow," Darg said, "was of tremendous use to
me on Argelius. I have taken the liberty of inviting him to join our operation.
General Thul... this is Kwint. Kwint, this is our glorious leader, the great
General Thul. And this is Thul's glorious associate, Vara Syndra, and Lodec of
Danter, and..." he
growled the name reluctantly, as if hating to acknowledge that it
needed to be spoken, "Mackenzie Calhoun, late of Starfleet. Gentlemen,
lady... this is Kwint."
Calhoun turned and saw a man with silver hair and beard, but a
face that otherwise he recognized instantly. His voice caught in his throat as
he found himself staring straight into the eyes of Jean-Luc Picard.
XVIII.
"WE were set up, Si
cwan. I'm sorry, but that's one
of the things I drew from her mind," said Soleta. She looked around a
conference lounge that was occupied at that point by Shelby, Riker, Selar, and
Burgoyne, and Si Cwan. Cwan's face, in particular, was deathly serious.
"This ostensibly 'peaceful' race you spoke of had actually allied itself
with the Romulans. Because of their machine make-up, they were apparently the
perfect tools to help put into place the final elements that were needed for
Thul's plan. And they decided to test those elements on our computers. They
were simply able to take our computer system over with no problem, punching
through all the safeguards and security codes as if they weren't even
there."
"So their plan is to try and take over computers of star-ships?"
asked Burgoyne. "But why? It sounds somewhat abstract to me."
"You mentioned Thul. That would be Gerrid Thul," Si Cwan
said slowly.
"You know him, then," asked Riker.
"More by reputation, although I seem to have a vague recollection
of meeting him when I was quite young. A rather power-mad individual. At the
time he was a second-level
Thallonian nobleman. Very eloquent, but that eloquence helped to
cover a ferocity of ambition that was rather chilling. My father once said that
Thul is a man who uses lies the way a surgeon uses a scalpel, and assigned him
to be in charge of one of the farthest-flung of our outposts. But Thul craved
power, and decided that the best way to go about it was to court the emperor's
sister, my aunt. My father thwarted that, feeling that Thul wasn't good enough
for her. This infuriated Thul. Then there was a rebellion ... Thul's son was
killed, I believe... and then one thing led to another, and Thul wound up in
prison."
"Well, he's out, and apparently he has no love for the Federation.
What I managed to draw from Sela's mind before she collapsed is, unfortunately,
spotty at best," admitted Soleta. "Thul has been experimenting with
some sort of virus... a virus that apparently is one of the most devastating
that the Federation has ever dealt with."
"Dealt with? You mean it's surfaced before?" asked
Riker.
"Apparently it has, yes," said Soleta. "The Enterprise
first encountered it several years ago on Archaria m. It then resurfaced
on Terok Nor a few years later. A variation was used to attack the Romulan
royal family, and finally, just before his defection, Tom Riker reported
dealing with the virus on a planet in what was then the demilitarised zone
between the Federation and Cardassia."
"But what's been the point of it all? These repeated attempts
at a virus... ?" But then Shelby realized it. "He's planning
to unleash it on the Federation, isn't he."
"Apparently so," said Selar. "From what I have
garnered, this virus crosses races with the ease that we cross warp space. If
Thul does manage to unleash it somehow, it could annihilate every living
organism it comes in contact with."
"But a virus can't travel through space. How can he possibly
do it?" asked Si Cwan.
There was dead silence for a moment as they looked at one another.
Then Riker's eyes widened. "I get it. Good lord... I get
it."
"Get what?" asked Shelby. "I don't
understand..."
Riker leaned forward, his fingers interlaced. "Federation
races share technology. That's one of the fundamentals of the
alliance. That technology includes such standard items as holotech
... computers... and replicators."
"So?" asked Shelby... and then she understood. "Oh,
my God."
Riker nodded. "Replicators work via computers. They tap into
a data base and use that information to replicate food, clothing, whatever's
needed. It's one of the underpinnings of our way of life, because as long as
replicators exist, no one wants for anything. With the aid of the artificial
intelligence equipment and research that Thul has stolen, via such catspaws as
Zolon Darg, and the help of the Narobi, Thul has found a way to access any and
all computers throughout the Federation. Because computers are the connecting
tissue of the entire Federation."
"Thul has come up with the ultimate computer virus,"
Soleta said, comprehending.
"That's right," said Riker. "He's going to take
over the data base of every computer in the Federation, just as easily as he
took over ours. Every homeworld, every colony, every Starship, everything in
the shared computer environment. Once he's 'in,' he's going to program the
replicators to produce this virus of his."
"But replicators can't create living things," said
Shelby. "Aren't viruses partly alive?"
"Partly, yes. But there are ways around it," Soleta
said. "I can think of several."
"So can I," said Riker, "And either it'll put the
virus right into the food, or the clothing, or he might just pump it right into
the air. We should consider ourselves damn lucky that he didn't decide to try
and replicate the virus aboard the ship or we'd all be goners."
"We can probably thank the Romulans for that, ironically
enough," Soleta said. "I know them, I know how they think. We did
them some serious damage. They probably wanted to beam aboard first and obtain
some personal vengeance for the ships of theirs that we destroyed. Once done
with that, they likely would have started pumping their virus throughout the
ship after they left..." Her voice trailed off.
All eyes turned toward Burgoyne. But s/he shook hir head quickly.
"No. No, nothing like that's been done. We got out of the area fast enough
to avoid any such stunts."
"But we might be carrying something within the computer
base..."
"No, that's the problem. We're not carrying anything in me
computer base. When they got into our mainframe, they wound up erasing all the
data. Everything. This ship is a damnable blank slate. All of the fundamental
material and information needed for its running is gone."
"Gone? Completely?"
"Information is never gone completely from a computer,
Captain. It's mere somewhere. But when it's wiped clean, what basically happens
is mat we can't get at it I'll find a way... but it'll take time."
"How much time?"
"I don't know," s/he admitted. "I have all my
people working on it, but I simply do not know. And that's not all."
"What, it gets better?"
"That's an understatement. Our preliminary probes reveal
imprints of mental engrams left behind, like fingerprints. This wasn't simply a
virus or a machine wipe. A mind... an actual mind... entered the computer and
nearly wiped it, and us, from existence."
"The Narobi. It has to be," said Si Cwan.
"Perfect. So what have we got?" asked Riker. "In
terms of capabilities, I mean."
"Minimal, being routed through manual control. We've got Me
support systems on line. Warp drive is up, as you know, which is how we managed
to throw ourselves to... wherever the hell it is that we are."
"Have we got coordinates as to our present location?"
asked Riker.
Shelby nodded. "McHenry says he knows where we are. I have no
reason to doubt him."
"We jumped blind through warp space and he knows where we
came out?"
She nodded again. "He's rather talented that way."
"So I hear. All right: Life support, warp drive... what about
communications?"
"Not yet," said Burgoyne. "Besides, even if we did
have communications up and running and could get through to the Federation...
what would we say? 'Excalibur to UFP: Shut
down everything throughout the entire Federation. We're celebrating
the bicentennial by reverting to the Stone Age. Cease and desist in your entire
way of life until you hear from us again. And by the way, we have no proof.'
Oh, that's going to go over very well, I can assure you. They'd probably shunt
the message over into a committee which would debate about it for three weeks
before resolving to tell us that we're idiots."
"You've made your point, Burgoyne," Riker said. "Is
anything else functioning around here."
"Manual guidance control just came back on, and we've got the
viewscreens up and running. Basically, we can move, at warp speed if we need
to. But navigation is still off-line. It would be like trying to steer in the
dark while blindfolded. It's impossible. Besides, we have no idea where we
would go anyway."
"Yes. We do," Soleta said. "That was the one other
piece of information I... we," she amended with a glance toward Selar,
"... managed to get out of Sela. The coordinates of where Gerrid Thul
is."
"But as Burgoyne said, trying to plot, to navigate without
the computers ... unless these coordinates are practically next door, it's just
not possible," Riker said.
"I wouldn't be so quick to say that," Shelby told him.
"I suggest we run it past McHenry."
"Are you sure?" he asked.
She smiled thinly. 'Trust me."
"All right," he nodded slowly. "I don't see that we
have much of a choice. Let's do it, people."
As they cleared out of the conference lounge, Soleta found herself
momentarily alone with Selar. She moved toward her and said,
"Doctor..."
But Selar shook her head. "Lieutenant... do not."
"I was just..."
"Going to thank me?"
"Yes."
. "Do not," she said again. "I do not wish to be
thanked. You have done me service in the past. I found that I could not turn
away from you when you were in need. But I compromised myself... my sense of
ethics ... my very morality. I did harm, Lieutenant."
"For the greater good, Doctor. That should make it
easier." "It should. I agree. But... it does not If you will excuse
me," and she walked out of the conference room.
Mark McHenry stared out at the stars. So many. So many of them.
Riker stood behind him on the bridge, as did Shelby. "They are gorgeous,
you know," McHenry said softly. "I see them in my head last thing
before I go to sleep... and first thing when I wake up. I know them. Know them
all."
"And you know where we are in relation to them right now?"
"Yes, sir."
"And these coordinates that Soleta has given you... you know
where those are, as well?"
"Yes, sir."
Riker found it hard to believe. He had been treading the spaceways
for over half his life, but like virtually everyone else he knew, he required
starcharts, computer-generated readouts, and whatever else could be provided
for the purpose of making his way around the vastness of space. To just... know...
to be able to look out into the galaxy and have that clear an idea in one's
head of exactly where one was ... it was astounding.
"And you can get us mere?" Riker said.
McHenry closed his eyes a moment. It seemed as if he'd gone to
sleep. Riker started to say something, but Shelby touched him gently on the arm
and shook her head. Then McHenry opened his eyes once more and said, "Yes,
sir. Not a problem."
"All right, then. Lay in a course—" His voice trailed
off, and he corrected himself, because it was impossible to plot a course. All
the steering would have to be done manually. 'Take us out, Mr. McHenry. Warp
factor..." He hesitated and then shrugged. "Whatever you feel
comfortable moving at. And let's hope to hell that Burgoyne has the weapons on
line by the time we get there."
"Aye, sir. May I ask a question, sir?" he inquired as he
urged the ship forward.
"Absolutely."
"What's going on? I mean, I can get us there, but it's not
without risks. Without navigation on line, it's going to be a bit
trickier avoiding, oh... black holes, asteroid fields and the
like. I can do it, mind you ... but it's trickier. The smart thing to do would
be to remain where we were until everything is back up and running. So what's
the rush? What are we trying to do?"
"Fair enough." He glanced around the bridge and said,
with sufficient graveness of tone to put across the gravity of the situation,
"A deadly virus is threatening to wipe out the lives of everyone we hold
dear... and only the good ship Excalibur has a hope of stopping it. Does
that answer it?"
"Yes, sir."
"You're frowning, Lieutenant. I hope you're not feeling
daunted."
"No, sir," said McHenry. "Just the strangest
feeling of deja vu, that's all. Don't worry. It'll be gone soon enough."
XIX.
calhoun had been in his quarters for all of two minutes
when Kwint showed up at the door. He entered without a word and they faced each
other as the door slid closed.
"Are you out of your mind!" Calhoun fairly exploded the
moment they were in private. "What the hell are you doing here? You almost
gave me a heart attack!"
"Calm down, Mac," Picard said stiffly. "Having
apoplexy is not going to help the situation."
"That's putting it mildly! It was everything I could do not
to react when I saw you! Why are you here? With the hair? And me beard? And
Darg?"
"I was sent hi by Jellico..."
"Jellico? But he was working with Nechayev! He helped stage an entire
confrontation at the big diplomatic reception to make it seem as if I was
storming out of Starfleet! It's how we got Thul's attention!"
