7295 lines
369 KiB
Plaintext
7295 lines
369 KiB
Plaintext
Star Trek: The Next Generation
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The Enemy of My Enemy
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Jonathan Geld
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Copywrite Jonathan Geld 1991
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PROLOG
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------
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The interstellar shuttle ponderously approached the orbital drydock.
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After two days of deep-space flight, those within the transport
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vehicle were decidedly anxious to board the vessel moored in the
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confines of the drydock. For the past hour, the shuttle had been
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orbiting the planet Ceti Eridani Four while security codes were
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verified and reverified for the ship's occupants.
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``Damn the overactive imaginations of the intelligence services,''
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muttered the older of the two officers seated at the controls of the
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shuttle. ``We haven't been gone more than a week and yet they still
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have to go through all this nonsense.''
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``Calm yourself, Kafarth,'' intoned the younger but senior officer.
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``The wheels of bureaucracy turn very slowly at times. You must turn
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the time spent waiting into time spent being productive. When we
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finally board the Falcon there will be much to do. Prepare for it,''
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he said, as he settled deeply into his seat and reclosed his eyes.
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``Hah! `Time spent being productive,' he says. Look at you, lying
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there. How can you sleep? While we've been gone, those people who
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call themselves engineers have probably brought ruin to all the hard
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work that was done before I left.'' Kafarth pounded the armrest of
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his seat with frustration. ``Do you know how much still needed to be
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done after the last shakedown cruise? Realignment of the warp drive,
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modification of the Gamma-level cloaking device, not to mention the
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power imbalances we were having with the disruptors. Then we get
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called away from real work so that we can please some petty
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bureaucrats in the War Council.''
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High Commander Kareel tr'Arwhael was well acquainted with his Chief
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Engineer's intolerance of anything which drew him away from what he
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considered to be an important task. The fact that they had been
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called to attend a meeting of the Praetorian War Council in order to
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justify the material and personnel expense which had gone into the
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Falcon had not helped any. Kareel, himself, had not been pleased with
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the obligation, but there had been no avoiding it. As the most
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decorated senior officer of the recent Border Wars and as the trainer
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of many of the Fleet's commanding officers, his word carried the
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weight necessary to sway Council members' votes. He had brought his
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Chief Engineer to provide the technical evidence of the Falcon's
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worth. It had worked and the Council had given the go ahead for the
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ship to be commissioned. They had also given the ship its first
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mission, one which Kareel knew might also be its last.
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He shook himself from these thoughts when permission was granted for
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them to approach the drydock. ``There you go, Kafarth. Now we can
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see if your engineering crew did indeed destroy our ship.''
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The engineer gave his commander a withering look. ``Just wait until
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the first time you call for warp speed, Commander. You might find
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every food dispensary on the ship throwing out tons of mak'pargh.''
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Kareel chuckled as he imagined the ship being inundated by the red
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gelatin dessert. He then straightened his face and ordered, ``Take us
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in Sub-Commander, let's take a look at our ship.''
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Now given clearance, the shuttle matched the orbital characteristics
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of the drydock and resumed its approach. As the craft entered the
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opaquing field surrounding the drydock, the officers were provided
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with a full view of the newest ship in the Rihannsu fleet. Half again
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as long as the Nova-class battleships, the Falcon was the largest
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warship the Empire had yet to create. In the spirit of its
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predecessors, the bow of the ship contained the command and living
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sections. In spite of the greater overall size of the ship, this
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section was actually smaller than that of the Nova-class. Due to
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increased power requirements demanded by having twice the firepower of
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previous ships and the new cloaking technology, much of the additional
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volume was occupied by an enlarged engineering section. The increase
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in size of engineering gave the ship a teardrop shaped stern.
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Surrounding the tail of the ship were three warp drive nacelles. Two
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were mounted on wings attached to the large engineering section,
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giving the ship the classic birdlike look. The third was mounted
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along the base of the engineering section resembling a dorsal fin.
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There would be no mistaking this vessel as anything but Rihannish,
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thought Kareel. The familiar lines were all there. But woe to those
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who would try to attack this ship as if it were a Nova-class warbird.
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The additional disruptor emplacements not only gave the ship more
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firepower, but covered the areas which were blind spots on the
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previous ships. The new cloaking device solved many of the
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shortcomings of the earlier device by damping much of the
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gravitational distortion created by the starship's mass. At Kareel's
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insistence, modified defense shields had been added to the Falcon to
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protect it in those cases where the cloaking device would not be
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effective. There had been too many battles lost in the Border Wars
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due to the over-dependence some commanders had on the effectiveness of
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their cloaking devices.
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As Kafarth brought the shuttle to a docking bay, Kareel remarked,
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``This ship is our finest achievement, Kafarth, we have done well.''
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``Yes, Commander, perhaps too well. It is a very complex piece of
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equipment, there is much that can go wrong.''
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Kareel chuckled again as he and his Chief Engineer rose from their
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seats and approached the shuttle's portal. ``You worry too much,
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Kafarth, that is what makes you a great engineer. No matter what I do
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to a ship of ours, you manage to piece it back together again.''
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The engineer replied, ``That's because you were kind enough to leave
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enough of the ship for me to be able to patch it up. Though in some
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cases it wasn't easy.''
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Kareel's smile faded as he said, ``Then leave it to me, my friend, to
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see to it that there will be enough left this time for patching.''
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Kafarth nodded solemnly as he turned to the opening portal. An honor
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guard had arrived in the shuttle bay to greet the ship's commanding
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officer. As Kareel exited the shuttle, the guards snapped to
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attention and held their arms out, saluting in the traditional Romulan
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fashion. The commander paused at the portal of the shuttle and
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returned the salute. As he stepped down to the deck of the Falcon ,
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the First Officer and the Political Officer approached along the aisle
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formed by the guard.
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T'fara, his First Officer the past five years and wife for the past
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two, saluted him and said, ``We welcome your return, Commander. You
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will find that all is in readiness for the Falcon's commissioning.''
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At this announcement Kafarth snorted and muttered something under his
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breath. Kareel turned to him and, knowing his friend's haste to get
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to his post, said, ``Chief Engineer, why don't you go to Engineering
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and verify for yourself what the First Officer has told us.''
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``Yes, Commander, with pleasure,'' Kafarth said eagerly and quickly
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disappeared into the turbolift.
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``Does the Chief Engineer not trust in the efficiency of his own crew
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and his commanding officers?'' asked Bkandar, the Falcon's political
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officer.
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Kareel eyed the small, ugly man with distaste. Ever since the
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mutinies that had occurred on some ships during the Border Wars, the
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Praetorate had insisted upon each ship carrying a Political Officer.
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The official intent of the position was to keep crew morale high and
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faith in the Empire paramount. Kareel knew the truth of the matter
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was that they were spies sent to keep an eye on ship's officers. The
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one thing the Praetorate feared the most was a renegade and popular
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commander gaining power and turning the military against them. That
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was how many of them had achieved their current stations.
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Kareel had no use for Political Officers and always sought to make
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that clear to those assigned to his ships. ``Bkandar,'' he began,
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``Sub-Commander Kafarth has ensured the survival of ships under his
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care by not completely trusting anybody. This ship has orders to
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depart at the earliest possible time and Kafarth feels it necessary to
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inspect all of Engineering before then and I concur. Do you have any
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problems with that, Sub-Commander?''
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Bkandar had opened his mouth to reply but Kareel had already returned
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his attention to the First Officer. ``Commander, what is the status
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of the crew?''
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T'fara explained that acquisition of the ship's complement had been
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completed during his absence and that a full list was available for
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his perusal. As they walked to the turbolift, she continued her
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report that the personnel were busily familiarizing themselves with
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the new equipment on board the Falcon .
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Kareel could not help but admire his wife. She was the best First
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Officer he had ever commanded. She fulfilled her primary
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responsibility of crew organization and discipline so well that those
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problems seldom reached his office. She left him free to run the ship
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without having to be concerned with whether someone might not be able
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to fulfill their duties. As a consequence, his contact with the lower
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echelons of the crew was somewhat limited; but he had always preferred
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it that way.
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As the turbolift moved them toward the ship's bridge, Kareel briefed
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T'fara and Bkandar on their upcoming mission. ``As you are both
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aware, the past three years have seen three Neutral Zone outposts and
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five border starbases destroyed by an unknown force. An investigatory
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mission by Commander T-Bok revealed no indications of the agency
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behind this destruction. Last month, T-Bok's ship disappeared in the
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Neutral Zone. It is the decision of the War Council that the Falcon's
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commissioning voyage is to investigate T-Bok's disappearance and
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uncover the responsible agent.''
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``I would think that it is obvious who is doing this destruction,
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Commander,'' responded Bkandar. ``The only other force about the
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Neutral Zone is the Federation. What is the mystery?''
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``The `mystery', Sub-Commander,'' retorted Kareel, ``is that there is
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no proof of Federation complicity in this matter. In addition, the
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Praetorate is very hesitant to enter another war so soon after the
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Border Wars. Economically and socially, the Empire is not ready to
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support another prolonged conflict. The orders from the War Council
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are to investigate, not instigate. If we find that the Federation is
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the force behind the destruction, then further decisions will have to
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be made.
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``However, it was also suggested that if the opportunity does arise to
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engage a Federation vessel, the decision of how to proceed is under my
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discretion,'' the Commander continued. ``Realize though, that it is
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my decision and none other's.''
