488 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
488 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
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Path: moe.ksu.ksu.edu!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!mips!mips!public!btr.btr.com!mcmelmon
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From: mcmelmon@btr.btr.com
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Newsgroups: alt.startrek.creative
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Subject: Belly of the Whale - final
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Message-ID: <6298@public.BTR.COM>
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Date: 15 Apr 92 16:46:49 GMT
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Sender: mcmelmon@public.BTR.COM
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Distribution: na
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Organization: BTR Public Access UNIX, MtnView CA. Contact: Customer Service cs@BTR.COM
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Lines: 475
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Scene IV
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[Blackness cut by a narrow band of light. Rising through the
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band, the Enterprise. Flood-lamps flare along the rim of her
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saucer,
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their glare reflecting off pale skeletons of steel.
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Enterprise bridge.]
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Worf: We have lost direct contact with the T'Kiar and
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R'Shal. As expected, Captain. Establishing contact via probe
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links.
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[The Highest strides towards the main viewing screen. She
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stops before it, cutting an imposing profile.]
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Attendant: The Highest senses a mind.
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Picard: A mind? Singular?
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Attendant: Singular. A primitive mind. Barely sentient.
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Troi: It's true, Captain. I can feel it as well. Primitive,
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yet vast.
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Data: I do not understand. How can a mind be 'vast?' and
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yet 'primitive?'
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Troi: I don't understand, either. It feels as if I am
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surrounded by thoughts - or more rather, feelings - but all
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emanate from the same entity.
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Data: I do not think that would be possible.
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Attendant: Quite possible, android. This ship is alive.
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Killpatrick: You mean, we're in the belly of a whale!?
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Attendant: Your metaphor pleases the Highest.
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Troi: The full spectrum of emotional activity one would
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expect in a truly animate creature is not present.
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Picard: An artificial life-form?
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Troi: Very possible.
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Data: We are nearing the fore section of the craft. As
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their initial programming did not anticipate the super-
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structure, the probes did not penetrate this far.
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Picard: Meaning we may yet bump into something.
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Data: A possibility. We are detecting a massive structure
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ahead, Captain. A wall. We should clear enough of the super-
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structure that our lamps will illuminate it's complex
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surface soon.
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Riker: Complex?
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Data: According to sensors, reliefs and embossings mark the
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surface. On a very large scale. From an averaged base,
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projections and valleys occur to plus and minus seven
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meters...
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[Picard rises from his chair. He steps towards the screen,
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until he stands by the Highest's side. Light from the
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Enterprise begins to illuminate the wall. We see shapes.
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Humanoid shapes taking part in a colossal dance, not unlike
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those which grace the ceilings of palaces and churches of
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Renaissance Italy.
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From space, we see the Enterprise stopped before the wall.
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Her flood lamps stream across it as far as we can see.
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Throughout this range, the wall is flat, and the figures
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continue to dance.]
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ACT V
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Scene I
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[Enterprise bridge.]
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Picard [voice-over]: Captain's log, supplemental. In the
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belly of the whale. We have found what we believe to be a
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portal. Remarkable in that we can find no others. The hull
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of the vessel blocks both our scanners and transporter.
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Access to the Behemoth proper thus apparently limited to a
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single, small entrance. Not much larger than a shuttle
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craft. Commander Data has left the Enterprise in an attempt
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to open this door.
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Worf: The R'Shal reports Vulcan industrial vessel Ch'iar
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and Federation battleship Yamato arriving, Captain.
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Picard: Excellent. Request the R'Shal join us. Have the
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Ch'iar begin salvage operations on the Nadia.
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Riker: Don't like the idea of being alone in here any
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longer than necessary either, Captain?
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Picard: No, Number One. I do not.
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Worf: Data hailing us from Shuttle 4.
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Picard: Visual.
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Data: I have been unable to find any mechanism for opening
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this portal, Captain. In fact, I can find no automatic
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systems at all.
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Riker: Have you tried "Open Sesame?"
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Data: No, Commander Riker. I am not familiar with that
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device.