"So it would seem. I was unaware of mat Jellico called me in,
summarized the situation for me, and sent me on a mission to get hi good with
Zolon Darg. He chose me because Jack Crusher and I had dealings hi the past
with Thul. Jellico had heard the rumors that Thul was involved and wanted to
make certain, one way or the other."
"But if he knew about—" Then Calhoun actually
half-smiled to himself. "He didn't trust me. He didn't trust me not to
screw things up. So he sent you in as back-up, without telling Nechayev or
me."
"Charming," said Picard.
"And this disguise," and he tugged slightly at the beard,
"was supposed to fool him? It didn't fool me,"
"First, you've seen me far more recently than Thul. He hasn't
laid eyes on me for a good many years, and Darg has never met me. Second,
you're Xenexian. You have a heightened sensitivity to such things. Besides, I
didn't know for sure that I would wind up face to face with Thul. In any event,
he hasn't recognized me, nor has Darg. So we're safe enough... for the moment.
We have to stay steady, though..."
"That was easy until this got personal," said Calhoun, tightly.
Picard looked at him in confusion. "What do you mean?"
"Lodec ... the Danteri that you saw ... ?"
"Yes? What about him?"
"He killed my father."
Picard's eyes widened in concern. "Are you certain?"
"Absolutely. Absolutely positive." He paced the room
like a caged tiger. "The longer this goes on, the more I think of my
father crying out... think of what he did... Picard... there's so many people
here now. It could be covered."
"What could be covered?"
"I could
kill him, make it seem as if it was a random act of violence. There's enough
disreputable individuals that the suspicion wouldn't fall on me, and—"
"Mac," and Picard grasped him by the shoulders,
"you can't lose focus. Letting feelings get in the way is not a luxury we
can afford."
"Laying my father's soul to rest is not a luxury, Picard.
It's a mandate. It has to be done."
"Not here! Not now!" Picard said harshly. "If you
do anything to jeopardize the mission we're on now, Mac, just out of a
personal sense of vengeance, I will..."
"You will what? Have me busted in rank? Slap my wrist? Give
me ten lashes? Do you think I seriously give a damn what happens to me?"
"Probably not. But I would hope you give a damn what happens
to everyone else. Mac... I appreciate your anger and your frustration. But you
simply cannot indulge in those feelings at the moment. It could be ruinous for
everyone and everything. We have to determine what Thul is up to and stop him.
The Mackenzie Calhoun I know wouldn't elevate his need for vengeance over the
needs of those who are depending upon him."
"Maybe you don't know Mackenzie Calhoun, then."
"Maybe I don't. But the brutal, simple truth, Mac, is that
killing Lodec won't bring your father back.... and it could result in the
death of many more. Are you prepared to take that chance? Or are you going to
do what's right?"
"And who knows what's right, Picard. You?"
"Not always. But in this instance... yes."
Slowly, Calhoun sat. He rubbed the lower half of his face in
thought, and finally said, "All right For now... for now I do nothing
against Lodec. But I'll tell you something, Picard... I never thought that
doing nothing would be a hundred times more difficult than doing something. Do
you have any idea what it's like, Picard? That there's someone you hate so
much... that with every fibre of your being, all you want to do is hold their
head in one hand, their neck hi another, and with one quick movement, break
it?"
For a moment, Picard saw the skinless, gleaming skull and spine of
the Borg queen hi his hands, and the cathartic cleansing that came with that
glorious snap.
"Believe it or not... I do," said Picard.
The summons had come.
Everyone had been informed that they were to come to the grand
hall, and come they did. The lifts were operating at peak capacity throughout
the sphere as the entire populace converged on the main meeting area.
There had been those who had doubted. Even though they had shown
up with the one hundred thousand bars of latinum as promised, still there had
been doubts and discord. But the revelation of the sphere's existence, in and
of itself, was enough to quell their initial concerns. They knew, beyond
question, that they were now part of something special, some-
thing incredibly significant in the entire history of the galaxy.
There were still questions, still worries, but there was also enough faith that
Gerrid Thul actually had a plan. That he knew what he was doing.
And now they were going to find out. All their questions were to
be finally, ultimately, answered
Calhoun and Heard had resolved that going together would not be
the brightest move. There was no intrinsic reason for them to be especially
friendly with one another, and so it was advisable that they keep their
distance, at least until such time as it was unavoidable. So Calhoun headed
toward the turbolift on his own upon receiving word of the summons. He stepped
into the lift, and froze.
Lodec was standing there. It was just the two of mem.
Calhoun couldn't believe it What was this, some sort of perverse
joke that the cosmos was playing on him? He forced a smile as he stepped onto
the lift and the doors shut behind him.
"Impressive set-up, isn't it," Lodec said after a moment
Calhoun managed a nod. He pictured himself with his sword in his
hand, plunging it into Lodec's heart. It gave him a minuscule amount of
satisfaction, but not much.
And then Lodec said, "I'm sorry."
"Sorry." Calhoun repeated the word tonelessly. "Sorry
... for what?"
"You were right My saying that I was simply following orders
... mat was just an excuse. A nice, tidy way of shirking my responsibility. The
things mat we did..." He shook his head. "Inside... I was screaming.
Screaming. But Falkar— that's who I was connected to—Falkar was the liege-lord
of our family. Our patron, as he was to a number of us. So when he selected me
to serve him, I had no choice. At least, mat's what I told myself. My family
sent me off to war, and I'll never forget my rather looking at me so sternly,
giving me the admonition, 'Don't dishonor us, son. Don't dishonor us.' And me,
young and foolish... I would have done anything to make my father proud Do you
know what that's like?"
"No," Calhoun said hollowly.
"Oh. Well... mat's all I cared about Pleasing him, pleasing
my family. But I hated every moment of it It got so bad... there was a time
mete where we were posted to Xenex,
and I thought of leaving the camp and walking into the nearest
Xenexian town and picking a fight, and then allowing myself to be killed. That
way... that way it would have been over. I didn't have the nerve, though. I
didn't want to throw my life away because part of me kept saying, 'Stay steady.
Things will get better. You won't have to live this way forever.' Except the
problem is... even when you're not living it... it stays with you for as long
as you live. The things we did," he said again, shaking his head, looking
lost. "The helpless people we killed... the beatings... lord... they put
me in charge of whippings, can you believe that?"
"Indeed. Why you?" Calhoun's voice was strangled. But he
saw that Lodec was so far in his recollections that he wasn't noticing.
"I'd practiced with whips ever since I was a kid. To me, it
wasn't a weapon. It was a tool of skill. I could knock over a particular rock
from thirty paces without disturbing anything around it. Falkar saw me showing
off one day, and on the spot, stated that I was his new whip master. He had me
beat people... the screams ... the blood..."
"Beat them to death, did you?"
"Sometimes," he whispered. "Sometimes, yes. I'd be
there, torturing the poor devils, and hi my head I was taking myself away,
somewhere far away..."
"What are you telling me this for?" demanded Calhoun
abruptly. "What do you want from me? Absolution? You want me to tell you
that it's okay, you're forgiven?"
"Perhaps. You were their warlord. If you said you understood
... if you..." Then he saw the look in Calhoun's hard purple eyes.
"No. No, I suppose not My apologies. It was foolish of me even to
try."
The door slid open and he walked out leaving Calhoun drained in
the turbolift, his hands shaking.
The viewscreen was massive, and on it everyone could see the
celebration of the bicentennial well under way. It was in the great plaza of
the United Federation Headquarters, and it was a wonder to behold, a veritable
sea of races and faces, smiling or doing whatever their respective physicality
allowed them to dp when it came to expressing pleasure. Calhoun even
fancied that he could make out Jellico's face somewhere in all
that hubbub.
Gerrid Thul was standing upon a raised platform, looking down at
me assemblage that he had gathered. He looked stronger, more vital than he had
before. "Thank you, my friends," he said. "Thank you for coming.
Thank you for... believing. For many months now, you have heard the whispers...
you have had revealed to you, in small amounts, the truth of the time to come.
And you see there, now, on this screen, on the planet earth, the United Federation
of Planets celebrating its own birth. As it so happens, we shall be celebrating
as well. We shall be celebrating... its demise.
"It is ironic somehow mat we are witnessing a celebration on
earth. Earth has many interesting and intriguing end-of-the-world myths from
its many cultures. The details differ, but the outcome remains the same: The
old is washed away, while the new rises to take its rightful place.
"The time has come for a new cleansing. The Federation has
become too huge, too insensitive, interested only in maintaining its own
existence and status quo rather than attending to the true needs of various
sentient beings. There is too much need for commonality, and there is a loss of
individual identity. You see on that screen a dazzling array of species... but
as year upon year has gone by, they have slowly lost that which made them
unique, special. The Federation must pay for that loss. And the Federation
must, and shall, pay for the disservice that it has done to you. You, the
outcasts, who for whatever reason, do not fit in with the Federation's grand
scheme of the way things should be. Rejoice, my friends, for the days of your
living in a galaxy that attends to the Federation's beck and call are soon
over."
Thul gestured to his right, indicating that someone should join
him on the podium. In the meantime, Calhoun looked around, trying to catch a
glimpse of either Picard or Vara Syndra or, most particularly, Zolon Darg.
Darg was the only one he managed to spot, but that wasn't too surprising. With
bis bulk, he towered above everyone around him. Picard might have been standing
right next to him, but thanks to the crowd, Calhoun couldn't possibly see him.
A rather unassuming human was now standing next to Thul
on the podium. "This... is Doctor David Kendrow, one of the
premier computer scientists in the quadrant. Wave to the good people,
Kendrow." Kendrow obediently waved. He seemed none too thrilled to be
there. "Doctor Kendrow," continued Thul, "has been instrumental
in aiding us. He has helped us to coordinate an astounding amount of
information about artificial intelligence. His greatest aid has come in
helping us to understand a remarkably advanced computer called the Omega 9...
a computer which sets new advances in the art of interfacing with existing
mainframes. Working in tandem with the Omega 9, assorted other research, and
dissident residents of a world called Narobi II, we are going to accomplish
what no one else in the history of the Federation has managed to do: We are
going to connect, at one time, with every computer mainframe through the entire
UFP.
"The very commonality which has made the UFP into such a
tightly-knit organization is going to be used against it. But we are not simply
going to use the Omega 9 to destroy the computers, oh no. Far from it. You see,
the computers are tied in with, and control, food replicators which are common
technology on all the member planets. The Omega 9 is going to cause all the
computers to replicate a virus which I call the Double Helix, which I have
spent years perfecting. Now ... replicators are limited. They cannot create
something that is alive. They can, however, create a string of chemicals which
will replicate the disease, and as the disease is introduced into the food or
textiles that the replicators generate, that—I assure you—will be more than
sufficient.
"But that is too slow. Oh yes... too slow, my friends, and
too inefficient So what will, in fact, happen, is that at the precise same
moment, all replicators everywhere will go active, and a gas will be issued by
them. That gas will contain the Double Helix virus, and will spread as an
airborne menace in no time at all, over every single planet.
"The Federation representatives are scheduled to re-enact the
signing of the charter. That will be the moment when the virus will be released
on all the Federation worlds simultaneously .via the replicators. It will be
galaxy-wide, and the entire Federation will be obliterated in one stroke. Those
worlds which are not part of the Federation will naturally
survive... as will anyone who is safe within the Thul sphere."
He smiled out at the crowd, spreading his arms wide. "And mat will be
that. In one grand, glorious stroke, the entire United Federation of Planets
will become a thing of the past!"
A huge buzz of conversation had been building and building as Thul
had continued, and when he stopped and waited for a reaction, he very much got
one. There was a gigantic cheer, a roar of approval so loud that Calhoun
thought he was going to go deaf. The applause and huzzahs seemed to go on
forever, and when it finally did subside, it was only at Gerrid Thul's urging
as he clearly had more to say.
Calhoun, in the meantime, was endeavoring to drift toward the back
of the room. He had no problem making sure that no one was watching him; every
eye in the place was rivetted on Thul. He tapped the inside of his left heel,
and the long-range communicator slid smoothly out of the heel and into his
palm.