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Both T'fara and Bkandar nodded their understanding as the turbolift
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came to a halt at the Falcon's bridge. They both felt they knew
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Kareel well enough to have a good idea what his response to a
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Federation vessel in the Neutral Zone would be. After all, they were
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aboard a ship which was the match of any Federation ship, including
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the vaunted Galaxy class.
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Kareel critically scanned the bridge officers who had come to
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attention as he had entered the room. He circled the large room
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saluting each officer as he came to them. At each station he queried
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the officer of their readiness and what difficulties they had been
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encountering. His interest in the command crew of his ships had made
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him a popular and much sought after commanding officer in the fleet.
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When he had agreed to head up the Falcon project, there had been no
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difficulty in attracting the talent he had wanted. That was one
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reason the War Council had been reproachful of the personnel drain the
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project had caused upon the rest of the fleet.
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The High-Commander finished his rounds and moved to sit in the command
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chair near the middle of the rectangular bridge. He ordered a
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communications channel be opened to the rest of the ship as he eased
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himself into the chair. ``Crew of the Falcon ,'' he began. ``It is
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my pleasure to inform you that this ship has been fully commissioned
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by the Praetorian War Council. As you know, this implies that we have
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been given our first mission. What we have to do will not be easy,
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nor will it be safe. We have been ordered to investigate instances of
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aggression against the Empire along the Neutral Zone. This may entail
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bringing this ship into the Neutral Zone and it may mean reprisal acts
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of aggression of our own. I assure you that I have full faith that
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this ship and its crew are ready to do what is necessary to fulfill
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our mission.'' He paused to let the announcement sink in and then
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concluded, ``The Falcon will depart from drydock in thirteen hours.
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Kareel out.''
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He then sat back into the chair and contemplated the viewscreen which
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was showing an outer view of the starship. This was no ship of peace,
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he thought, it was a ship of war. Twice the firepower of the Nova
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class, an advanced cloaking device and additional shielding made it a
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deadly arrow aimed at only one target. It had been obvious from the
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beginning that the War Council intended for the Falcon class to battle
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the Federation. Technologically, this ship met or exceeded
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Starfleet's Galaxy class. The new cloaking device would enable the
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ship to enter the bowels of Federation space, perhaps even to the
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Terran system itself. It could possibly endanger the very balance of
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power which had held the Romulans back from waging an all out war
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against the Federation. Kareel knew that the true purpose of
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selecting the Falcon for this mission was to test just that theory.
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Kareel smiled and thought, ``It's time for theory to end and for
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practice to begin.''
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CHAPTER ONE
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-----------
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Commander William Riker's entrance to the Vari-Gee chamber was less
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than dignified. The First Officer of the Starship Enterprise lost
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control as he stepped from the controlled gravity of the rest of the
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ship into the null gravity of the chamber. As he flew across the
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room, he regained enough presence of mind to execute a tumble in
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mid-air and stop himself using his legs against the wall to absorb the
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energy of his flight.
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``Very good, Number One. You are getting better at this,'' said the
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other occupant of the room.
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Riker silently regarded his captain who was hanging from an inverted
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position over the middle of the room. The First Officer had nothing
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but respect for Jean-Luc Picard, but he personally thought the man was
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out of his head if he truly enjoyed null gravity. All Riker ever got
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out of it was a good case of nausea.
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``I'm afraid I will never get to like this feeling as much as you do,
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Captain,'' Riker said as grabbed a handhold and brought himself to the
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same orientation as Picard.
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``Nobody said that you had to like it, Will,'' Picard replied. As he
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talked he pushed himself from the ceiling and executed a tight tumble
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which enabled him to push off from the next wall with his feet. He
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bounced from wall to wall, each time ending up perfectly oriented with
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his feet in a position to push off. Finally, he wound up back in his
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starting position. ``It may become a necessity to function in zero
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gravity if the artificial gravity aboard the Enterprise or any other
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ship you happen to be commanding suddenly went out,'' explained
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Picard.
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Riker shook his head as his captain bounced around the room. He just
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hoped that he would be in that kind of physical condition when he
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entered his fifties. Meanwhile, here he was just trying to keep his
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stomach in line. To take his mind off the aerial gymnastics and his
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stomach, Riker decided to follow up on Picard's reasoning. ``But,
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Captain, that wouldn't likely be the only problem if that happened.
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Let's face it, if we lost gravity while the ship was moving there
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wouldn't be enough of the crew left to worry about after we all
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slammed into a wall at Warp speed!''
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Picard, who wiped his face with a towel that had been floating near
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him, rolled his eyes up to the floor. ``Number One, I do believe you
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are being deliberately obstinate,'' he said with humor in his voice.
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``You have to allow your captain his little eccentricities, it says so
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right in the Starfleet guidebook.'' His tone became more somber as he
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said, ``Besides, events which occurred during the Stargazer's final
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mission made zero gravity training a necessity. A well placed Ferengi
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shot disabled a main gravity generator and its two backup subsystems.
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Rather than have a gravity imbalance tear the ship apart, I decided to
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shut down all generators until engineering could repair it. For
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fifteen minutes during the heat of battle, we had to remain stationary
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and effect repairs while fending off a Ferengi warship. If it hadn't
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been for the null gravity training of the crew, I might not be here
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lecturing you today.''
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Riker knew something of the Stargazer incident, when a young Jean-Luc
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Picard had lost his first command and his closest friend. He was
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always amazed that his captain could casually bring up a subject that
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had almost cost him his career, not to mention his life. He realized,
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however, that to Picard all of life was a learning experience and that
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mistakes often taught more than successes. That ability was one which
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Riker admired and tried hard to emulate.
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Picard continued with a mischevious grin, ``Of course, the Stargazer
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was dead in space at the time. I always hope that if I am on another
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ship which decides to lose its gravity there will be enough time to
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bring the ship to a halt. It is heartening that there have been no
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reported cases of a ship losing artificial gravity except after an
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attack.'' He paused as he stroked his chin. ``Although, there have
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been a few unexplained losses of ship and crew!'' Picard cracked a
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smile and remarked, ``Why, Commander, I do believe you are turning a
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shade green. Perhaps we should get you more secure footing.
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Computer, restore gravity.''
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That command brought an order to Picard and Riker's one room universe.
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Suddenly there was an up and a down orientation and the younger man's
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stomach stopped spinning. Slowly they were deposited on the padded
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floor of the room. Padding had become a necessity after the first
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broken wrists and legs wound up in sick-bays from the earliest null
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gravity rooms.
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The Vari-Gee chambers were common items on Starfleet vessels and the
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Enterprise had three. They were possible because of a feature of the
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way gravity was generated in a starship. They were located at points
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within the ship at which the various generated gravity fields
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intersected. The combined effects of the fields were played against
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one another to create the desired gravitational effect. They had
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proven themselves valuable not only as null gravity training rooms,
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but also as tools to climatize crew members who were preparing for
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planetary excursions to worlds more massive than Earth.
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Riker and Picard exited the room with the First Officer looking much
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relieved. He accepted the importance of being able to handle himself
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in zero gravity, and felt that he was better than most at it. But he
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much preferred knowing which way was up. He said to Picard, ``I think
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I'll head over to the locker room and get out of this exercise suit
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and into the spa. I had a jiu-jitsu match this morning which has left
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every muscle hurting. That room,'' he said pointing over his
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shoulder, ``didn't help matters any. Care to join me?''
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``An excellent idea, Will,'' he replied. ``It sounds like a very
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relaxing way to finish the day.''
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As they began to head for the exercise area, the gruff voice of
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Lieutenant Worf, the Enterprise's Chief of Security, came from
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Picard's chest communicator, ``Captain, we are receiving a Priority
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call from Admiral Johnson at Starfleet Command.''
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Picard tapped his communicator and responded, ``Thank you, Lieutenant.
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I am on my way. Have the call routed to my ready room.'' He closed
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the connection and the two officers reversed their course, now heading
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for the turbolift at the end of the hall, ``We'll have to forego the
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spa for another day, Commander, it seems we have work to do.''
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Riker nodded and took on a more serious demeanor. ``Should I start
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recalling the crew from their shore leave? We still have about two
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hundred people on the planet's surface.''
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``Yes, have Chief O'Brien begin recovery procedures. Let him know
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that I want Commanders La Forge and Data back on board as soon as
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possible. If the rumours I have been hearing are true, we could be in
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store for a rough mission. I want the two of them to give the ship a
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complete work over before we deorbit. Shield and drive diagnostics to
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receive top priority.'' As they stepped into the turbolift he glanced
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at Riker's damp clothes. Smiling, he said, ``You might, however, want
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to stop by your quarters and clean up after you give those orders,
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Number One. You're a mess! Join me in my ready room when you are
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done.''
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------
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Geordi La Forge had known that coming into the casino was not a good
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idea. But his android companion had wanted to try out his newly
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learned poker skills. Data was doing quite well for himself, the
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Enterprise's Chief Engineer had to admit. He had collected quite a
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large sum of money in winnings, but had also collected an even bigger
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audience.
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Data was now involved in a very high stakes game. La Forge estimated
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there were half a million in credits worth of chips on the table.
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Only Data and one other man remained of the fivesome who had started
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this hand, and the other man was beginning to sweat. Data was
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impassive as always.