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Attendant: There are no automatic systems. There is no
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computer. Only the ship.
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Riker: A starship without a computer?
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Attendant: Correct. This vessel is alive. It must be
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treated as such.
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Picard: Then perhaps "Open Sesame" is the right idea,
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Number One.
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Data: Forgive me, Captain. Could you explain what "Open
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Sesame" is?
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Picard: Not now, Data.
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Riker: You're suggesting we ask to be let in?
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Picard: Right, Number One.
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Killpatrick: But ask who? We've been hailing for hours.
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Haven't gotten a peep back yet.
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Picard: We've been asking the wrong way.
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Data: Ah, 'Open Sesame...' Taken from the myth of 'Ali Baba
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and the Thousand Thieves.' The magic words which, when
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spoken, would open the cave used by...
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Riker: Data...
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Haifa: I believe I understand.
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Picard: Prepare for a guest, Data.
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Scene II
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[Haifa floats by the great wall. Data floats near her. Her
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gloved hand brushes against the surface. For a moment, she
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is still.
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She takes a hold of the glove with her other hand and begins
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to remove it.]
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Data: That is not wise, Commander. We are still in deep
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space. The elbow pressure point will protect the rest of
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your body, but you could loose your forearm to the extreme
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cold.
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Haifa: I must touch the ship.
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Picard: Transporter Room. Lock on Commander Haifa. Energize
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on my command. Dr. Crusher, prepare for a case of severe
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frostbite.
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[Haifa removes her glove. Air puffs from the forearm section
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of her suite. Frost crystallizes along her fingers. We can
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see the bulge of veins. She touches the wall of the ship
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gingerly.
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Haifa: Open.
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[Light flares along the periphery of the small circular
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portal. It moves back several meters, then slides to the
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left, revealing a dock slightly larger than the shuttle
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craft.
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Killpatrick: That's my girl!
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Picard: Energize.
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Scene III
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[Enterprise sick bay. Haifa lays on a platform. Dr. Crusher
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finishes examining her arm with a monitoring device.]
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Beverly: That was very brave. And very foolish. It'll be
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awhile before you have full use of your fingers again.
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Haifa: I understand.
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[The Highest and her attendant enter. Dr. Crusher does not
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recognize her. The Highest touches Haifa's head tenderly.
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Several moments pass.]
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Attendant: You were not happy on Vulcan.
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Haifa: There is no happiness on Vulcan.
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Attendant: You did not consider it home. Did you feel ill
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treated?
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Haifa: I was treated as a Vulcan.
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Attendant: And this did not please you?
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Haifa: I am not a Vulcan.
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Scene IV
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Picard, the Highest, and her Attendant move quickly down a
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corridor aboard the Enterprise.
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Picard [voice-over]: Captain's log, supplemental. The inner
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door of the docking chamber does not possess enough of the
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outer hull's unidentifiable materials to block our
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transporter. This provides us a window of opportunity
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into the main ship. Captain Killpatrick has already lead an
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away team, comprised primarily of his own crew. Their
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training in infiltration and commando activities made them
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ideal for the first-in scenario. They report no signs of
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life.
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[Enterprise transporter room. Riker, Worf, and Data ready
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themselves on the platform. Picard enters. Behind him, the
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Highest and her Attendant.]
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Riker: Is it wise...?
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Picard: The Highest insisted.
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Riker: Even so...
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Picard [interrupting]: Argument is useless, Number One
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Riker: Energize.
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The team materializes within a cavernous chamber, not unlike
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the lobby of a hotel, on a truly enormous scale. On three
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walls of the square, rising up almost beyond sight, are tier
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after tier of balconies. Everything covered in baroque
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carvings. A graceful, arching double-door marks the fourth
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wall - several stories tall itself. Above that, a
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hanging banner emblazoned with a coat-of-arms. Killpatrick
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walks over to the new arrivals.]
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Killpatrick: Pretty spectacular, eh Picard? This room here,
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about a hundred meters square. Must be eighty stories up
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that way. Rooms spread out and out and out. It'll take weeks
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to go through the whole thing. I've pulled my men back to
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form a perimeter. If something wanders over, we'll be ready.