Thul started to speak again. His voice was amplified, and it was
so loud that Calhoun knew he was going to have trouble getting anyone to hear
him.
"Yes, my friends. The Federation has become weak," said
Thul. "The Federation has become stupid. And the most insulting of all...
the Federation thinks that we, ourselves, are so stupid, that we will easily be
fooled by whatever pathetic plan they might come up with. See for yourself the
pathetic spy that they have sent into our midst."
Calhoun's head snapped around... and he saw himself. To be
precise, he saw his face on the gigantic screen behind Thul, having replaced me
image of the UFP celebration. There he was, right in the midst of the crowd,
palming the device that he was about to speak into.
Those who were standing around him naturally recognized him
immediately and lunged toward him. Calhoun tried to fight bis way out, but it
was hopeless before he even began. Innumerable hands surrounded him, shoving
him toward the floor, and the communicator flew out of his hand. It skidded to
a halt several feet away and he could see it, just out of his reach.
And then it was trampled, simply crushed beneath the stampede
that was converging on the spy who had been named by Gerrid Thul.
Calhoun was hauled to his feet, still struggling. Even as he
did, though, he knew that it was futile. It was almost more out of
misplaced pride than anything else, because in point of fact, he didn't stand a
chance.
"Up here, my friends! Bring him up here!"
They shoved Calhoun forward, laughing and shouting, and within
moments he had been thrown at the feet of Gerrid Thul. He started to get to his
feet, and then an immense foot came down on his back. He knew who it was
immediately, even as his spine creaked under the weight
"Zolon Darg," Thul said conversationally to Calhoun,
"has been asking for this opportunity."
"I'm not a spy—" Calhoun began. Then he couldn't get another
word out as Darg increased the pressure, chortling as he did so.
"It is possible," Thul allowed. "On the other hand,
that is merely a possibility ... whereas I consider your being a spy to fall
far more into the realm of likelihood. Darg ... do as you like."
"As I like?" Darg said, and made as if to slam his foot
completely through Calhoun's torso. Then he paused and said, "No. Why
should I keep the fun to myself? You know... there are many things I can do
with you, Calhoun, after you're dead. So why not give others the opportunity to
actually escort you to the other side." He pulled his blaster from his
holster and called out, "Kwint!"
Kwint appeared at his side, his face one big sneer. "Yes,
sir?"
"Here," and he handed the blaster to Kwint.
"Execute him."
Calhoun, very carefully and very deliberately, did not look up at
the disguised Picard. To do so would have come across as pleading, and that was
not something he could risk. Calhoun was done for, he knew that. But if Picard
foolishly attempted to save him, they would both be finished. One of diem had
to complete the task. And if Calhoun was going to be the one to fall, then so
be it.
He just prayed Picard wouldn't be so foolhardy as to try some
insane rescue ploy. Surely Picard had to know that it was hopeless, that
Calhoun had to be .sacrificed. That was simply the way it had played out. No
offense, no foul, see you next lifetime.
In a way, it was almost a relief. At that point, Calhoun had
absolutely no idea what to do about Lodec. At least dying first would resolve
that quandary.
He had always understood that, when one is about to die, one's
life flashes before one's eyes. He waited for that to happen.
There was no flash. There was no life.
This made him edgy, as it seemed to indicate that he wasn't about
to die. If that were the case, then it was most unfortunate because that meant—
"Nobody move!" shouted Picard.
"Oh, hell," muttered Calhoun.
Picard considered, for a moment that was in fact brief but, to
him, seemed endless, the option of shooting Calhoun. There didn't seem to be
any other options being presented to him.
His finger even started to squeeze the trigger... and that was
when Picard knew that he simply couldn't do it If one was dealing with sheer
numbers—the death of one man, Calhoun, versus the potential death of trillions
of beings—obviously mere was no choice. But Picard refused to accept mat it
was that simple. There had to be other choices.
Moving with surprising speed, Picard vaulted the distance between
himself and Thul and put the blaster straight at Gerrid Thul's head. Darg
didn't budge. Neither did Thul. The crowd started to converge, to surge
forward, and Picard called out, 'Tell them to back off! We're going!"
"Are you?" Darg asked calmly. "And if you're
prevented from doing so... ?"
"Then Gerrid Thul dies," Picard said firmly. "I'll
kill him..."
"As you killed my son?" Gerrid Thul asked
The words froze Picard. Did Thul actually know him? What was that
possible? But if he did, then that meant—
. "Go ahead," Darg was saying. "Shoot. See if I
care."
That more or less clinched it for Picard. He looked down at the
energy indicator on the blaster he was holding, but was reasonably certain
about what he was going to find.
It read "empty." The blaster was completely out of
power.
Picard looked up and saw that he was ringed by half a dozen
blasters, all aimed squarely at him.
"Now these," Darg said conversationally, "all
work."
Slowly Picard put up his hands, knowing there was no choice. He
was grabbed from all sides, and he saw Calhoun being hauled to his feet as
well.
"I never trusted you for a moment, 'Kwint,' " Darg told
him. "So I had a DNA check run on you from scrapings taken off a glass at
Kara's. By the time we arrived here, Gerrid Thul was already quite aware that
the man who killed his son was going to be making a return visit."
"I was not responsible for the death of your son, and you
know it," Picard said to Thul.
"You can believe that, if it pleases you to do so," Thul
said. "I, however, know otherwise. Darg... take them away. Put them in
lock-up."
"What? Why? I'll just kill them..."
"You'll do no such thing," Thul admonished him. 'I want
mem in lock-up, with a screen mat broadcasts the Federation ceremonies. I want
them to witness their Federation's fall. I think..." and he smiled
broadly, "I think my son would have liked it that way."
XX.
"what did you expect me to do?" demanded Picard.
From within their cell, Calhoun glowered at him. "I expected
you to pull the damned trigger, that's what I expected you to do."
"And kill you in cold blood."
"If it meant preserving the mission, yes."
Just outside the cell, two guards were visible through the force
field that was blocking the door. They appeared to be smirking as the two
captains disagreed rather vocally about the direction that Picard should have
followed in the given situation.
Calhoun was sitting disconsolately on one of the hard benches that
constituted the entirety of the furniture in the cramped cell, while Picard was
standing and facing him. "So you expected me to shoot you down?"
"Absolutely," said Calhoun. "I knew there were
hazards to this mission..."
"For God's sake, Mac, mere are hazards to any mission. But
this was ..." He paused and then said, "If the situation were
reversed, would you have shot me."
"With the safety of the entire Federation on the line?"
"Yes."
Without hesitation, Calhoun said, "In a heartbeat."
They stared at each other for a long moment, and then Picard said
softly, "And if it were Shelby?"
Calhoun looked away. "This is a stupid discussion. It's all
moot anyway. The game was up before they even handed you me blaster."
"True."
"So..." Calhoun slapped his thighs and stood. Then he
walked over to the forcefield that barred the way and he stroked his chin
thoughtfully. The guards outside watched him through narrowed eyes.
"Here's what we have to do. We have to get out of here, destroy their computer
system, take down Gerrid Thul and Zolon Darg, and do it all before they have
the signing ceremony back on earth that's going to signal the beginning of the
end."
The guards clearly thought this to be a hilarious proposition.
They laughed out loud as Calhoun stared at mem. "Is something
funny?" he asked quietly.
"No, nothing at all," said one of the guards. "We'd
be most interested in seeing you get out of here. Wouldn't we, Benz?" he
said to the other.
"Absolutely, Zeen," said Benz.
"I just need to warn you," Calhoun said calmly,
"that if I do get out of here, the first thing I'm going to have to do is
kill the both of you. Nothing else to be done for it, I'm afraid. I can't take
the chance of either of you recovering and sounding an alarm prematurely."
"Oh, we understand that perfectly. We won't hold it against
you. How are you going to kill us, by the way? Weapons scan revealed no weapons
on you."
"I'll just have to do it with my bare hands."
"Very well. You go right ahead," grinned Zeen.
"You're sure you won't be upset?"
"Not at all. We understand you have a difficult job to do.
Far be it from us to resent you for it."
"That's very kind of you. Activate transporter, right"
The grin remained on their faces for another moment or two... and
then, to their shock, Calhoun vanished in a burst of molecular rearrangement.
"What the hell!" the one called Benz roared.
They were both facing the cell when Calhoun rematerialized
directly behind them. They spun, faced him.
Benz was closer. Calhoun's right hand speared out, nailed Benz in
the throat, crushing his windpipe. It was effectively over for him at that
moment as he collapsed to the floor, unable to breathe.
Opening his mouth to shout out a warning, Zeen brought up his
weapon at the same time. Calhoun didn't even slow down. Moving with incredible
calm, he grabbed Zeen's gun, angled it backward and fired. The blast struck the
forcefield, ricocheted, and hit Zeen in the back. Zeen's eyes went wide as his
spine sizzled, but he didn't feel the pain for long as Calhoun grabbed either
side of his head and twisted with brisk efficiency to the right. Zeen's neck
broke with remarkable ease and he sagged to the floor.
As he fell, Calhoun pulled the gun from his lifeless fingers and
glanced down at Benz, gasping on the floor, unable to draw in air. Calhoun
fired off a quick shot into his head and Benz stopped thrashing about.
From the moment he'd reappeared outside the cell to the moment
that the guards were dead, the entire incident had taken no more than four
seconds.
Calhoun shoved the blaster into his belt, picked up Benz's, which
he'd never even had the chance to pull out, and then tapped the controls
deactivating the cell forcefield. Picard stepped out and looked down in
astonished horror at the unmoving guards ... and then up at the cold purple
eyes of Calhoun.
"Let me guess," he said coolly to Picard. "You
wouldn't have done it."
"I would have found another way, yes."
"I guess you're not a savage, then."
There was an element of pity in Picard's eyes that Calhoun found
most annoying, "I guess not."
He handed one of the blasters to Picard. "That's too bad.
It's a savage galaxy. Let's go."
Suddenly they heard a footfall behind them, someone else coming
down the corridor. Calhoun spun, levelling his weapon and fully prepared to
annihilate almost anyone who appeared around die corner.
Vara Syndra, however, fell into the "almost anyone"
category, and so it was that when she came into view, she did not immediately
die. Instead she looked at the fallen bodies, and up at Calhoun, with a
remarkable lack of surprise.
"I should have known," she said, and for some reason her
voice sounded different Less airy, less seductive, more hardened. "I show
up to free you, and you're already out"
"Free us? Why?" demanded Picard.
"Because I owe him," she said, indicating Calhoun,
"and I always pay my debts."
"You don't owe me anything," Calhoun said. "I mean,
granted, it was good, I thought, but—"
"This isn't about sex, you idiot!" she said in
exasperation. "Don't you know anything? Don't you—?"
And then, from behind Vara, came three guards. Like the fallen
ones, they were Thallonians. Unlike the fallen ones, they had their weapons up
and they were ready to start firing. Picard and Calhoun had their blasters up,
but Vara was squarely in the way.
"Hold on a moment," she sighed, and then she spun and
she was holding a knife in either hand. Before the guards were even aware they
were under attack from her, they were already dead. A thick pool of blood began
to spread from their fallen bodies as they lay on the floor, one piled atop
another, dark liquid pouring from the vital arteries that Vara had effortlessly
cut.
Vara grinned. There was nothing seductive about her. The woman who
had been radiating sex not so long ago had changed into something completely
different. Feral, wild, brutal and—
And Calhoun laughed.
"What," Picard asked him stiffly, "is so damned
funny?"
"She knows what's so funny," said Calhoun. "Don't
you, Vandelia."
"It took you long enough, you Xenexian jerk," said
Vandelia of Orion.
In the main computer lab, Kendrow studied the final linkups very
carefully. The last thing he wanted at mis point was for something to go wrong,
because he knew all too well mat any sort of failure at this point would be the
end of him.