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``I believe that I will see your bid, sir, and raise you two hundred
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thousand credits,'' Data responded to his opponent's sortie.
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``You're bluffing, mister. So I'll humor you,'' the big man replied.
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He then pushed his entire pile to the middle of the table. ``I'll
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call. You're going to have to beat two pair, kings and eights.''
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La Forge let out a low whistle, there wasn't much that could beat that
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combination. Then he saw something incredible, as Data lay down two
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queens and three deuces. A full house and Data had won.
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``A most enjoyable game, sir,'' Data said as he leaned across the
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table to pull in his winnings, only to look straight into the business
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end of a projectile weapon. Data stood up quickly and backed away
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from the obviously irritated man. ``May I ask what your intent is?''
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Data asked imperturbably.
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``I don't know how you did it, but you must have cheated,'' the man
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said as he shook away spectators that were trying to restrain him. He
|
|
continued as he alternated aiming his gun at both Geordi and Data.
|
|
``No one wins that many games. And no one,'' he emphasized, ``wins
|
|
that many games against me. Tell me. You're counting cards, aren't
|
|
you?'' It was more of a statement than a question.
|
|
|
|
Geordi tried to signal to his friend, but the android did not see him.
|
|
Data continued on truthfully, ``Of course, sir. I've been taught to
|
|
use my greatest abilities to win at this game. Being an android can
|
|
have its advantages.''
|
|
|
|
A hush had fallen over the crowd at Data's admission. His opponent
|
|
began to laugh. ``Well, that will teach me to play stud poker with a
|
|
walking computer.'' Others in the crowd began to relax and smile, but
|
|
the tension rose as the man became ominously serious again and said,
|
|
``But, Mr. Android, counting cards is strictly illegal on this planet
|
|
and I'm going to have to kill you.'' He raised his weapon at Data.
|
|
|
|
Geordi stepped up to the man. He wasn't worried about the gun
|
|
injuring Data, but some of the bystanders might get hit by a
|
|
ricocheting bullet and this he wanted to avoid. ``Come on, there must
|
|
be another way to resolve this. How about if Data agrees to return
|
|
the money to its original owners?''
|
|
|
|
The man appeared to consider this and then shook his head. ``No, he
|
|
must be made an example of. Then the money will be returned. If you
|
|
don't get out of the way, you'll buy it before your friend here.''
|
|
|
|
``Buy it?'' Data asked.
|
|
|
|
``I'll explain later. If there is a later,'' Geordi replied. Just
|
|
then his communicator beeped with a transporter lock. He smiled with
|
|
relief and turned to the gunman. He backed off to stand next to Data
|
|
and as he waved to the man with his right had he tapped the
|
|
confirmation signal with his left.
|
|
|
|
``Sorry, we'd love to see this resolved, but maybe next time,'' he
|
|
called as he and the Enterprise's second officer dematerialized to the
|
|
stunned look of the antagonist.
|
|
|
|
|
|
------
|
|
|
|
A starship with a crew of over one thousand people on an extended
|
|
mission inevitably had problems between crew members. The Enterprise
|
|
was a small insular city whose ultimate authority was the captain.
|
|
Thus, gone were the days when the captain could conduct all his
|
|
business from the bridge or from a desk in his quarters. There needed
|
|
to be a location where the administration of ship could take place, as
|
|
well as the final resolution of difficulties among the crew. The
|
|
captain's ready room off the main bridge became that place. It was
|
|
where the business of the ship was conducted, and it was the place
|
|
where all crew members could be assured of getting the captain's ear.
|
|
It was also the place where communications considered sensitive could
|
|
be received and evaluated.
|
|
|
|
Jean-Luc Picard stood staring out the viewport in the ready room
|
|
contemplating the stars. The orders which he had just finished
|
|
viewing were not only sensitive, they were profoundly disturbing. The
|
|
peace which had been the rule more than the exception over the people
|
|
who lived about those stars might be shattered by the ultimate
|
|
resolution of those orders. He turned from the viewport when the door
|
|
signal chimed, indicating Riker was ready to talk with him. He picked
|
|
up a cup of tea from his desk and sipped it, trying to calm his
|
|
turbulent feelings with mundane acts. He then signalled for the door
|
|
to open.
|
|
|
|
The First Officer walked in smiling. ``Geordi and Data have just
|
|
beamed aboard, sir. I appears that Commander La Forge was showing
|
|
Data the finer points of the human condition,'' he quipped.
|
|
|
|
``Indeed? I shall be most interested in how my Chief Engineer is
|
|
educating my Second Officer.'' He then took another sip of his tea
|
|
and indicated for Riker to pour himself some. ``Later, though.
|
|
Please sit down, Number One.''
|
|
|
|
Picard sat behind his desk and touched a few controls on the computer
|
|
console. ``I would like you to see the communique we just received
|
|
from Starfleet.''
|
|
|
|
They both turned their attention to the viewscreen on the wall next to
|
|
Picard's desk. Admiral Robert Johnson's face lit up the screen.
|
|
``Hello, Jean-Luc. I trust that this finds you and your crew well
|
|
rested, and the Enterprise in good condition. I apologize for not
|
|
being able to allow you to complete your shore leave term, but
|
|
circumstances in and around the Romulan Neutral Zone have made that
|
|
impossible.
|
|
|
|
``As you are aware, for the past two years attacks have been made on
|
|
our outposts along the Neutral Zone border. Your ship was sent in to
|
|
investigate early on in this matter and wound up having the first
|
|
encounter with the Romulans in over twenty years. Until two months
|
|
ago, there had been no further attacks against Federation posts.
|
|
Since that time, two more planetary outposts have been obliterated, as
|
|
well as three of the border Starbases.''
|
|
|
|
Riker looked up in surprise at Picard, he had not realized the
|
|
destruction had gotten to this scale. The captain nodded and replied,
|
|
``It gets worse. Listen.''
|
|
|
|
Johnson continued, ``After the first of the starbases was destroyed,
|
|
Starfleet sent in two ships to investigate. The Gallant and the
|
|
Endeavor arrived about three weeks ago. Last week, the most recent
|
|
attack resulted in Starbase 59's destruction. The Gallant responded
|
|
to the distress call but was too late.'' The screen switched to a
|
|
view from space of the starbase. Large pieces of the hull of the base
|
|
were scattered in the view, and an angry red glow was coming from a
|
|
large hole in the starbase's living section. Over the picture, the
|
|
admiral's voice went on, ``The Gallant reported no survivors.''
|
|
|
|
The viewscreen came back to Johnson's tense face. ``Not one hour had
|
|
passed after these pictures were sent when we lost contact with the
|
|
Gallant. There was no warning and no distress call sent. The
|
|
Endeavor was dispatched to the region and although it found the debris
|
|
from the starbase, there was no sign of the other starship. That was
|
|
three days ago. This morning, communication with the Endeavor was
|
|
lost, also without warning.
|
|
|
|
``We have now lost over ten thousand people to these attacks,
|
|
Jean-Luc. The captains and crew of the two starships were among the
|
|
best we have, they should not have been taken by surprise but that is
|
|
the only explanation we have for the lack of distress calls.'' He
|
|
paused and his mouth set grimly, ``The apparent lack of forewarning
|
|
and the location being the Neutral Zone indicates to Starfleet Command
|
|
that these attacks are most likely the work of the Romulans.
|
|
Especially in light of their heightened presence in and around the
|
|
area the past two years. It is the decision of Starfleet Command that
|
|
the Enterprise be sent to the region to investigate. We need to know
|
|
just what kind of weapons are being brought to bear against our bases
|
|
and ships, and more importantly, confirmation that it is the Romulans
|
|
who are doing this.
|
|
|
|
``We would like to send you support ships, but at the moment it is
|
|
impossible. The nearest ships are weeks away and have begun
|
|
preparations to join you, but until they arrive you are it. Not only
|
|
are you going to be responsible for unearthing the details of these
|
|
attacks, but also for protecting the remaining three starbases: 57,
|
|
63, and 64.''
|
|
|
|
At this Riker whistled and then quietly said, ``Those bases are three
|
|
days apart at warp seven. We can't protect all of them.''
|
|
|
|
Picard sipped his tea and grunted in acknowledgement of Riker's
|
|
observation.
|
|
|
|
``The Enterprise has been given extraordinary authorization to enter
|
|
the Neutral Zone if you feel it is necessary, Captain,'' the recording
|
|
continued. ``It is not the desire of Starfleet to start another war
|
|
with the Romulans, however, we must know the cause for these attacks.
|
|
If your investigation brings you in contact with the Romulans,''
|
|
Johnson paused. He then cleared his throat and looked with compassion
|
|
through the viewer, ``I don't need to tell you your business,
|
|
Jean-Luc, nor will I tie your hands. You are the best captain we
|
|
have, and the Enterprise is our best ship. Your authorization is to
|
|
do what is necessary, and that is for you to decide at the time.
|
|
Johnson out.'' The image of the admiral was replaced by the stars of
|
|
the Starfleet logo.
|
|
|
|
The two officers turned their chairs to face one another, a look of
|
|
resignation in both of their faces. Riker began, ``I can't help
|
|
thinking, Captain, that this isn't the Romulan's style. Historically,
|
|
they avoid provoking a battle by firing the first shot. Usually, they
|
|
will provoke it by drawing their adversary into a situation where he
|
|
has to fire first.''