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Picard: Have you opened those?
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Killpatrick: No. Haifa thought the Highest would be coming.
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Thought she'd like to open them.
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Riker: And if there's something on the other side?
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Attendant? Then we shall know soon enough. Where is
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Commander Haifa?
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Killpatrick: Checking the perimeter. Always a soldier, that
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girl...
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Attendant: Please tell her we are grateful.
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[The Highest walks across the chamber. She places her hand
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on the smooth, metallic surface. The doors shimmer slightly
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as they sweep back silently.]
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Attendant: Truly a fascinating vessel. It shall take far
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longer than weeks, Captain Killpatrick, to investigate it's
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complexities.
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[The group passes between the doors. They enter another
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cavernous chamber, though smaller than the first. Darker as
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well. And littered with towering mound after towering mound
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of glittering, broken swords. A path leads through the
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useless weapons. It ends before a glossy black disk, raised
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slightly from the floor.
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Picard: What is it, Data?
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Data: It would appear to be some manner of projector,
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Captain. Holographic.
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[The Highest's kneels, placing her hand upon the surface. A
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brilliant image chases away the darkness. An incredibly
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tall, fiercely beautiful woman with billowing silver hair.
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She begins to speak, but at first her words are foreign and
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cannot be understood. A look of concentration washes over
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the Highest's face. The words become clearer.]
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Data: Fascinating, Captain. The Highest is interacting with
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this vessel to translate the words as they are spoken.
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Woman: ...Lady Niam, Empress on Avelos. But this is all
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that remains of my empire. Empty chambers and broken swords.
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But even that is more than all the others. Their kingdoms,
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ash. Their people, dead. Forty millennia of star-spanning
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civilization. Ended. These, the fruits of my strength, now
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stand as mute testimony to our weakness.
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[As Lady Niam speaks, other images flash by. A whirling
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galaxy. A planet. Massive ships like the Behemoth disgorging
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swarms of smaller craft. Titanic struggle. Then nothing.
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Just the Empress. Her head bowed.
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Lady Niam: Our failing... But perhaps all shall not be ash.
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Here, in the holds of ships within this ship, the life of
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those worlds - in vanity - I called mine. Primitive life.
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'Foolish,' my generals screamed at me. Foolish to waste so
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valuable a carrier - the greatest in space - on animals.
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'Mere' animals. But it is they who were foolish. They who
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could not see. Why could they not see? From the lowly come
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the high. Perhaps it shall not be as it was, the second time
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around?
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[The image vanishes. An uncomfortable blackness returns. The
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Highest stands.]
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Attendant: There is no more. Nothing.
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Data: The galaxy shown in the holograph matches what we
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call Andromeda. Apparently, this vessel has crossed the
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intergalactic void, to escape the calamity of warfare.
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Riker: What does it all mean?
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Worf: From the lowly come the high? Second time around? And
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ships within this ship? Where did they go?
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Riker: Escape with nothing but animals? Why wouldn't the
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Empress escape herself? With her people. A carrier of this
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size could hold perhaps hundreds of thousands.
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Attendant: You do not see. They did escape.
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Riker: In the ships this vessel carried? She said only
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animals...
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Picard: Perhaps they are us?
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Riker: Captain?
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Picard: Noah's ark, Number One. 'The second time around.' A
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second chance. The Empress understood the process of nature.
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From animals come successively higher forms of life.
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Data:'From the lowly come the high.' It could be, Captain.
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And it would help to explain the similarities of alien life
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throughout the range of our travels. Though it would place
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this ship's age in the hundreds of millions of years.
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Riker: Which I find rather difficult to accept.
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Picard: There may be other explanations, Number One.
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Granted. But imagine. A common thread, woven through all of
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our histories. Imagine.
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[We rise into the darkness, looking down at the team,
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surrounded by the broken swords. Light falls on them from
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the open door, itself shaped like a dagger.
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