He kept glancing, equally nervous, at the Narobi who was standing
nearby. His name, loosely translated, was simply Silver, which was his color.
He had another designation which was used to distinguish him from other Narobi,
but since there were none others around at that point, he had seen no need for
its use. When it had been made clear to him that human interaction almost
required that he be called something, he had chosen simply
"Silver" and recommended that that be the end of it.
Silver was the leader of the dissidents of Narobi. Normally a
peaceful people, it had been Silver who had felt most strongly that they were
capable of so much more than simple peace, and he had been more than
accommodating when he had been approaching by Gerrid Thul. Silver, like all
his people, was tall and glistening and almost entirely machine. There were
some small elements of the mortal left within him. Those were doubtlessly the
ones that made him dissatisfied with the Narobi philosophy of peace.
When he spoke, his Ups did not move, for the simple reason that he
had none. No mouth, for standard food was not a requirement; he was solar
powered. No nose, for of what interest was scent. He did, however, have eyes,
not so much for sight as it was that the Narobi had discovered other races like
to have eyes they could look into when they were talking.
Standing nearby, observing the final preparations, were Gerrid
Thul and Zolon Darg. "Everything will be ready, will it not,
Kendrow?" asked Thul in that silky voice he had mat was half pleasantry,
half warning.
"Yes, sir."
"Good, Quite good. We wouldn't want anything to go wrong,
would we?"
"Definitely not, sir."
There was an observation window in the computer center that opened
up onto the grand square. The screen was up and running, once again focused
upon the events at the Federation gathering. Many of Thul's followers who had
gathered there were still there, watching the drama unfold that was going to
spell the end of the Federation. Thul smiled down at them. His people. His
followers. He very much liked the sound of that. And Mendan Abbis would have
liked the sound of it, too. The
thoughts of his son momentarily saddened him, and he pushed them away.
Now was not the time for distractions.
"Darg..." he glanced around. "Have you seen Vara?
She seems to have disappeared."
"No, sir. I have not."
"See if you can find—"
And suddenly there was a breep that came over Darg's comm
unit. "Yes. Go ahead," he said brusquely into it.
"Sir! The prisoners are out! We found the cell deactivated!
Five guards down!"
Darg looked at Thul in a most accusing, "told you so"
manner. "Alert the security force. But do it quietly. We don't need alarm
bells howling, getting everyone upset and also letting the prisoners know that
we know they're out I'll be right there." Then he stabbed an angry finger
at Thul. "I told you this would happen! I told you I should have killed mem
immediately!"
"I simply have endless confidence in you, Darg, that you'll
be able to handle them. In fact, you should thank me. You see ... you made a
muddle of attending to Calhoun last time you faced him. If I hadn't found you
and... attended to you ... you'd be long dead by now. So I'm generously giving
you an opportunity to get it right this time. Do not disappoint me, or
yourself."
With an irritated growl, Darg headed out Thul, meantime, turned
back to Kendrow and said calmly, "Don't slow in your preparations,
Kendrow. Timing, after all, is everything."
At the site of the great Federation assemblage, Admiral Nechayev,
in full formal dress, felt a tap on her shoulder. She turned and saw Admiral
Jellico behind her, with his customary polite-but-pained expression.
"Greetings, Admiral," he said. "I don't usually see you at such
functions, particularly at such crowded ones."
"I know that, Admiral. But even an office-bound old thing
like me likes to get out every now and then. Mingle. That sort of thing."
"So," and he folded his arms, "your boy Calhoun
staged quite an exit didn't he, Alynna?"
"You cooperated admirably, Eddie."
"Cooperated? He hit me! In the head!"
"He was simply improvising."
"In the head," repeated Jellico.
"Oh, well, Eddie, it's not as if you were using it for anything."
"You're a riot, Alynna. We were supposed to stage an argument.
Not get physical."
A slightly tipsy Tellarite bumped into her. He grunted an apology
and moved on. She shook her head in annoyance, although she was more irritated
with Jellico than the Tellarite. "And how convincing do you think it would
have been if you threatened to throw him out of Starfleet after a simple argument.
I don't blame Mac for slugging you. It all serves a higher purpose, Eddie,
just remember that."
"So you say." He looked around. "Except I don't see
him here. In fact, I don't see any danger of anything at the moment."
"That's why he's involved, Eddie. To attend to whatever it is
we don't see."
"And maybe he's not needed. Maybe there are others who are
attending to it just fine."
She looked at him askance. "What is that supposed to
mean?"
"Nothing." He smiled enigmatically. "Not a
thing."
Rolling her eyes, she said, "Fine, Eddie. Whatever you say.
It means nothing. Oh," and she pointed toward the front of the room.
"They're starting."
"Starting what?"
"The re-enactment of the Resolution of Non-interference. Come
along, Eddie. We're about to see history."
XXI.
all those years ago, even after Calhoun had freed her, Vandelia
had lived in fear of Darg. For she had heard rumors that Darg had somehow
survived the destruction of his headquarters. That he was back in the
business, building up his strength, making his connections once more. That he
was more powerful and nastier than ever. And that he had never, ever, given up
the notion of tracking down Vandelia and the mysterious man who had freed her,
and making them both pay. On at least two occasions, Vandelia had narrowly
missed him, arriving at a performing spot mere days after Darg had been mere.
Vandelia was a brave and fierce woman, as was typical of Orions.
But even she had her breaking point. Night after night she would lie awake,
listening, wondering whether this would be the night that Darg tracked her
down. She had no interest in facing him and teaching him one final lesson, nor
did she desire to track him down first so she could put an end to him. For
Vandelia had had the most uncanny feeling that she had gotten off quite luckily
the first time, and to encounter Darg again would be to tempt fate in a manner
that would ultimately rebound to her detriment.
She saw only one way out... and she took it.
Vandelia disappeared ... and Vara Syndra was bom.
It had not been all that difficult, really. The changes were
mostly cosmetic. She hadn't really been transformed into a Thallonian. Shaving
her head, changing the pigmentation of her skin from green to red, all had been
fairly simple. Her physicality, however, and the ability to give off waves of
sex appeal in the same way that stars gave off light was another matter,
however.
For that, she had turned to a supplier of all things exotic,
questionable and, for the most part, illegal. His name had been Brace Carmel
Mudd, and the first time that she had encountered him, she had felt unclean.
Purported to be a "family business," it had been his name which she
had heard bandied about most often when she'd made inquiries as to obtaining
Venus drugs. She had managed to track him down and, for a healthy price (not to
mention a substantial loss of her self-respect), had obtained the drugs.
The drugs had been around for nearly two centuries, and the core
suppliers—whose real names were unknown to all but a handful, Mudd included—had
spent much of that time perfecting them. In the old days, their effects had
been fairly temporary, and the alterations they made relatively modest. They
had simply enhanced those features that the users felt were their strongest.
But it had been as much in the mind as in the body.
Not anymore. The Venus drugs of the modern era were far more
sophisticated. They had put inches on Vandelia in all the right places,
reconfigured her into an absolute sexual magnet They had even altered the shape
of her face, to the point where she was unrecognizable. Mudd had given her a
ten-year supply and gone on his way, and Vandelia had used it extremely well.
She had gone into Thallonian space, which on the surface of it seemed insane.
It was, after all, the native territory of the one man she never wanted to
encounter again. But she had decided to play the concept of hiding hi plain
sight to the hilt If Darg was busy checking the far reaches of the galaxy for
Vandelia, it would never occur to him to look in his own backyard. And even if
he did, he wouldn't think at all about a sultry Thallonian woman who went by
the name of Vara Syndra.
Everything had been going fine... until the drugs had run out
prematurely. For Mudd, as it turned out, had not exactly
dealt fairly with her. The ten-year supply was, hi reality, half
that, the rest of it simple colored gelatin. It meant that she had overpaid
significantly. It also meant she was hi tremendous danger.
It was around then that she had fallen hi with Gerrid Thul. Thul
had taken an immediate liking to her. He did not know her true name, or even
that she was originally an Orion. What he did know, however, was where to
obtain the Venus drugs which she now desperately needed as her supply of the
real drugs was dwindling to nothing. It became an eminently workable
arrangement. She became his full-time aide, generating her considerable sex
appeal whenever he needed it, and he kept her hi supply of the Venus drugs. It
worked out rather nicely.
Nonetheless, she nearly panicked when Zolon Darg came on the
scene.
At first she couldn't believe it was he when Thul 'Introduced"
them, he had become so huge. Then she waited for some glimmer of recognition
from him. She had steeled herself for this possibility for many years, but once
it arrived, it was everything she could do not to run screaming from the room.
Darg grunted.
That was it. End of encounter. He granted. Whenever he would see
her hi the future, it would always be the same terse acknowledgment of her. She
couldn't believe how fortunate she had been; he had no idea who she was. In
fact, at one point, he even asked her if she knew of an Orion dancer named
Vandelia. It was all she could do not to scream the truth hi his face to
display her contempt for him. That, however, would not have been a wise move,
since he would then have killed her hi short order, so she managed to restrain
herself.
"Vandelia? Never heard of her," she had said, wide-eyed,
and he never inquired again.
He also never displayed any physical interest hi her. For the
first weeks after encountering him, she had dreaded the day that Gerrid Thul
might tell her that she was required to "entertain" the formidable
Zolon Darg. But it had never happened. He wasn't remotely drawn to her. She
couldn't quite figure out whether she should be relieved or insulted.
Ultimately she opted for the former.
Thus had her life gone, hiding in plain sight. Living the life of
Vara Syndra, adored by more males than she had ever known. It was artificial,
it was a shadow, but at least she was alive and enjoying herself.
But every so often she would think about her dancing... and also
about the scarred man who had rescued her back when she was another person
entirely ... the scarred man who had, amazingly, not immediately succumbed to her
charms as an Orion dancing girl, even though the Pheromones that she generated
(as did all of her kind) should have made her irresistible. She was sure,
though, that the Venus drugs enhancing her Pheromones would prove irresistible
even to Calhoun.
She'd proven right
She was, for some reason, a little disappointed...
Calhoun, Picard and Vandelia headed down the corridor as quickly
as she could. "Down this way," she said. "We've got to get you
out of here."
"We can't," Picard said. "We have to stop Thul's
plan."
She was about to try and talk them out of it, and then she
mentally shrugged. "Yes. You would have to, wouldn't you?" Calhoun
was staring at her. "Well? Any questions, Mac?"
"No," he said after a moment's thought. "Shaved the
head, retoned the skin, Venus drugs, hid in plain sight. Correct?"
She blinked back her astonishment and then said in the most bored
tone she could muster, "Wrong. Completely wrong. Now come on."
"Where's the central computer room. He must be programming
it from somewhere," said Picard.
"Up," she said. "It's up at the top level.
Here," and she suddenly walked over to a computer station that was built
into the wall. She tapped in an identification code and, moments later, a
schematic of the sphere appeared on it. "Here it is," and she pointed
out the location.
"Are there laboratory facilities?" asked Picard.
"Yes. Here. Two levels below the top. Why?"
"Because if we don't manage to stop the initial launch of the
virus, and it does get loose, we need to know if there's some
sort of cure for it," Picard said. "And if he was doing
research on it—"
A blaster bolt struck the computer station and smashed it apart.
The three of them whirled, just in time to see a squadron of
Thul's men charging toward them.
Picard and Calhoun immediately fell back, firing as they went,
desperately trying to keep their pursuers off balance. Vandelia, who had lifted
a blaster from one of the Thallonians who had tried to take them down earlier,
was also firing. They picked off several of their pursuers, and the others
ducked for cover. "Come on! This way!" shouted Picard, and they
bolted down the corridor.
Blasts ricocheted off the walls around them as they ran. One of
them struck an overhead pipe, and coolant blasted out, filling up the entire
walkway with thick, white smoke. Vandelia took a deep breath of air before it
became impossible to do so, and then she couldn't see anything. There were
forms, shadows ahead of her, and she ran after them. She went around another
comer, and then another.