|
|
|
|
``My feelings exactly, Number One. Our previous encounters with the
|
|
Romulans have all been of that genre as well. For them to all of a
|
|
sudden take the offensive like this is very much out of character,''
|
|
he replied. ``However, if they have developed a new weapon which
|
|
allows them to easily destroy a planetary outpost and starbases which
|
|
are heavily shielded, they may very well have experienced a change of
|
|
strategy.
|
|
|
|
``Regardless, it is our job to discover just what is going on out
|
|
there. As soon as we have recovered our crew and Mr. La Forge is
|
|
ready, I want the Enterprise headed on a course for the location of
|
|
Starbase 59, since it was the last starbase to be attacked and the
|
|
Endeavor and Gallant disappeared there. Let's see what clues we can
|
|
unearth at the scene of the crime,'' he paused to collect his
|
|
thoughts. ``I want you to rearrange the duty schedules so that two of
|
|
either yourself, myself, or Mr. Data are on the bridge at all times
|
|
once we arrive at the Neutral Zone. The third shall be available to
|
|
respond immediately if the situation warrants it. Once we leave warp
|
|
near the zone, I want the entire crew to be under conditional alert at
|
|
all times.''
|
|
|
|
Riker nodded his assent, but added, ``It will be a strain on the crew,
|
|
Captain. Heightened alert status always is.''
|
|
|
|
``I'm aware of that, Will, there is no choice. It is better for us to
|
|
be ready for any situation that arises, rather than be caught
|
|
unaware.'' Picard then stood and picked up his tea cup as he turned
|
|
once again to the viewport. ``As I see it, Number One, we are now the
|
|
only thing standing between peace and war. If it is to be war, then
|
|
ours will be the first battle.''
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER 2
|
|
---------
|
|
|
|
Picard entered the briefing room adjacent to the main bridge. As he
|
|
approached the table, the assembled officers quieted down and turned
|
|
to him expectantly. When the Enterprise had begun its journey to the
|
|
Neutral Zone two days earlier, the captain had ordered each officer to
|
|
research a different aspect of the mission. Now, each would give
|
|
their report in the presence of the others so that they could all be
|
|
better prepared to handle the job at hand.
|
|
|
|
``Well, let's get started, shall we?'' said Picard as he sat in his
|
|
chair at the head of the table. ``You've all been briefed on the
|
|
mission, but we all have gaps in our education about the Romulans.
|
|
So, Mr. Data, tell us what you've found out about the Romulan Empire
|
|
and its people.''
|
|
|
|
Data began in his normal neutral voice, ``Considering how long the
|
|
Federation and the Empire have been at conflict with one another,
|
|
Starfleet's records contain surprisingly little useful information,
|
|
sir.''
|
|
|
|
``Can you elaborate on that, Data?'' prompted Riker.
|
|
|
|
``Yes, sir. One would expect that after having had contact with the
|
|
Romulans, or Rihannsu as they call themselves, for over one hundred
|
|
fifty years that the Federation would have more information than I
|
|
have been able to access. Starfleet computers have minimal cultural
|
|
and sociological information regarding the Romulan Empire. The
|
|
historical information is fairly common knowledge. The Federation and
|
|
the Romulan Empire fought against one another in an interstellar war
|
|
which spanned decades. This conflict began shortly after the first
|
|
Federation vessels attempted to make contact with the Romulan
|
|
homeworlds, and were subsequently destroyed. The treaty which ended
|
|
that period of conflict created the region of space we call the
|
|
Neutral Zone. Yet through the length of that war and even during the
|
|
treaty talks, no direct contact was ever made with a Romulan. In
|
|
fact, the treaty was negotiated completely over voice only subspace
|
|
channels.
|
|
|
|
``Approximately eighty years ago, the first Federation starship named
|
|
Enterprise made the first recorded direct contact with the Romulans.
|
|
During this engagement, which took place on the Federation side of the
|
|
Neutral Zone, discovery of the Romulan cloaking device was made. This
|
|
enhancement to the normal defense shields of Romulan warbird makes the
|
|
ship invisible to Federation scanners. However, it was also
|
|
discovered that the enormous power drain attributed to cloaking makes
|
|
it impossible to amass enough energy to fire weapons. Thus a ship
|
|
must drop its cloaking shields to launch an attack. This weakness has
|
|
since been exploited by the Federation many times.
|
|
|
|
``Shortly after the first engagement, the same ship initiated another
|
|
contact with the Romulans, this time within the Neutral Zone. This
|
|
contact resulted in the acquisition of a Romulan shield generator.
|
|
Much useful information is in the computer banks regarding the
|
|
subsequent tests of this shield generator, including confirmation of
|
|
the immense power drains that it puts on the systems of a starship.
|
|
Until this time, it was doubted that a ship could move at warp speeds
|
|
with the shield generator on. These tests proved that this was not
|
|
the case, and that a Constitution class vessel could accelerate at
|
|
almost warp two with the shielding up.''
|
|
|
|
``Why did the Federation not copy and improve the Romulan shielding
|
|
for its own vessels?'' inquired the ship's counselor, Deanna Troi.
|
|
|
|
``The records indicate that while Starfleet Command was impressed with
|
|
the data acquired in the tests, it was felt that dependance upon a
|
|
largely defensive device which was very inefficient would be very
|
|
unwise. It was decided to concentrate on improvements to the warp
|
|
drive and weaponry as offensive weapons, while increasing the
|
|
effectiveness of traditional shielding.''
|
|
|
|
Picard interrupted, ``Yes, all that you have said is well documented,
|
|
Mr. Data. But what about more recent contacts?''
|
|
|
|
``That is the oddity of this case, sir. As you are aware, until our
|
|
own first encounter with the Romulans two years ago, no authorized
|
|
incursions of the Neutral Zone had been made by a Federation vessel.
|
|
Indeed, nothing was heard from the Romulan side of the zone for 70
|
|
years. Judging from the transcripts of our communication with the
|
|
Romulan commander T-Bok, it would appear that they have been involved
|
|
in a great conflict on another border of their empire that kept them
|
|
otherwise occupied.''
|
|
|
|
``They have also improved their weaponry and defenses greatly,''
|
|
rumbled Worf. ``The new ship configuration that we have seen is a
|
|
great deal more advanced than the old designs they borrowed from my
|
|
ancestors.''
|
|
|
|
``Continue, Mr. Worf,'' prompted Picard as he turned his attention to
|
|
the Klingon.
|
|
|
|
``The ships that we have been encountering are approximately three
|
|
times the size of the Birds of Prey seen 70 years ago. Yet, life sign
|
|
readings indicate that there are no more than 200 people aboard. This
|
|
can only mean that much more room is being used for engineering and
|
|
weaponry than in our own ships. While we cannot assume that this
|
|
would indicate inferior power supplies to our own, sensor scans taken
|
|
at the time of our most recent meeting at Galorndon Core would
|
|
indicate that the total power output of their ship was just under that
|
|
of our own. This may show that they have not fully conquered the
|
|
problems involved with the costliness of their cloaking device.
|
|
|
|
``Sensor scans also showed that the Romulan ships are able to bring to
|
|
bear a greater quantity of firepower than we can. They have perhaps
|
|
half again as many energy weapons emplacements as does the Enterprise.
|
|
Our data is not as good with the projectile weapons, but the same
|
|
would seem to hold true. However, what they have in quantity may not
|
|
make up for the fact that a Romulan disruptor is not as powerful as a
|
|
Federation phaser,'' he said with pride in his voice.
|
|
|
|
``Defensively, it is more difficult to say how the new warbirds match
|
|
up to our own. We have never fired at one so we cannot judge how
|
|
their shields would stand up to phaser power. We also do not know how
|
|
defense shielding is affected by having the invisibility screen up.
|
|
|
|
``Finally, regarding the cloaking device. The information that the
|
|
Klingons have given us on their modified cloaking device indicates a
|
|
tendency to use brute force to increase the effectiveness of the
|
|
shield. By dedicating more of a ship's power to the shields, the
|
|
cloaking effect becomes all the more complete. If the Romulans have
|
|
stayed on the same development track that they were on when they had
|
|
close ties with the Klingon Empire, then we may be able to find them.
|
|
The advances we have had in sensor technology over the past fifteen
|
|
years may give us an edge. It may take some time to get the method
|
|
down, but given the opportunity, I believe I can find a way to lock on
|
|
to and destroy a cloaked ship.''
|
|
|
|
``Excellent, Mr. Worf. I hope that we can give you the opportunity to
|
|
get some practice before we find ourselves fighting for our lives. I
|
|
expect you to work with Mr. Data analysing those old test results and
|
|
the logs of our previous encounters to perfect your method before we
|
|
meet up with them again. Keep myself and Commander Riker informed of
|
|
your progress.'' said Picard, sitting back in his chair at the head
|
|
of the black walnut briefing table. Thoughtfully, he turned to
|
|
Beverly Crusher, the chief medical officer, ``Well, we've heard had
|
|
our history lesson and our strategy lesson. Dr. Crusher, why don't
|
|
you give us the physiology lesson?''