And suddenly she was alone.
She looked around, tried to figure out where she had become
separated from Calhoun and Picard. There were no sounds of pursuit; perhaps
they had decided to go around another way, she must try to catch up with them.
Even so, retracing her steps would not be the best idea. So she decided to
keep going forward.
As she did, she mulled over the fact that she could easily have
ducked out of the situation. She could have pretended that Calhoun and Picard
had just now taken her hostage. The guards that she'd killed were dead, so they
weren't going to talk. The Federation men would certainly have played along so
that she wasn't at risk. She could have kept her life going...
Except it wasn't her life, not really. It was Vara Syndra's life,
and she realized that she had grown rather tired of her. She missed the woman
she was. She wanted Vandelia back. And this was the only way to recapture her.
She saw a figure ahead of her in the mist, turning and looking at
her. "Mac!" she called. "Mac! Over here!"
The figure suddenly seemed to stand up, looming large in front of
her. Zolon Darg emerged from the mist and looked at her as if seeing her for
the very first tune.
"Hello, Vandelia," he said.
Then he killed her.
XXII.
picard had absolutely no idea how he had become separated from Calhoun,
but there was no time to worry about it at that point. What was of far greater
concern were the men who were pursuing him.
He turned quickly, spotted an open lift, and charged toward it. He
ducked, weaved, ran as fast as he could. A blast bolt singed his shoulder and
he staggered, but he tumbled into the lift, losing his grip on his blaster as
he did so. "Level 3A!" he called, which was how he had seen it
demarcated on the schematic.
The doors slid closed... but just before they did, a Thallonian
leaped the distance and fell into the lift car atop Picard. The car started up.
The Thallonian snarled into Picard's face, tried to bring his
blaster up. Picard gripped his wrist and they struggled furiously as Picard
tried to aim it away from himself. The blaster discharged, blasting through
the clear backing of the lift that overlooked the dizzying interior of the
sphere.
Picard and the Thallonian straggled to their feet, pushing and
shoving against one another. The blaster went off again, ricocheting and
striking a glancing blow against the Thallon-ian's heavily armored back. It
wasn't sufficient to hurt him. It
was, however, enough to knock both the Thallonian and Picard back
and out the gaping hole in the back of the turbolift.
For a moment, there was nothing between Picard and a drop except
air, and he was floating in the zero-g environment. Then he snagged the
shattered exterior of the lift. It sliced up his hand fiercely, but it held
firm.
The Thallonian was less fortunate. He tumbled away from the lift,
but he did so in extreme slow motion. He tried to make it back to die lift,
looking for all the world as if he were swimming in the air. But he simply
drifted backward, faster and faster, heading toward the core of die sphere
where the massive cloaking device was.
Picard knew immediately what was going to happen. When he hit the
gravimetric center of the sphere, he was going to make a fairly significant
splat. And if Picard didn't manage to haul himself back into safety, he was
going to go die same way.
The slicing of his hand was excruciating—it was like massaging
broken glass—but Picard had no choice. Setting his jaw determinedly, he dragged
himself into the lift, fighting against the zero G which seemed so buoyant but
was, in fact, so deadly. In a moment he was tumbled to the floor, and then
looked up as the door opened on the level that he had requested.
He picked up me blaster that he had dropped on the floor of the
turbolift and staggered out. His blood-covered palms made it difficult to grip
the gun securely, but he had to do the best he could. He looked around
desperately and saw signs pointing to the lab. How exceptionally convenient.
He followed them quickly, got to me lab, and just as he arrived,
ran into another squadron of guards. They had their weapons out, he was ten
feet short of the door to the lab, and they absolutely had him cold.
At that point, Mackenzie Calhoun ran by.
And another. And another still.
"Get him!" the lead attacker shouted, but they had no
idea which "him" to get "And him!" he added, and pointed at
Picard.
Several of them indeed fired right at Picard, and he would have
been dead if Calhoun had not thrown himself into the blaster's path. The shot
took him down from die back, and Calhoun collapsed into Picard's arms.
"Mac!" Picard cried out
At which point, Calhoun abruptly got to his feet and started
running back die other way.
By then, everyone was so confused, that they totally missed it when
Picard charged into the laboratory.
There were workers and people whom Picard presumed to be
scientists within the lab. They were milling about in confusion, clearly
concerned over the shots that they were hearing just outside. One of them, not
realizing that Picard was the target of those shots, demanded, "What's
going on out there? Are you people insane! We can't have blasts flying around
here! We can't—"
Picard aimed his blaster squarely at the scientist's face.
"You can't... what?"
He froze. They all did. When he spoke again, it was with a
stammer. "We... there are dangerous chemicals... things here that can't...
that mustn't..."
"Things such as the Double Helix virus?" Picard said,
bis blaster never wavering. His hands were throbbing. It was everything he
could do to hold his weapon steady.
There were apprehensive nods from everyone in the room.
"And mat means it would be very, very bad if something were
to be broken... wouldn't it... because it might release something that you
don't want released...."
At which point, he swung his blaster around in a sweep of the
room. He didn't fire... he just aimed. But when he was pointing to one corner
in particular, that caused an alarmed jump by nearly everyone in the room.
A-ha, he
drought as he crossed quickly. Several of the scientists made a move toward
lum, but he held mem back with a glance that spoke volumes.
There were vials, samples lining the wall where he was standing.
"Which one?" he demanded. "Which one is the Double Helix? And
which one is the cure?"
"There is no cure!" one of die scientists said, and die
others bobbed their heads in agreement
It was too spontaneous a reply to be a falsehood. Picard's heart
sank when he heard it, but then he reasoned that if the Federation got their
hands on a pure sample of die virus, perhaps their researchers could find it
"A sample, a sample of the virus. I need it, now."
"But..."
"Now!"
They pointed
to one of the tubes, and he snatched it up.
"No, that's the wrong one! It's not the standard virus...
that one's highly concentrated!" one of them said. 'Ten times more
virulent! You—!"
Suddenly the pursuing guards burst in through the door, their
weapons ready to blast holes into anything and everything.
Considering the inflammatory nature of the moment, Picard was
remarkably calm. He simply held the vial up and said, coolly, "You would
not like me to drop this?"
In spite of themselves, the guards cast a glance at the scientists.
There were rapid and very anxious shakings of heads from all of them, verifying
the notion that shooting at Picard at that moment in time would be an extremely
bad idea.
Slowly Picard moved toward the door, holding the vial in front of
him. "That's it. That's fine. Everyone stay right where they are," he
said. "My hands are slippery enough with blood, you see. Wouldn't want me
to be even more clumsy, would you? Now, clear the way." They didn't move.
His voice dropped even lower, so low that one would have been inclined to check
and see if he still had a pulse. "Clear... the ... way," he said very
slowly, very methodically, and very dangerously.
They cleared the way.
Calhoun had run to the upper levels and no one stopped him.
He had done so through a rather crafty subterfuge that he was, in
fact, rather proud of. He had circled around to where Vandelia had dispatched
the group of guards, torn off a piece of cloth from one of them, soaked it hi
the widening pool of blood, and then held it up to the right side of his face.
He then proceeded to run as fast as he could, using stairwells and ladders
rather than the lifts which he felt would be watched more carefully. He kept
the cloth pressed against his face.
The first time he encountered a squadron of guards, he said
nothing, but simply pointed and gesticulated while groaning. What the guards
saw was a man who had clearly been badly injured by the escaped prisoners who
were somewhere behind him. They promptly ran right past Calhoun and, grinning
to
himself, he kept on going. It happened three more times as he made
his way up the sphere, and each time played out in exactly the same manner.
The fourth time, while on the third level, it didn't work.
It worked at first as they started off down the hall. But then
around the corner came Lodec, and he and Calhoun froze, face to face. Lodec
wasn't fooled for a second, but for a moment— just a moment—doubt seemed to
play across his face.
Calhoun brought his blaster up, operating completely on instinct,
ready to shoot Lodec down. And he, likewise, hesitated for a moment.
And then Lodec shouted, "Calhoun! He's here!"
The guards, as one, turned and charged back.
Calhoun shoved his tongue against the replicator inside his mouth,
and suddenly multiple versions of himself sprang into existence and started
running in all directions. The guards were frozen in confusion, and when they
did start opening fire, it was too late. As for the real Calhoun, he paused
only long enough to swing a roundhouse punch that flattened Lodec. He hoped he
had broken his jaw, and would have liked to do more, but it was all he had time
for.
Just ahead of him, on the uppermost floor, was the computer room.
He braced himself, holding his blaster firmly, and then he thrust himself in,
coming in low, getting ready to fire...
There was no one there.
That wasn't entirely true, actually. Vandelia was there, her body
tilted back on the chair, blood trickling from her mouth. Calhoun could see
from across the room that she was dead. God knew he had seen it enough.
Even so, he didn't want to believe it was true. He approached her
slowly, hoping against hope that somehow she would just get up, come back to
life. That it was all some sort of a sick joke. Then he heard her voice, and
she was whispering, "I wanted to dance... for just you... Mac ... one
more time..." And then her voice rattled in her throat.
And then she repeated it... and died again ... and again...
He turned and saw Darg's image-on the screen. He was smiling. It
was not a pleasant expression.
"Those were her last words, Calhoun. I recorded them for
you. I knew you'd want to hear them. If you're hearing this...
which I assume you are... I can further assume that you're in the main computer
room. That's where you would naturally come to try and head off Thul's plan.
That is naturally where we would be... if we didn't mind being easy targets
for you. We're secured in another part of the station, I assure you, preparing
for the great moment I'm afraid there's nothing you can do to stop it. It would
be most appreciated, however, if you would kindly ... die."
At that moment, Calhoun had no idea where to go.
At that moment, Calhoun didn't care.
The door to the computer room slid open, as he knew it would. Darg
was standing there, as he knew he would be. He was empty-handed, and he waggled
his fingers toward Calhoun. Pressing in around him, from all sides, were armed
guards. They had their weapons trained on Calhoun. The slightest move and they
could easily blast him to free-floating atoms.
"If you drop the weapon... you have an opportunity at me...
man to man. If you don't drop the weapon... my men drop you." He paused
and then said softly, "Come on, Calhoun. You know you want it."
Calhoun allowed the blaster to drop from his fingers. At that moment,
they could easily have killed him where he stood.
They didn't Instead, they simply watched and grinned. Clearly they
were all of the opinion that Darg was hi absolutely no danger at all. But at
that moment, Calhoun didn't give a damn what they thought. Instead he charged
toward the far bigger man, building up speed with every moment, and he slammed
into Darg with everything he had.
And bounced off.
His head spun around him as he hit the floor. He had no idea what
had just happened. It had been like crashing into a bulkhead at full tilt. His
eyes crossed and then uncrossed and he looked up at Darg who was coming right
toward him, his fist cocked and ready to slam home. He barely managed to roll
out of the way in time as Darg smashed the floor where he'd just been and made
a hole in it the size of a watermelon.
Calhoun stumbled out the door. Darg's men made no effort to stop
him. They seemed to be having too good a time. Darg
lumbered after him, coming toward him like a tidal wave, just as
easy to reason with, just as unstoppable.
"A little different this time," he rumbled. "Come
back here, Calhoun. We have old scores to settle."
He closed on Calhoun, swung an uppercut that could have taken off
Calhoun's head had it connected. Calhoun barely dodged it, moved out of the way
of a second thrust, dodged a third. "Stay still!" snarled Darg, but
Calhoun did not feel inclined to oblige.
Once more Darg swung, and once more Calhoun got around him, and
this time Darg was slightly off balance. Calhoun moved quickly and drove a
punch to Darg's jaw. Darg let out an angry yelp and staggered, and Calhoun hit
him in the head a second time, staggering him. But then he pressed his luck and
mis time Darg caught his hand, yanked him off his feet, and slammed him against
the wall as if he were a beanbag.
Calhoun felt his face starting to swell from the impact of hitting
the wall face-first He saw Darg advancing on him. Trying to stall for time, he
pushed his tongue against the false tooth to activate it Nothing. Instead he
felt the broken shards of the device crumble in his mourn. The impact had
shattered it He spit it out and made a mental note to write a memo to Nechayev
about the durability of SI devices.
Darg extended his hands... and razor-sharp blades snapped out of
the ends of his fingers. He swiped at Calhoun, slashing across his tunic, and
Calhoun barely managed to avoid more serious injury. He stared at the blades
uncomprehendingly.
"You still don't understand, do you," Darg said.
"All right I'll make it clear for you." He turned the blades toward
himself and slashed open his shirt. It fluttered to the ground in several
pieces, to reveal Darg's glistening metal silver torso.
"Thul found me, damned near dead. He was impressed I'd
survived that long on sheer hatred. He kept me alive and took me to Narobi.
They built me this body. My head, my brain's all that's left. I'm not a man
anymore. I'm a walking weapon, a machine that pretends it's vaguely alive. A
freak. And it's your fault, Calhoun. Your fault!" Upon the last
words, he succumbed to total rage and charged at Calhoun.
Calhoun twisted loose the heel of his boot It came clear and he
aimed and fired. The phaser blasted out, smashing Darg
squarely in the chest. It knocked him back and he fell with a
startled grunt.
Calhoun did the only thing that seemed reasonable under the
circumstances. He turned and ran.
One of Darg's men tried to fire after him, but Darg slapped the
weapon from his hand. "No! He's mine! After all this time, he's
mine!" He charged after Calhoun, the floor trembling under bis footfall.
In the back-up computer room to which they had been relocated,
Kendrow was making the final adjustments under the watchful eyes of Silver and
Gerrid Thul. "We're running out of time, Mr. Kendrow," Thul said. He
didn't sound nearly as jovial as he usually did.
"I'm very aware of that, sir," said Kendrow nervously.
"But I'm getting some odd readings off the Omega 9. Having a bit of
trouble locking down some of the neural nets ..."
"I have far too much riding on this, Kendrow." He
pointed below him at the masses who were watching the ceremony about to start.
"When one makes the sort of announcements that I have made, it is
incumbent upon me... for the purpose of my sustained credibility ... to see
them through. I do not need last-minute glitches ruining my plans."
"Neither do I!" Kendrow shot back, sounding rather nervous.
"Do you think I don't know what you'll do to me if I—"
"Steady, Kendrow, steady," said Thul gently. "Just
do your job. Silver... are you prepared?"
Silver was seated in front of the interface panel. He had his palm
flat, prepared for the process to begin. "I am ready," he said
in that flat and rather unappealing voice of his.
"Excellent." Thul's eyes glittered with anticipation.
Calhoun found an access port directly in front of him, and then he
heard the thundering footfall of Darg coming in fast behind him. He ripped open
the access port and dropped through.
He landed lightly on a narrow maintenance bridge and made the
hideous mistake of looking down.
"Down," in this instance, went on forever. Because he
was at the uppermost point of the sphere, standing on a very small
bridge which ran across the top of the gigantic column that fed
energy into the cloaking device. It was anchored to the top of the sphere by
support struts overhead.
Far, far below him, in the center of the great sphere, the
cloaking device hummed powerfully.
Clutching onto the railings, Calhoun started running the length of
the maintenance bridge. He had almost made it to the far end when he heard a
tearing of metal, and men Zolon Darg dropped onto the bridge in front of him.
Darg looked utterly confident. There was no reason for him not to be.
"Shoot me again," Darg challenged him. "Go
ahead."
Calhoun aimed for Darg's head and fired. But Darg easily blocked
the shots by raising his huge metal arms in front of his face and deflecting
the blasts. Quickly, Calhoun squeezed the sides of the heel-shaped phaser
instead, increasing the intensity of the blast. This actually caused Darg to
stagger under the barrage, but it also seemed to anger him more. Despite the
sustained assault, Darg advanced step after steady step. His arms
outstretched, he was within five feet of Calhoun, then four and then three, and
the phaser blast was starting to falter. Calhoun realized that he was reaching
the limit of the small phaser's energy capacity.
Calhoun backed up, further and further, and cast a desperate
glance behind and up. He saw Darg's men clustered at die access port above and
behind him. They didn't seem about to let him climb out. Instead they grinned
and pointed and clearly were waiting for the inevitable moment when Darg would
get his mechanical hands on him.
He glanced up at the support struts... levelled his phaser, and
fired.
Darg's smug grin of triumph flickered and then vanished as he saw
what Calhoun was doing. "Wait! Hold it, you idiot! Stop!"
But it was too late. The phaser blast tore through the support struts,
weakened it sufficiently, and the entire thing tore loose. The maintenance
bridge, with a groan of metal, angled wildly downward, affixed to the ceiling
only by the struts behind Calhoun. Calhoun clambered toward the, section that
was still secured, holding on to the railing for dear Me as the bridge slanted
wildly beneath him, threatening to send them both tumbling off.
Darg leaped forward and upward toward Calhoun, trying to forestall
sliding down and off. Calhoun tried to swing his legs up and clear away from
Darg's desperate grasp, and almost managed it. But Darg, at the last second,
snagged Calhoun's leg. Calhoun let out a yell as he felt his leg practically
being torn right out of its socket. Then he lost his grip on the railing and
both of them slid off the maintenance bridge and fell.
Gerrid Thul grinned in triumph as the Narobi named Silver pressed
his hand flat against the interface board. "Contact processing,"
announced Silver.
Suddenly a clipped voice called from behind him, "Disconnect
him."
He whirled, and couldn't quite believe what he was seeing.
It was Picard. He was standing there with a blaster and an
extremely irritated expression. The insensate bodies of a couple of guards
could be glimpsed out in the corridor. "You," he said, "have
been a very difficult individual to locate."
"Indeed," said Thul slowly. "How did you do
it?"
'1 asked
around. I believe you will find that several of your guards are no longer
functioning at full capacity. Have him back away from the computer. Shut it
down."
"That's not going to happen, Picard," said Thul.
'1 think it will." Picard aimed the blaster and fired almost
point blank at Silver.
The blast coruscated around Silver. He paid it no heed.
Picard couldn't quite believe it. Thul, however, didn't seem the
least bit thrown. "Very dense material that the Narobi are made
from," he said mildly. "Resistant to blasters, phasers, disruptors
... just about anything. And you'll find that the exterior of the computer
bank is coated with the same material. Just one of the several contributions
that the Narobi provided. You see, Picard... I tend to think ahead. I was not expecting
that some foolhardy Federation idiot would come charging in here at the last
moment and try to disrupt it... but I anticipated it. I try to
anticipate everything."
Picard swung the blaster around and aimed it at Thul.
"You," he said sharply, "are not blaster proof. Shut this down,
now, or I'll—"
"You'll what? Kill me?" There was no longer any trace of
amusement in his voice. "You already killed me, Picard. You
killed me years ago, when my son died because of you." Slowly he started
to walk toward Picard. "You know ... when I considered the possibility of
the Federation sending someone... when I contemplated, imagined that I might
find myself facing a desperate emissary trying to stop me ... I always
fantasized it would be you. Isn't that interesting? No one else. Always. In my
mind's eye, I saw it just this way, with the two of us race-to-face, and you
standing there feeling the same sort of helplessness as Double Helix was
unleashed that I felt when I lost my son. Lost him because of you. Because of
your damnable Federation."
"And everyone, every man, woman and child is to suffer because
of your loss?"
"That's right. That is exactly right."
"You won't live to see your triumph."
"Don't you understand? / don't care! Do your worst,
Picard! I assure you it will pale next to what I have already done to myself!
But in the meantime, nothing you will do will matter one iota, because in the
final analysis, I will still win! And there's absolutely nothing you can do
to—"
That was when the lights when out and the sphere was rocked by a
massive explosion.
In other sections of the Dyson Sphere (or the Thul Sphere, as it
were) the gravity was zero, as Picard had learned. But in the center the
gravity was near normal. Calhoun tumbled, end over end, trying to find
something that he could grab onto, but there was nothing. Far, terribly far
away to his left, was the docking port where his ship was comfortably anchored.
It operated on voice recognition, but it had to hear him to respond, and he
was simply too far away.
Then Calhoun slammed into something. He landed badly, wrenching
his shoulder, and he lay there a moment, stunned. He realized that he had
struck the outer edge of the cloaking device. He could feel the power of the
mighty machine humming beneath him.
He slid a few feet but then managed to halt his skid. Slowly he
tried to push his way back up toward the center of the cloaking device, in the
meantime looking around and trying to
catch a glimpse of where Darg had gone to. His main hope was that
Darg had not landed quite as fortunately as he had. That he had instead clipped
an edge and bounced off, or perhaps missed it entirely, and was sent tumbling
the rest of the way to the bottom of the sphere.
Suddenly he felt the surface of the cloaking device tremble
beneath him in a manner that was in excess of the power rumbling beneath it.
He craned bis neck around and saw Darg charging him.
The top of the cloaking device was slightly angled downward, and
Calhoun did the only thing he could: He stopped fighting the pull of gravity
and allowed himself to skid toward the edge. Darg was right after him. Calhoun
got to the edge of the device and saw a yawning drop beneath him. He also saw
that the side of the device was not smooth: There were handholds, or at least
protruding surfaces that could be utilized as handholds. The only hope he had
was that Darg's metal fingers were so thick that he wouldn't be able to utilize
them.
Calhoun swung his body over the edge. His toes sought and found
something to break his fall. He started clambering down the side like a monkey
scaling a mountain. He just couldn't help but wish mat he had some clear idea
as to just where the hell he thought he was going.
And in the meantime, his mission was still unfulfilled. He knew
that he had almost no time before the Double Helix was unleashed. He had to
stop it, somehow.
There was absolutely no choice.
He reached up to his face, grabbed the fake scar that was adhering
to his own, and pulled. It came loose with a soft tearing sound, and he slapped
the adhesive against the side of the cloaking device. He twisted the edges around
each other, and he realized that he had no idea as to whether it was actually
activated or not. Well, within fifteen minutes, he'd know for sure... and if
the thing really were as powerful as claimed, it would wind up being the last
thing he knew. , He then continued his descent, and he'd made it fifteen feet,
moving quickly in the slightly lighter-than-normal gravity when he saw Darg
reach the edge and look down at him with cold, implacable fury. But it would
still take Darg time to find a way to come down after him.
Darg jumped.
Son of a bitch, thought Calhoun.
Darg's hand lashed out and he snagged a crossbar, halting his
fall. The bar held. Damned sturdy devices these Romulans designed. He was
clinging, bat-like to the surface of the cloaking device, only a few feet to
Calhoun's right. He advanced on Calhoun, and Calhoun looked around frantically,
up and down, trying to determine if there was a direction he could go fast
enough that would carry him out of Darg's reach. Nothing presented itself.
Darg was closer, closer, and the blades were fully extended on his
hand. Within less than a second, he would be close enough to slash out at
Calhoun and cut him to ribbons. Beneath Calhoun's ringers, he could feel the
power of the cloaking device surging beneath him. If there were some way to
disrupt it, maybe ...
Too late. Darg's fingers lashed out, trying to slice through
Calhoun's grip. Calhoun desperately shifted handholds, swinging his body out
of the way, buying himself perhaps another second or two. But Darg had him
cold, they both knew it.
And then Darg spotted the explosive that Calhoun had affixed to
the surface of the cloaking device. He didn't recognize it for what it was,
clearly, but he didn't like what he saw. With one glance at Calhoun's
expression, he could tell that Calhoun wasn't happy about his noticing it
either. That was more than enough reason for him to reach for it and start to
peel it off. As he did so, he said almost conversationally, "Any last
words?"