|
|
|
|
She smiled and spread her hands wide, ``Historically, the lesson is
|
|
the same as Data outlined. Starfleet records have very little
|
|
detailed information about Romulan evolution. What we do know comes
|
|
from Vulcan prehistory. It relates of a time when the Vulcans and the
|
|
Romulans were once and the same race. This was a period of what can
|
|
best be described as feudalism, where small city-states warred against
|
|
one another. There then came a period of great sociological change on
|
|
Vulcan when their great thinker Savek preached logical control of the
|
|
emotions which brought on these wars. The Romulan forebears rejected
|
|
these teachings which they regarded as soft. The two groups split,
|
|
not only philosophically, but also geographically. The Romulan
|
|
ancestors, in what is probably the greatest exodus in recorded
|
|
history, left Vulcan for a new and presumably more adventuresome life.
|
|
|
|
``As Data indicated, there have been very few opportunities to
|
|
directly examine any Romulans. Our encounters with the defecting
|
|
Admiral Jaroc and with the shipwrecked Romulan, Bochra, on Galorndon
|
|
Core were perhaps the closest any Federation medical officer has come
|
|
to living Romulans and certainly a dead one. The studies I made while
|
|
we had them here and during the autopsy of Jaroc revealed that the
|
|
Vulcan/Romulan legends are probably true. There is a striking
|
|
physiological resemblance between the Romulans and Vulcans. The
|
|
differences in internal anatomy could be attributed to the rise in
|
|
temperature which Vulcan experienced after the Romulan forbears left,
|
|
and to gravitational variations between Vulcan and the Romulan
|
|
homeworlds.''
|
|
|
|
``The mental abilities of the Vulcans is well documented. Is there
|
|
any indication that the Romulans have these psi powers?'' inquired
|
|
Riker.
|
|
|
|
Counselor Troi responded, ``Doubtful. Nothing we have seen verifies
|
|
this. Apparently, the Vulcan ability for mental prowess has its
|
|
foundations in Savek's early philosophical journeys which the Romulan
|
|
predecessors forsook. However, I think that we can expect great
|
|
intelligence and persistence in them. Our greatest strength against
|
|
them may be our unpredictability, as was proven, I believe, by the
|
|
successes of some of the early encounters.''
|
|
|
|
``Agreed, Counselor. We must be prepared to use our guile to our best
|
|
advantage. From what Mr. Worf has said, we must also be prepared to
|
|
take a beating if we find ourselves in a fight.'' Picard turned and
|
|
addressed his Chief Engineer, ``Mr. La Forge, what can you tell me
|
|
about our own preparations?''
|
|
|
|
Geordi had been looking over the most recent engineering status report
|
|
when Picard had asked this. As he looked up, the light glinted off
|
|
the gray steel of his VISOR, a device which enabled him to overcome
|
|
blindness and see in a way no other human could. He pressed a button
|
|
on the table top which caused the computer to display the data on the
|
|
main viewer. As he responded, the listeners turned to the viewer and
|
|
considered the data. ``I feel the Enterprise is in the best shape
|
|
she's ever been in, Captain. I have had my staff running diagnostics
|
|
on all the systems ever since we left orbit and all that has needed
|
|
repairing has been dealt with. All systems are showing optimal. The
|
|
fine tuning of the warp drive that has been been going on for the past
|
|
few months should enable us to top warp 9.85. If the conditions are
|
|
right, perhaps 9.9.''
|
|
|
|
Riker whistled quietly. This was close to the theoretical envelope
|
|
for the Enterprise . ``How well will the ship hold together and
|
|
maneuver under that kind of speed?''
|
|
|
|
``I don't know that I'd want to go any direction but arrow straight at
|
|
that high a warp,'' Geordi replied smiling. ``But I'll stand by the
|
|
integrity of this ship and the specs that say this ship's structure
|
|
should handle warp 9.95. If only we could make a drive that could
|
|
punch us that high.''
|
|
|
|
``Well, we don't have one, although I'm sure by the time this journey
|
|
of ours is over you'll have gotten us there, Commander. In the
|
|
meantime, let's make do with what we have.'' Picard then stood ready
|
|
to dismiss the group. ``I feel that we are ready to take what steps
|
|
we need to resolve this situation.'' He then looked down at his
|
|
officers and spoke somewhat softer, ``I just want to impress upon you
|
|
how important this mission is. We are once again going up against old
|
|
adversaries whom we know at the outset are dangerous. Many people
|
|
have already died, and our job is to try to make sure that many more
|
|
don't. To accomplish this, Starfleet has determined that this ship
|
|
and her crew are potentially expendable. Our mission is not to start
|
|
a war, but if one indeed does develop, let me make it perfectly clear
|
|
that this ship will not fold in the face of the enemy. You are all
|
|
excellent officers, and I expect nothing less than excellence these
|
|
next few days.''
|
|
|
|
He looked up the table and paused looking at Beverly Crusher. He
|
|
thought of their friendship and how he was glad to have her aboard.
|
|
Her companionship meant a great deal to him, more than he cared to
|
|
admit. The thought of bringing her or any of the non-combatant
|
|
personnel on the Enterprise into this situation troubled him. But, as
|
|
a Starfleet captain he had learned to deal with troubling situations.
|
|
Picard then cleared his throat and said, ``I want you all to carry on,
|
|
and stay sharp.'' He then turned and walked out onto the bridge.
|
|
|
|
|
|
------
|
|
|
|
The next day, the Enterprise dropped out of the netherworld of warp
|
|
space into physical space at the location of where Starbase 59 should
|
|
have been stationed. In its place, the crew found debris covering a
|
|
volume of space that a small planet could have covered.
|
|
|
|
``Mr. Data'', called Picard as he exited the turbolift and entered the
|
|
bridge, ``what information can your scanners provide about the debris
|
|
field?''
|
|
|
|
``Wreckage, Captain,'' responded Data from the Operations console in
|
|
the front of the bridge. ``Definitely parts of the Starbase. We are
|
|
picking up all the right trace elements. Sizes of the pieces range
|
|
from millimeters to sections bigger than a shuttle. No life signs,
|
|
and no indications of life-boats.''
|
|
|
|
``No. If there had been life boats, the Endeavor would have picked
|
|
them up,'' Picard said grimly. He then turned to the helm station.
|
|
``Plot out a search pattern that will enable us to scan at least 80 of
|
|
the blast zone, Mr. Crusher. Mr. Data, I want you to select various
|
|
pieces of the debris to be beamed aboard and analyzed. Number One,
|
|
assemble a science team to study the fragments and have them prepare a
|
|
report.''
|
|
|
|
``How about Evans and Okawa? They have solid background in structural
|
|
analysis and stress testing. Okawa was also involved with the
|
|
original design team of the perimeter starbases. And perhaps a
|
|
weapons expert like Mr. Worf would be helpful.'' Riker said, nodding
|
|
his head toward the rear console.
|
|
|
|
``Evans and Okawa,'' Picard paused as he remembered their names.
|
|
``They're the ones who helped Engineering with that nacelle cracking
|
|
problem a few months ago. They do excellent work. Mr. Worf, you will
|
|
go on half shifts. Four hours here on the bridge and four hours with
|
|
the science team.''
|
|
|
|
``Sir, I can continue to do my full duty shift and follow up with the
|
|
science team in my off hours,'' Worf replied.
|
|
|
|
``Lieutenant, I have no doubts about your endurance. I want you
|
|
sharp, however, not dead tired. There will be time enough for long
|
|
bridge shifts,'' Picard ended the discussion.
|
|
|
|
``Mr. Data, let's get started. I want to be on our way to the last
|
|
reported position of the Endeavor within 2 hours.''
|
|
|
|
``Aye, sir, my calculations indicate that it will take approximately
|
|
one and three quarter hours to complete the scan.''
|
|
|
|
``Very well, let's get on with it,'' Picard ordered as he settled into
|
|
his command chair.
|
|
|
|
|
|
------
|
|
|
|
Doctors Miriam Evans and Yasu Okawa were intently studying the
|
|
remnants of Starbase 59 when Worf walked into their science lab on
|
|
Deck Thirteen. The first thing he noticed was that it was highly
|
|
cluttered with piles of overstrained test samples scattered about the
|
|
room. He almost chuckled when he saw that the old samples had been
|
|
simply pushed aside when the new piles from the destroyed starbase had
|
|
been brought in.
|
|
|
|
Worf cleared his throat when it became obvious that they had not
|
|
noticed his arrival. Both of the scientists turned with startled
|
|
surprise that this large man had been able to enter without their
|
|
noticing. The Klingon ignored their surprise and began, ``I see that
|
|
you are already at work here. I apologize for not arriving earlier.
|
|
My presence was required on the bridge. However, the captain was very
|
|
specific that I should report for half my shift, and here I am. Is
|
|
there any way I can be of some assistance.''
|
|
|
|
``Certainly, Lieutenant,'' said Dr. Evans in a soft contralto. She,
|
|
like many of the crew, was always a little taken aback by the sight of
|
|
the large Klingon up close. Neither of the researchers had been given
|
|
an opportunity to work with Worf, and now they weren't sure they
|
|
wanted the experience. However, she regained her professionalism and
|
|
continued, ``We've been looking at a section of what we believe was
|
|
part of the central hub of the Starbase. Take a look at these burn
|
|
marks. This is the first piece which has actually had an indication
|
|
of weapons fire. All the other sections that we have examined show
|
|
evidence of being torn apart, rather than blown apart.''
|
|
|
|
``I see,'' Worf said as he picked up a large section of the hull
|
|
debris. ``So you are saying that most of the Starbase sections show no
|
|
evidence of a direct hit.''