"Actually... yes. Three, to be exact," said Calhoun. He
yanked the pip off his shirt where he had secreted it and slapped it on Darg's
arm. "Activate, transporter right."
Darg looked at him in confusion, and suddenly he dematerialized.
He let out a roar and lunged at Calhoun, but his now-phantom hands went right
through him, and then Darg vanished. Seconds later, he materialized in the
heart of the cloaking device.
Calhoun had no real idea what would happen when that occurred.
The energies required to power a cloaking device that big were like nothing
that Calhoun had ever encountered before. He didn't know what powered it, nor
did he know what
powered Darg's robotic body. All he knew was that he was combining
two elements, and hoping for the best.
What he got was far more than he had bargained for. For he felt a
violent rumbling beneath him, and he heard, or thought he heard, a truncated
scream from Darg before the energies within the cloaking device ripped
him apart, even his powerful mechanical body not impervious to the power and
energy that was buffeting him.
And then Calhoun heard an explosion, muffled but huge, and he
suddenly realized that the explosive adhesive had been stuck to Darg when he
rematerialized, and he had the further flash of understanding that the explosive
had been detonated prematurely thanks to the forces roiling within the cloaking
device.
He did the only thing he could. He hurled himself off the cloaking
device into mid-air, hurtling down and away from the immediate blast area.
A split second later, the cloaking device erupted.
XXIII.
there was alarm throughout the sphere as the cloaking device
erupted in flame. The entire manufactured world trembled from the detonation.
Thul saw it from a distance and couldn't believe it. From his
vantage point he could see the crowd that had been milling about in the great
square, waiting to witness the signing of the document that would be the cue
for the annihilation of the Federation. Except the picture on the huge screen
had disappeared as systems shorted out and went down all over the sphere. Not
only that, but they could see and hear, as he just had, the terrible explosion
that had originated at the very core of the sphere.
Silver stood up, gingerly pulling his hand from the surface of the
computer.
"What are you doing!" said an alarmed Thul in the
now-darkened room. "I need you to interface with the Omega 9! The job's
too big for a normal human mind! You have to—"
"I have to do nothing," Silver said calmly. "I have
analyzed the present situation, including the obvious sabotage to this sphere.
It is my belief that, within three minutes, at the present rate of destruction,
this sphere will be 'destroyed. I have no desire to accompany it. So... I am
leaving."
And suddenly there was a fearful looking weapon in Thul's
hand, pulled from the folds of his cloak. "Get back there,
Sil-ver!" he snarled.
"I am leaving," said Silver.
Thul fired.
Picard watched the entire scene unfold with a sort of distant
disbelief.
Thul fired upon the being whom he called Silver. But the blast
from Thul's own weapon was no more effective upon Silver man anything that
Picard might have wielded. The blast ricocheted harmlessly off Silver...
... and struck Kendrow.
With a howl of agony, clutching at his blackened chest, Kendrow
went down. He flopped about on the floor like a just-landed marlin, making
incoherent babbling noises.
Thul paid him no mind. Instead he fired once more at Silver, and had
no more luck than he'd had the previous time. Silver walked past him,
completely ignoring him.
Everything forgotten except his boiling rage and desperation to
carry out the final demise of the Federation, Thul charged at Silver. All
pretensions of dignity, all of his superiority, were gone, vanished, boiled
away by pure fury. It made him a very easy target. Picard reversed his gun,
bringing the butt-end around, and as Thul passed him, Picard slammed him across
the side of the head. Thul collapsed at his feet.
Silver paused a moment to cast a glance at Picard. "I would
leave here if I were you," he said simply, and then the silver-metal being
turned and walked away.
Picard turned quickly and headed over to Kendrow. He knelt down
next to him, saw the severity of the wound, saw the despair in the man's eyes.
Kendrow clearly knew he was dying... and yet he was looking up at Picard with
heartbreaking despair, silently pleading for him to help him. Picard hesitated,
unsure of what he could possibly do...
And that was when Gerrid Thul leaped upon his back.
A huge piece of metal, buffeted by the shock wave, slammed into
Calhoun as he hurtled through mid-air. His head rang from the impact, but then
he quickly realized that it was the single luckiest thine that could have
happened to him.
The shock wave from the explosion hit, radiating outward,
propelling Calhoun toward the far edges of the sphere. He tumbled end over
end, but because he was clutching with all his strength at the large shard of
metal, his body pressed flat against it, he managed to avoid losing
consciousness altogether. He was like a crazed surfer riding out a massive
wave.
Before he knew it, he slammed into the interior surface of the
sphere. He lost his grip on the metal shard and it spiralled away from him.
Once again in a zero-G area, Calhoun hung there for a moment, dazed, banged up,
barely able to string a coherent thought together.
Then he started to float back toward the center, toward the
massive conflagration which was building upon itself exponentially.
It was at that moment that he saw his freighter, docked and
waiting. It was some distance away and he prayed his voice would carry as he
shouted at the top of his lungs, "Freighter! Voice response activate! Pick
up!"
For a moment he was certain that it hadn't heard him, and then the
running lights suddenly flared to life. Wasting no time, the freighter pulled
away from its moorings and angled obediently down toward its pilot.
Another explosion roared from within the heart of the sphere as
the lower half of the cloaking device went up in flames.
Calhoun was now plummeting toward it, and then the freighter was
there, main door open. Calhoun tumbled into the cabin, kept rolling and slammed
into the far wall. He lay there for a moment, stunned, muttering, "I'm not
getting paid enough."
Then he stumbled to his feet and seized the controls of the
freighter...
... and was abruptly faced with a very difficult choice.
Picard tried to stagger to his feet and barely managed to do so.
Thul was on his back, howling in fury, and Picard barely managed to shove him
off. They faced each other, both then-weapons fallen. Thul had a look of
dementia in his eyes. "It's over, Thul. We have to get out of here—!"
"No." Thul was shaking his head like a man deep in denial.
"No... they have to die... you have to die... the Double
Helix..."
"I said it's over! Snap out of it, man! Nothing is going to
be accomplished by staying here and being incinerated!"
Thul didn't listen. He was beyond listening, beyond caring. Instead
he came right at Picard, his attack so sudden that Picard barely had time to
defend himself against it
And Picard abruptly found himself in the hands of one of the most
devastating hand-to-hand combatants he had ever encountered.
One wouldn't have known it to look at Thul. The Thallonian was
clearly an older man, older than Picard. He wasn't all that tall, not
especially wide. But in close-quarters combat, he was a terror, an absolute
terror. Picard wasn't exactly helpless in such situations, a fair hand-to-hand
combatant himself, with some good moves and a rather nasty right hook, if he
said so himself. But he couldn't even begin to mount a defense against Gerrid
Thul.
Thul's hands were lightning. Picard would try and block a punch,
and even before he had time to realize it was a feint, Thul had landed two
blows, a third and a fourth. He struck Picard at will, doubling him over,
straightening him up with an uppercut. Picard never even laid a hand on him.
Thul picked him up and threw him out into the main corridor,
advancing on him mercilessly. All around them, panicked residents of the sphere
were running like mad, trying to get to whatever ships were nearest so that
they could get the hell out of there. Thul didn't seem to notice any of them.
He was focused, with laser-like efficiency, on Picard.
Picard felt the world swimming around him, tried to get to his
feet, and then Thul was there and he kicked Picard in the gut, causing him to
curl up like a fetus, and he kicked him over and over, howling, "You,
Picard! It's all your fault! You're the living symbol of everyone and
everything that destroyed my life! But you're not going to be living much
longer!"
David Kendrow's desperate, questing hand stretched out toward the
hand padd for the Omega 9. His body trembled from the exertion, and he was
certain that he wasn't going to make it. But then, at the last moment, like a
gift from God, he had a
small surge of energy that was small, ever so small, but it was
enough. He lunged forward and his hand came into contact with the padd.
He trembled as the nannites, careless of the environment that was
crumbling around them, did their job. They joined with him, penetrated his
mind, his body, and seconds later his consciousness was pulled from his body
and sent hurtling into the depths of the Omega 9.
What he had, at that point, was a plan that could most charitably
be called a long-shot. What he was hoping was that his consciousness would
survive the passing of his body if it was buried deep within the Omega 9. The
problem was that, all too soon, the Omega 9 would be dust, gone with the rest
of the sphere.
But the intention had been for the Omega 9 to interface with
computers on other worlds. Granted, it had been too massive a job for Kendrow
to do himself. Silver was supposed to bridge that gap with his machine mind.
But Kendrow was still capable of at least projecting himself to some other
computer data base... earth, perhaps, or another world. And perhaps... just
perhaps ... he could use the replicators wherever he wound up to fashion
himself some sort of body. There were other possibilities as well, but before
he could explore any of them, he had to survive.
He plunged into the heart of the Omega 9, the glistening circuitry
singing gently to him. It was the first time that he himself had done it, and
it was glorious, it was like nothing else. He floated there, feeling as if he
had somehow managed to return to his mother's womb. There was peace, there was
security, there was ...
Darkness. Something was moving in around him, something that
seemed alien to the Omega 9. Kendrow's consciousness looked around, tried to
perceive, tried to understand...
And a voice echoed all around him, a voice that said, I'd been
trying to get your attention, David. Causing glitches here and there, doing
what I could in my own small way... how kind of you to finally brave the
interior of the Omega 9... it took you quite some time, didn't it... but you
always were a bit of a coward at heart, you know that, don't you, David... ?
Kendrow looked around frantically. It was everywhere, the dark and
cold, and he called out, Who is it? Who's there?!?
/ brushed against the Omega 9, David... with Darg and the
others standing there, and you, and all you bright people, and you didn't spot
it. Didn't spot the final connection. What did you think, Dave... that you were
the first person to hit upon the idea of putting his consciousness into the
Omega 9? You always were more of a follower than a leader...
And then he understood. Fro... Frobisher... but... but you're
dead...
Yes, Dave. I was dead. But you know, Dave... I'm feeling a lot
better now...
The laughter was everywhere and Kendrow screamed as the darkness
enveloped him.
Picard rolled over onto his back and then Gerrid Thul was upon
him. He was straddling Picard, his hands at Picard's throat, and he slammed the
captain's head against the floor. Stars exploded behind Picard's eyes, and Thul
wasn't letting up, not for a second.
"I made a son... and you destroyed him. I created the perfect
virus ... and you destroyed my plan to implement it," and as he spoke the
pressure of his hands upon Picard's throat was steady and unyielding. "You
call me the destroyer? It's you, Picard! You are the bringer of pain! You are
the slayer of dreams! You!"
The test tube rolled out from Picard's pocket.
It made a gentle, tinkling sound as it rolled. Thul cast a confused
glance in the direction of the tube...
And the distraction was all Picard needed. He broke Thul's grip
and shoved as hard as he could, sending Thul off-balance as he gasped and drew
in air. Thul tumbled to the side, hit the floor hard.
Picard heard something break.
He clambered to his feet and saw Thul, on his back, starting to
tremble. Instantly Picard understood. Thul had landed atop the test tube and
crushed it... and the Double Helix virus was rampaging through his body. But it
was doing so in highly concentrated form.
Gerrid Thul, creator of the Double Helix, writhed in the grasp of
his own creation. His back arched, his tongue lolled out, and his eyes went
wide with horror as he realized what
had happened. For all his speeches about not caring about life,
about being dead already, he certainly seemed to have the expression of
someone who was suddenly terrified about being hurled into oblivion. Or perhaps
it was simply the way that it was occurring.
Thul's eyes shrivelled, collapsed into their sockets, his tongue
began to blacken even as he voicelessly screamed his terror, the skin started
to pucker and blister, pus oozing out from sores that had appeared
spontaneously all over.
Picard was transfixed, and then it suddenly occurred to him that
if the damned thing became airborne, this was going to be the perfect time to
get the hell out of there. He tore his gaze away from Thul and ran like mad.
His legs and arms pumping, Picard dashed down the corridor. He
hoped that he remembered where the docking area was, and also prayed that he
would be able to find a means of escape once he got there. The sphere rumbled
around him and he knew there wasn't much time left as the systems ate themselves,
one explosion feeding upon another. Bleakly, he wondered what had happened to
Calhoun and Vara Syndra, or Vandelia, or whatever her name was. He could only
pray that they were all right and that somehow they were going to manage to
get themselves clear.
He saw a sign marked for one of the docking areas, turned right,
and saw huge double doors that were just sitting open, which led to the docking
ports. He dashed out into the vast docking area which opened out to the
interior of the sphere. From that viewpoint, he could see flame erupting from
spots throughout the sphere. The far side of the sphere was already a massive
wall of flame, and it was spreading wildly. He was witnessing the death of a
technological marvel. From a purely scientific and even aesthetic view, it was
a tremendous waste and tragedy.
All this he saw from where he was standing. What he did not see
were any ships. He spotted the last of the small transports moving away, and
there was nothing left in his immediate area. There were other docking ports,
but they were too far away for him to get to in time.
He saw the firewall racing toward him from either side. There was
nowhere to go.
He took a deep breath, faced his death, and thought about a book
his mother had read to him several times in his youth: Peter Pan. He
thought of the time that Peter was crouched on the rock, having just been
stabbed by Hook, unable to fly, unable to save himself, and he had looked at
the rising tide and mused philosophically about his impending doom.
'To die," Picard whispered, "would be a great
adventure."
At which point he promptly disappeared in a haze of sparkles.
Seconds later, he materialized in what appeared to be a small
freighter. He looked around in confusion ... and then a smile broke across his
face. "I should have known."
"Yes, you should have," Calhoun said reprovingly from
the control panel. He hadn't even bothered to turn around. "I was on my
last sweep of the place looking for you. You certainly took your sweet time
getting somewhere that I could see you. Thanks to you, I've had to cut this a
lot thinner than I would have liked."
"It's getting thinner still. Where's the woman?"
"Dead," Calhoun said tonelessly. "Darg killed her.
But considering there's not two molecules of him left to rub together, I doubt
he'll be hurting anyone else. Where's Thul?"
"The same, but more grisly. Get us out of here."
"That's why you've been captain longer than me. You know how
to make the tough decisions."
Even as he spoke, he was sending the freighter hurtling toward
one of the few areas that was not completely aflame. The sphere was collapsing
on itself, gigantic flaming shards smashing into one another. Calhoun coolly
maneuvered the shuttle between the debris, dodging left and right as he called
out, "Hold on. This is going to be a little tricky."
He saw an escape route and went for it, and the freighter darted
forward just before a huge piece of debris could smash into it. Then they were
clear of the sphere, moving away from it faster and faster as the last of the
explosions utterly consumed it.
Other ships were all around, scattered, confused, unsure of where
to go or what to do. Then, after a few moments, they slowly started to move
away from the area of the destruction. Picard watched them go, shaking his
head, and—like an old-
time policeman—he said, "Show's over. Nothing more to see
here."
"Yes," Calhoun said slowly, "yes ... there
is."
He was angling his freighter toward one particular ship.
"What is it, Mac?"
"That's Thul's ship. But you said he's dead."
"He is."
"Then I'm going to take a shot in the dark," Calhoun
said.
He touched several controls and Picard heard the distinctive whine
of phasers powering up. "What are you doing?"
But Calhoun had opened up a ship-to-ship channel. "Lodec. I
have you targeted. I'm coming in at 273 Mark 2. This is it, Lodec."
There was dead silence as Picard looked in puzzlement at
Calhoun... and then Lodec's voice came back over the channel. "Hello,
Calhoun."
"Do you want an opportunity to fight back... or should I just
blow you out of space?"
"Calhoun, back off," Picard said sharply, "this is
absurd—"
Calhoun looked at him with blazing eyes and said, "No. This
is personal. Well, Lodec?"
Again a moment of silence, and then Lodec said, "I was going
to let you go, you know. In the corridor. I saw you there, and I was all set to
keep my silence. And you had to draw on me, so that I thought you were going to
shoot me. You left me no choice. But it's all about choices, isn't it, Calhoun?
So fine. I leave you the choice you didn't leave me. Shoot or don't It's of no
consequence to me. Death will just silence the voices that have been crying
out in my head for so many years. Do as you like."
With that, he cut the connection.
Picard said nothing. He simply watched Calhoun, who stared out at
the ship that was hanging there, a huge target. It offered no defense. It would
have been so easy.
And then, unmolested... the ship moved off. a moment later, it
kicked into warp space and was gone.
Picard let out a slow, relieved breath, and he patted Calhoun on
the back. "Mac ... believe it or not... I know how difficult it is to let
go of the need for revenge. .But—and I don't mean to sound patronizing here—I
think you've taken a tremendous step forward in your personal growth and—"
"The phaser banks are empty," Calhoun said.
"What?" Picard leaned forward and looked. It was true.
The phasers had powered up, but had been unable to sustain it.
"They're empty. And it's not just them. Thul must have
drained the ship's systems. Engines, life support, all going. He had quite a
knack for thinking ahead. Here was a man who thought, Well, just in case
Calhoun and/or Picard escape, I'll leave them just enough power to get away. To
make them think they're safe. And then all the systems will..."
The lights in the freighter suddenly went out.
"... cut out," he concluded.
On earth, the closing ceremonies for the bicentennial went without
a hitch. As they did, Jellico turned to Nechayev and said, "Well, well...
it would appear that we got all concerned for nothing."
"Apparently so. Unless, of course, someone just saved the
galaxy as we know it from total disaster and we're simply unaware of it."
"I doubt it," Jellico replied. "I mean, I think I'd
know if something like that had happened."
"Yes," said Nechayev. "It'd be fairly difficult to
slip something like that past you, Eddie."
Picard and Calhoun spent the next several minutes seeing what they
could possibly do to reverse the situation, but nothing seemed to present
itself. Furthermore, all the other ships had moved out by that point. Not that
their being present would have offered any great options. Calhoun and Picard
had already been named as traitors and enemies by Thul. Finally, options
expended, they simply sat there, looking at each other.
"Had you already decided not to kill Lodec before you saw the
phasers were out? Or did you notice that the phasers were out and realize that
the decision was out of your hands?"
Calhoun said nothing.
"You're not going to answer, are you."
"Picard," Calhoun said slowly, "you are probably
one of the brightest men I've ever met. You've known me for twenty years. You
know my background. You know what I stand for.
And you know that, ultimately—even if there are some bumps along
the way—I'm going to end up doing the right thing. So I think you really know
the answer to that question, don't you."
"Nice try, Mac."
"All right... I suppose I knew I wouldn't get away with it
that easily. The truth, Picard... is that I was in the same situation once
before. The indecision led to my resigning from Starfleet because the universe
was very black and white to me. This time around... I have to admit that, once
again, I don't know what I would have done. I still might have given in to the
impulse for vengeance. Or I might not. I'm just not sure. But at least this
time, I'm not going to let the lack of knowledge get to me. It took me a long
time and a lot of learning to realize that it's all right not to know
everything ... including every aspect of oneself. That it's acceptable to live
within the shades of gray on occasion. Good enough?"
"Not really. But I suppose it will have to do."
They sat there for a time more, and then Calhoun said, "What
are you thinking about?"
"All the people I've known. All the opportunities I've had in
my life, and whether I would do it all the same. About Thul's son, and whether
his death could have been prevented ... whether I could have done anything
differently, for if I had, all this could have been avoided. Lives wouldn't
have been wasted and lost, and incredible forays of ingenuity wouldn't have
been dedicated to such a useless endeavor as a hollow need to destroy in the
quest for useless revenge. I'm thinking about the universe in general, of free
will, and of man's place within that universe and whether we really have a
place at all, or how much we matter in the grand scheme of things. I'm
wondering ... what the ultimate answers to all reality are, and whether we'll
ever get to know them." He paused, feeling the chill of space beginning to
work its way into his bones. "And you? What are you thinking about?"
"I'm thinking about how nice it would be if the Excalibur showed
up and rescued us."
Picard laughed softly to himself,, starting to feel a bit lightheaded
as the carbon dioxide began to build up. And at that moment, space in front of
them rippled, a hole in the space-
time continuum opened up, and the Starship Excalibur dropped
into normal space a mere five hundred kilometers away.
Picard gaped at the sight and then turned to Calhoun, who maintained
an absolute deadpan as he said, "I don't know about me ultimate ones, but
I guess some answers come more quickly than others."
XXIV.
calhoun and shelby were escorting Picard and Riker to the
transporter room. "Sela's already been beamed aboard the Enterprise, as
per your request, Captain," said Calhoun. "I'm afraid there's been no
change in her condition."
"I'm hoping that Starfleet will be able to give her the help
she needs," Picard said. "Perhaps even leave her better than when she
started. No matter what it is that she's become ... she remains the daughter
of an old, dear friend. If there's any way to salvage the influence of the good
person that Tasha Yar was, then we have to take it."
"Looking for the best in people. It's comforting to know that
some things about you don't change, Captain," Calhoun said.
"It is equally comforting, Captain, to know that some things
about you do change," Picard replied with a carefully neutral expression,
which drew a wary grin from Calhoun. Picard continued, "Number One... how
went your temporary assignment to the Excalibur?"
"Good question," seconded Calhoun. "Commander
Shelby, did you two get on with each other? Or were there any problems I
should know about?"
Shelby and Riker cast a glance at each other, and then Shelby
said, "Actually... it went about as expected."
"It was a learning experience... for all concerned,"
Riker added.
"It would appear, Captain Calhoun," Picard said,
"that the crew here is beginning to imitate your rather enigmatic way of
expressing yourself. Perhaps you—"
He stopped in his tracks.
A dark haired woman was approaching him. And she looked like...
but... it couldn't possibly be...
"Leaving, Commander? I hope you enjoyed your stay. Well, have
to rush. Good day to you," said Morgan Lefler as she breezed past.
Picard gaped after her, then looked back to Riker. "What was
... was that... how?"
"Captain," Riker said in a firm but understanding voice,
"I've learned that around this ship... it's best not to ask too many
questions."
"Is it finished yet?"
Burgoyne lay on the examination bed in sickbay while Doctor Selar
studied the readouts. "Almost, Burgoyne. But let me see if I understand
this. Medical scans and similar procedures are privileged information... but
you want me to post this scan publicly? To everyone on the ship?"
"Yes. That's correct," Burgoyne confirmed. "I'm
tired of everyone congratulating me on my pregnancy. It's gotten very old, very
quickly. And some of them even think I'm being coy when I deny it So if I just
publicize it in one shot, with the scan confirming that I'm not pregnant, that
should put an end to it."
"That sounds like a commendable plan. I wish I could
oblige."
"But Selar, I told you, I'm waiving the
confidentiality—"
"It is not a matter of that But if you wish to circulate this
scan as proof of what you are claiming, that is not going to be possible."
"What?" Burgoyne was completely confused. "What are
you talking about?"
"You are pregnant"
"What?" The blood drained from Burgoyne's face.
"But... but I can't be..."
"You are. Look for yourself."
Burgoyne took one look at the readout and faulted dead away.
Selar stood there and regarded hir with very mild amusement. And
then McHenry emerged from hiding nearby and grinned down at the unconscious
Hermat. "Well, well, Burgy. You told me you were pregnant, except you
really weren't... and I passed out... and you teased me about it. So now, with
the good doctor's help here, you get told you're pregnant, except you're really
not... but you handled the unexpected fake news as well as I did. For some
reason, I find that very comforting. Don't you think that's comforting?"
"I think you are all insane, and I think I am just as insane
for cooperating," sniffed Selar. And she turned away to hide the slight
smile that she couldn't quite repress.