|
|
|
|
``Not hardly, Mr. Worf,'' spoke up Okawa. The small Oriental
|
|
scientist spoke as if he were lecturing a student, ``It is almost as
|
|
if certain sections of the Starbase were targeted and then the whole
|
|
thing structurally collapsed. It is strange, because we did not think
|
|
that a perimeter starbase with all of its shielding could be hit with
|
|
enough energy to cause this kind of damage. Especially considering
|
|
the additional structural reinforcements in these bases.''
|
|
|
|
``Ordinarily, it cannot,'' mused Worf. ``But all shields have their
|
|
weak points and a starbase's are no exception. The trick, of course,
|
|
is knowing what those weak points are. That requires knowledge of how
|
|
they were designed and implemented.''
|
|
|
|
``Very good, Mr. Worf,'' exclaimed Evans. ``That is exactly what we
|
|
were thinking. Normally when we examine debris from an attacked ship,
|
|
it holds evidence of a great deal of sustained weapons impact over
|
|
much of the hull. Not in this case, however. As I said, this was the
|
|
first piece of debris that had any indication of impingement. Granted
|
|
we've only gone through about 1/4 the collected samples. But we
|
|
should have come across other weapons' burns by now.''
|
|
|
|
``Back to why we called you down here, though,'' interrupted Okawa.
|
|
``Could you look at this piece and tell us what kind of weapon may
|
|
have caused this damage?''
|
|
|
|
``It may require some study,'' Worf said, picking up the charred piece
|
|
in his hands, ``but at first glance I would have to say a low energy
|
|
phaser caused this. Perhaps disrupter fire, but I doubt it.''
|
|
|
|
``So do I, Lieutenant,'' said Okawa, ``I also am hesitant about saying
|
|
it is phaser impact as well until I take a look at the molecular bonds
|
|
around the incision.''
|
|
|
|
Worf nodded in agreement, ``I would like to examine this piece further
|
|
with you. Shall we get to work?''
|
|
|
|
The scientists nodded eagerly and they began to attack the pieces
|
|
intently with the massive Klingon.
|
|
|
|
|
|
------
|
|
|
|
``We are very close to the area from which Starfleet picked up the
|
|
Endeavor's last transmission, sir,'' called Data's voice over the
|
|
intercom in Picard's ready room.
|
|
|
|
``I shall be on the bridge in a moment, Mr. Data. Thank you.''
|
|
Picard looked back up at Worf, ``So our experts are not convinced that
|
|
it is disrupter fire which caused the destruction of the Starbase?''
|
|
|
|
``No, sir, and neither am I. I have been studying the deep lattice
|
|
scans of the impact areas on the debris, and I can say that although
|
|
they don't look like phaser burns they also do not look convincingly
|
|
like disruptor fire either. The breakdown of the lattice bonds in the
|
|
metal is all wrong for either weapon, and yet has come characteristics
|
|
of both.''
|
|
|
|
``Well, that's bothersome, isn't it, Number One?'' Picard said to the
|
|
other guest in the ready room. ``The last time we were here, the
|
|
Romulans were still using disruptors.''
|
|
|
|
``Aye, sir,'' Riker assented, ``and the Romulans aren't ones to hold
|
|
back a weapon like this.''
|
|
|
|
``No, they are not. So we are up against something potentially very
|
|
different from what we are equipped to handle. A new weapon in the
|
|
hands of an old and not too well known adversary,'' the captain said
|
|
as he rose and walked toward door adjoining the bridge. ``Well, let's
|
|
keep that in mind, shall we?''
|
|
|
|
As the bridge door opened, Data looked to the entrance, ``Sir, we are
|
|
approximately in the area last reported by the Endeavor .''
|
|
|
|
``Very well, scan the area for any signs of that ship,'' Picard said
|
|
as he stepped between the helm and operations consoles toward the main
|
|
viewer as if to get a better view.
|
|
|
|
The long range scanners aboard the Enterprise were as good as any in
|
|
the fleet. They could scan hundreds of parsecs in any direction in
|
|
very short order. Under the observation and control of the android
|
|
operations officer, the time to study a large volume of space became
|
|
very short indeed.
|
|
|
|
A few minutes later, Data reported, ``Sir, I believe I am picking up a
|
|
signal beacon and some indication of scattered debris in quadrant
|
|
17.''
|
|
|
|
``A signal? Lock onto it and get us over there, Mr. Crusher. Shields
|
|
up, Mr. Worf. Escalate the alert status, let's not get caught
|
|
unawares. Remember we are in the Neutral Zone, anything can happen,''
|
|
he added needlessly.
|
|
|
|
As the Enterprise neared the area, Picard could see on the main viewer
|
|
a small field of debris. Worf reported what the captain had already
|
|
surmised, ``Definitely the remains of a starship, Captain. The short
|
|
range sensors indicate some sections of the ship to be still intact.
|
|
No life forms in any of the large pieces, however.''
|
|
|
|
Unlike the long range scanners, the short range scanners were
|
|
controlled by the tactical console of the Klingon. These sensors were
|
|
also used for weapons targeting. They provided Worf a detailed
|
|
picture of what was in the immediate vicinity of the ship. They could
|
|
also give him an idea of how a ship in the region might be constructed
|
|
and how many life forms were inside it.
|
|
|
|
``Where is the signal that Data is picking up coming from?'' asked
|
|
Picard.
|
|
|
|
``There is a small life boat among some of the smaller pieces of the
|
|
ship.'' Worf made some adjustments to his console. ``Yes, there is a
|
|
life reading from it, but it is very faint.''
|
|
|
|
``Lock onto that life boat with a tractor beam, Mr. Worf. Captain to
|
|
Sick Bay. Dr. Crusher, get a triage team down to the shuttle bay. I
|
|
believe we have a patient for you.''
|
|
|
|
``Acknowledged, Captain,'' came the reply from the intercom.
|
|
|
|
``Captain, I have acquired the life boat with a tractor beam and I am
|
|
now positioning it to be brought into the shuttle bay.''
|
|
|
|
``Very good, Mr. Worf, proceed.'' He turned to Riker, ``Number One,
|
|
Data, let's go down to the shuttle bay and see what we have reeled in.
|
|
Worf, get a security detail to meet us down there. You have the
|
|
conn.''
|
|
|
|
|
|
------
|
|
|
|
A life-boat was not intended for long term journeys in space. A
|
|
practiced eye could tell that with one look. With no engines to speak
|
|
of and only rudimentary shielding, it was only intended to keep
|
|
someone alive long enough for help to arrive. Usually within a matter
|
|
of a day or so a rescue ship could be at hand. That is, within normal
|
|
Federation controlled space. That was where the Endeavor was designed
|
|
to operate. It had been called out of its sphere of operations for
|
|
the Neutral Zone emergency and had not been equipped with hostile
|
|
space rescue equipment. A ship like the Enterprise had no life boats
|
|
to speak of, but was designed so that individual sections of the ship
|
|
could function to keep the crew alive for many weeks. This, of
|
|
course, assumed that there was at least one section that had sustained
|
|
no major damage. If one didn't, then no life boat could sustain any
|
|
portion of the thousand member crew long enough for rescuers to
|
|
arrive.
|
|
|
|
The Endeavor's life boat had been adrift in space for five days and
|
|
its air and food supplies had been seriously depleted. The energy
|
|
storage cells would continue powering the emergency transmitter for
|
|
years to come, but by then the occupants of the life boat would be
|
|
long dead. To add to the boat's problems, it had been exposed to some
|
|
blast radiation when the Endeavor emolated itself. This knocked out
|
|
some of the food storage systems and had destroyed the reoxygenator,
|
|
the device that recycled the ship's atmosphere and kept it breathable.
|
|
All in all, it was a wonder that this life boat had kept anyone alive,
|
|
and Riker said as much.
|
|
|
|
``The human body can take a great deal of punishment, Commander,''
|
|
said Beverly Crusher as she ran a tricorder over the officer who they
|
|
had discovered. ``But I'm afraid that this body may have received too
|
|
much abuse. I won't be able to tell until I get him up to sick bay.''
|
|
|
|
``Do what you can, Doctor. I want to be able to speak with him as
|
|
soon you can get him conscious. He should be able to tell us
|
|
something about what happened here,'' said Picard.
|
|
|
|
The doctor and her team then disappeared into the turbolift with the
|
|
unconscious body.
|
|
|
|
``You seem rather certain about that, Captain,'' said Riker. ``Why?''
|
|
|
|
``Because I know him, or at least of him. He is Commander Redd
|
|
Tarkenton. He went through the academy a year or so after I did. His
|
|
exploits there are legend, as I understand it.''
|
|
|
|
``Yes, they are, sir,'' replied Riker. ``He was captain of the
|
|
academy spaceball team and second in his graduating class. His record
|
|
of a 3.97 grade point and 206 points in a season is still untouched.''
|
|
|
|
``Even by you, Will?'' Picard said, smiling.
|
|
|
|
Riker grimaced, ``Spaceball was never my forte, Captain. You had to
|
|
be really good at handling yourself in null gravity. I was, however,
|
|
a fairly competent assistant offensive coach.''
|
|
|
|
``Yes, well, we'll have to see about getting you ready to take over
|
|
next season's team. Anyway, Tarkenton went on to have a rather
|
|
distinguished career, but he never wanted his own ship. He preferred
|
|
the technical levels of a ship to command. He went back to the
|
|
Academy after rising to the rank of Lieutenant-Commander and got his
|
|
engineering certification. Starfleet then reassigned him to the
|
|
Inspector-General's office as an inspector of engineering for the
|
|
fleet. I met him a couple of times when he came to inspect the
|
|
Stargazer , a tougher and fairer man one could not hope to meet.''
|
|
|
|
``I understand the saying was, `When you see Redd, you'll see red',
|
|
around the engineering corps, sir,'' commented Riker.
|
|
|
|
``Yes, Will, I believe I said that on occasion, too. He continued his
|
|
career teaching at the Academy in some of the upper level Warp drive
|
|
Practical classes. I had thought he was still there, but apparently
|
|
he got himself back out in the field. I hope he can give us an
|
|
accounting of what happened out here.''
|
|
|
|
``He looks pretty tough, but it would be difficult to imagine anyone
|
|
surviving the radiation levels to which he was exposed,'' Riker said.
|
|
|
|
``That's very true, Will, that's why I want to speak with him as soon
|
|
as he comes to. Meanwhile, let's get back to the bridge and see if we
|
|
can collect some more samples for our analysis team to piece
|
|
together.''
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER 3
|
|
---------
|
|
|
|
The Enterprise had completed its survey of the wreckage of the
|
|
Endeavor and was now racing toward Starbase 57. Picard had assembled
|
|
his senior officers to another meeting in the briefing room to hear
|
|
the results of the science team's studies.
|
|
|
|
``Captain, I believe that with Lieutenant Worf's invaluable assistance
|
|
we have been able to figure out the cause of Starbase 59's demise,''
|
|
started Okawa. ``To put it simply, the starbase was destroyed by
|
|
advanced structural fatigue.''
|
|
|
|
``Structural fatigue, Dr. Okawa?'' queried Riker, raising an eyebrow.
|
|
``I would hardly call an attack by Romulan Warbirds `structural
|
|
fatigue'!''
|
|
|
|
``Commander Riker, what my colleague means is that the direct cause
|
|
for the destruction of Starbase 59 was a collapse of the major
|
|
structural members of the starbase's outer hull. This was brought
|
|
about by weak weapons fire onto key locations of the structure,''
|
|
explained Evans. ``If I may demonstrate, Captain?''
|
|
|
|
``Please do, Doctor,'' said Picard indicating that she had the floor.
|
|
|
|
Evans pressed a few buttons on the table top, in the center of the
|
|
table a holograph of the unmistakable mushroom shaped image of a
|
|
Perimeter Starbase appeared. ``Here we have an image of a Type 3
|
|
Starbase, the design of the Neutral Zone Perimeter bases. This design
|
|
is unique due to its redundant shield generators. It has five, with
|
|
one on the northern end of the axis and one on the southern end of the
|
|
axis. It also has three shield generators placed equidistantly along
|
|
the equatorial circumference.'' Blue lights appeared in the
|
|
appropriate places on the image. ``These starbases are also equipped
|
|
with phaser defense emplacements in two rings, one on the northern
|
|
hemisphere of the starbase and one on the southern.'' Rings of red
|
|
indicated the locations of the phaser tracks on the image.
|
|
|
|
``Based upon the wreckage samples of Starbase 59 that were recovered
|
|
we have made what we believe is a fairly accurate computer simulation
|
|
of the attack that was carried out upon the base,'' continued Okawa.
|
|
``Computer, if you please, simulation Okawa Two Starbase Five Nine.''
|
|
|
|
``The heaviest hull scarring was around the polar shield generators.
|
|
This causes us to believe that the attack concentrated on these areas.
|
|
One ship would have been enough to do the damage, though two would
|
|
have made things more expedient.'' At that moment a dot appeared on
|
|
the screen below the south polar end of the Starbase, a white line was
|
|
then inscribed from the dot to the blue shield generator along the
|
|
south pole. ``With the aid of Lieutenant Worf, we determined that the
|
|
scarring around the south polar end of the starbase was not caused by
|
|
a standard Romulan weapon, at least not one we know about.''
|
|
|
|
Worf growled, ``The weapon has characteristics of a Romulan disruptor
|
|
and a Federation phaser, but is really not either. It seems to have
|
|
bored its way through the shields slowly, similar to a percussion
|
|
drill. It seems to set up frequencies of destructive interference
|
|
within the shields and then exploits the zones of lesser intensity.
|
|
Even so, by the time the energy beam gets to the hull of the starbase,
|
|
its strength would be greatly attenuated by the shield's residual
|
|
strength.''
|
|
|
|
``Exactly, Lieutenant,'' continued Evans. ``Judging from the energy
|
|
which we estimate must have been used to cause the damage on the polar
|
|
areas, the power source of the weapon must be close to three times
|
|
that of a phaser on this ship.''
|
|
|
|
``Wait a minute,'' La Forge said shaking his head, ``there is no way
|
|
that a ship could sustain that kind of power for very long and keep
|
|
its own shields up protecting it from the defense phasers on the
|
|
Starbase. It would have to have the power supply of the Enterprise
|
|
dedicated to the shields and weapons, with none left for engines and
|
|
internal support.''
|
|
|
|
``Either that or it could be cloaked and unshootable, Geordi,''
|
|
pointed out Riker.
|
|
|
|
``Yet, we haven't seen a demonstration of the cloaking device being
|
|
maintained while power is diverted for the ship's weapons. It is
|
|
possible, however, that they could have made a breakthrough with their
|
|
cloaking device that we are not aware of. After all, the Romulans are
|
|
not in the habit of telling us about their scientific breakthroughs,''
|
|
observed Picard wryly.
|
|
|
|
``This we don't know, Captain,'' said Evans, ``it is something the
|
|
evidence cannot tell us. The evidence also does not tell us which was
|
|
destroyed first, the starbase shields or weapons. We show them
|
|
hitting the shields first, but the best way to have the time to deal
|
|
with the shield generators would be to destroy the phasers first. I
|
|
must restate that the time to get through the shields to the shield
|
|
generators would be considerable, perhaps as long as 15 minutes of
|
|
continuous firing. It depends on just how the weapon goes about
|
|
setting up those resonance patterns in the shields. The time to get
|
|
to the phasers would be less due to their distance from the shield
|
|
generators. Once the phasers were taken out, however, they could
|
|
spend as long as they liked hitting the shield generators.''
|
|
|
|
``A slow painful death for our colleagues on the Starbase,'' Picard
|
|
said solemnly. ``What about this structural collapse business?''
|
|
|
|
Okawa answered, ``The best way we can explain it is that the attacking
|
|
ship, had such low power left in reserve after removing the Starbase's
|
|
defenses that it was reduced to etching the surface of the starbase
|
|
along the major structural members of the shell. After a bit of time,
|
|
perhaps five minutes, maybe less, the Starbase literally tore itself
|
|
apart.''
|
|
|
|
``Wouldn't they require an intimate knowledge of the starbase's
|
|
construction to know just where those weak points are?'' asked Riker.
|
|
|
|
``Perhaps, Commander, perhaps. These are fairly new starbases, twenty
|
|
years or so. During that time we have not seen Romulans near the
|
|
bases, aside from these attacks. Therefore, one might assume they
|
|
found the plans somehow, or they have some very good scanners that can
|
|
get through our scramblers.'' said Okawa.
|
|
|
|
``I don't think so, Doctor,'' said Picard. ``We would have known they
|
|
were scanning us a long time ago, and I have never seen a report out
|
|
of the Neutral Zone which would indicate that. Okawa, you have given
|
|
us several possible attack scenarios. What is your educated best
|
|
guess of the actual attack?''
|
|
|
|
Okawa pondered this before responding. ``They probably used two
|
|
ships, one at the north pole, the other at the south. They took out
|
|
the phaser banks simultaneously very quickly, remember they would have
|
|
had full power resources then. They probably approached the Starbase
|
|
cloaked so they could get fairly close before being detected. Once
|
|
the phasers are gone, the starbase is as good as destroyed. The polar
|
|
generators would be the next target to get the living section exposed,
|
|
then finally the equatorial emplacements. All in all it probably took
|
|
half an hour to an hour to get all the shield generators down. From
|
|
that point, it probably took another fifteen minutes to etch the hull
|
|
of the starbase and let it tear itself apart.''
|
|
|
|
``Any defense against this type of attack? Answers from anyone would
|
|
be appreciated . . .'' Picard asked.
|
|
|
|
``A starbase is big, slow and relatively unprotected, Captain,'' said
|
|
Worf. ``It cannot move out of the way. The weaponry on a starbase is
|
|
basically defensive, once that is gone, there isn't much that can be
|
|
done except die knowing you fought the enemy bravely.''
|
|
|
|
``There are always options, Mr. Worf. Dying is not the most pleasant
|
|
of them. Think on it people, that includes you, too, Doctors. Let's
|
|
see if we can come up with anything,'' Picard said, leaning back in
|
|
his chair staring at the ceiling. ``There has to be something...''
|
|
|
|
The intercom piped in the voice of Wesley Crusher from the bridge,
|
|
``Captain, we are receiving an emergency distress signal from Starbase
|
|
57,'' the young ensign reported. ``They are under attack, sir.''
|
|
|
|
``Go to Red Alert, Mr. Crusher, hold our heading to Starbase 57 and
|
|
increase speed to Warp Eight. What is our ETA at that speed?''
|
|
|
|
``Approximately forty minutes, sir.''
|
|
|
|
``Damn. Thank you, Ensign, I'm on my way.'' Picard then turned to his
|
|
assembled officers, ``Let's try to think of something quickly, folks,
|
|
if you are correct that Starbase doesn't have forty minutes.
|
|
Dismissed.''
|
|
|
|
Picard, Riker, Worf, and La Forge then scrambled to the bridge and
|
|
assumed their stations.
|
|
|
|
``Mr. Worf, please put the call from Starbase 57 on the main viewer.''
|
|
ordered Picard.
|
|
|
|
``Aye, sir. The signal is weak but stable.''
|
|
|
|
The star field on the main viewer changed to a staticy picture of a
|
|
woman's face in the Operations Room of Starbase 57. `` Enterprise ,
|
|
this is Starbase 57, we are under attack. Do you read me?''
|
|
|
|
Picard stepped toward the main viewer, ``This is Jean-Luc Picard,
|
|
Captain of the Enterprise , we are reading you. What is your
|
|
status?''
|
|
|
|
``Captain, three small ships appeared in near space to us about
|
|
fifteen minutes ago. We hailed them, but got no response. Shortly
|
|
thereafter, they began firing on our phaser emplacements. We were
|
|
able to destroy one of them before they disabled our phaser banks.
|
|
They move very quickly, Captain, and it is almost impossible to lock
|
|
onto them. They are now attacking our polar shield generators. The
|
|
shields are holding, but are beginning to weaken. We figure those
|
|
generators will hold for about half an hour.''
|
|
|
|
``Is there any way for you to increase the power going to your
|
|
shields? Can you shut down any unnecessary sections and route the
|
|
power to your shields?'' Picard queried.
|
|
|
|
``Captain, I don't think you've ever been in command of a starbase.
|
|
There are very few unnecessary sections here. However, we are in the
|
|
process of moving people to clear out several levels so that we can
|
|
shut down life support to them. Once we do that, we should be able to
|
|
increase shield power about five percent. That's about all we can do.
|
|
When can we expect your arrival, Captain?''
|
|
|
|
``Forty minutes, Commander. We can't make it any sooner. Try to hold
|
|
out that long and keep us posted. Picard out.''
|
|
|
|
``Well, Number One, I guess that modifies one of our theories. They
|
|
attack in threes, not twos. Also, no mention was made of a cloaking
|
|
device, so we have even more questions than we had before,'' he said
|
|
heading to the turbo lift. ``One thing we don't need is more
|
|
questions, we need some answers.''
|
|
|
|
``Where are you heading, sir?'' asked Riker.
|
|
|
|
``To sickbay. The Doctor may not like it, but the source to some of
|
|
our answers may be with that man in her care. I'm afraid our
|
|
situation is more pressing than medical ethics will allow. You have
|
|
the bridge, Commander. Mr. Worf, try to patch in to the starbase
|
|
sensors, I'd like to see what we're heading into. Contact me when
|
|
that is done.'' The turbo lift doors closed behind Picard, leaving
|
|
some very troubled bridge officers staring at them.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
------
|
|
|
|
As the Enterprise raced through millions of miles of space, Picard
|
|
raced past the levels of his ship, and so too, did his mind race.
|
|
What he thought of he didn't like, the scowl on his faced giving ample
|
|
proof to that.
|
|
|
|
``It doesn't all fit quite as nicely as Okawa and Evans would like to
|
|
think. But then again, reality doesn't mirror theory as much as the
|
|
theorists would like to think,'' Picard thought silently.
|
|
``Disruptors which aren't disruptors, unknown battle tactics, no
|
|
cloaking, and no real historical background. Yes, that is the
|
|
important one. The Romulans very seldom make the first move, and this
|
|
is totally out of character for them. They would not provoke a war,
|
|
at least not this flagrantly.''
|
|
|
|
``It just doesn't add up,'' he spoke aloud.
|
|
|
|
``Unknown command sequence,'' spoke the turbolift computer.
|
|
|
|
``Damn. Now I'm talking to myself,'' muttered Picard. ``No command
|
|
given, computer.''
|
|
|
|
Picard went back to his thinking, but through it all he felt that he
|
|
was missing something. Something he felt he should remember,
|
|
something important, but for the life of him couldn't bring to the
|
|
forefront of his mind. This made him scowl all the more. As captain,
|
|
he liked an orderly ship and he had always felt that order in the ship
|
|
began in the order of the captain's head. Right now, Jean-Luc Picard
|
|
was more confused than he had ever been.
|
|
|
|
Finally, the turbolift doors opened at the medical level. Picard
|
|
exited the turbolift and headed for the main sickbay, subconsciously
|
|
straightening his tunic for the unpleasant confrontation he knew lay
|
|
ahead with the doctor.
|
|
|
|
As the sickbay door opened he knew from one look at Beverly Crusher
|
|
that this was not going to be easy or as pleasant as his normal
|
|
discussions with her. She sat at her desk, looking up with her lips
|
|
compressed into a thin line. He knew from experience that look meant
|
|
she was going to be stubborn about the welfare of her patient.
|
|
|
|
Picard cleared his throat, and decided to approach the topic directly.
|
|
``Doctor, I need to speak with your patient in there. The safety of
|
|
this ship may depend on what information the Commander can give me.''
|
|
|
|
``Captain, that man is dying in there. There is nothing I can do
|
|
about that, but I might be able to keep him alive longer and more
|
|
comfortably if he is left to rest and recuperate somewhat from his
|
|
exposure. At least let the treatment I have given him a chance to
|
|
work.''
|
|
|
|
Picard noticed, not for the first time, how the intensity in Beverly's
|
|
eyes expressed the deep dedication of her profession to keeping living
|
|
beings living. He only could hope that she would see in his the same
|
|
desire to keep the people under his command living as well.
|
|
``Beverly, you said it yourself, Tarkenton is dying. I want to make
|
|
sure that his death is not in vain. I also believe that what he can
|
|
tell us may keep the thousand people under my command alive just a
|
|
little longer, too. Perhaps long enough to save the people on
|
|
Starbase 57. He was there on the Endeavor . He saw how they attacked
|
|
and he knows what that ship did to defend itself. Perhaps we can
|
|
avoid their mistakes and find out what force is behind all this. But
|
|
I am going to need his help and your cooperation, Doctor.''
|
|
|
|
``Jean-Luc, sometimes I wish you were not so persuasive.'' Crusher
|
|
slumped her shoulders signalling defeat. ``You know I must register
|
|
my objections in the medical log. Starfleet is going to want to know
|
|
the circumstances under which such an important officer died in my
|
|
care.''
|
|
|
|
``I understand, Doctor, I will register my reasons as well. When can
|
|
we talk with the Commander?''
|
|
|
|
Beverly bit her lower lip and called for an intern. ``Give Commander
|
|
Tarkenton 15cc's of cordrazine. We'll be there in a moment.'' She
|
|
stood up from her desk. ``I sure hope that this isn't all for
|
|
nothing, Captain. I hate to lose a man this way.''
|
|
|
|
He nodded and sympathetically said, ``I hope so, too, Doctor. But we
|
|
won't know until we do it.''
|
|
|
|
They entered the intensive care section of the sickbay and Picard saw
|
|
just how badly off Redd Tarkenton was. He lay in one of the life
|
|
support units that Picard always had felt reminded him of a coffin.
|
|
Tarkenton's face was splotchy with radiation burns around his neck and
|
|
forehead. Picard shook his head sadly. ``A tragic ending for a great
|
|
man. I know he would want to die in space, but not this way. No one
|
|
wants to die like this. When you bring him to, will there be much
|
|
pain for him?''
|
|
|
|
``Fine time to ask that, Captain,'' the doctor said wryly, ``but no,
|
|
there will be little pain. The life support unit numbs those sections
|
|
of the brain that register pain.''
|
|
|
|
``Of course, I had forgotten. Seeing him like this momentarily made
|
|
me ...''
|
|
|
|
``I understand, Jean-Luc, it even happens to us doctors.'' She turned
|
|
to the intern and asked, ``Have you administered the cordrazine?''
|
|
|
|
``Yes, Doctor, but there has been little response in his vital
|
|
signs.''
|
|
|
|
``All right, let's administer another 10 cc's, along with 10 cc's of
|
|
DMT. He may be too far gone for us to bring him to,'' Crusher said to
|
|
Picard as she leaned over the life support system. ``Ah, there's some
|
|
response. A little more time . . .''
|
|
|
|
Picard definitely felt out of his element. He never really had liked
|
|
the atmosphere of a sickbay or a hospital. Perhaps, he thought,
|
|
because he had spent too much time in them himself after Stargazer and
|
|
the barroom incident of his youth that had destroyed his heart.
|
|
Indeed, the Captain did not like sickbays or the scent of ill health
|
|
that seemed to permeate them. He had come too close too often to
|
|
ending his days in one.
|
|
|
|
``Jean-Luc?'' Crusher indicated that Tarkenton was coming around.
|
|
``I don't know how long I can keep him lucid. I also don't know just
|
|
how aware he will be, so ask clear questions.''
|
|
|
|
``Thank you, Doctor.'' Picard went up to the head of the patient and
|
|
leaned close to Tarkenton. ``Commander Tarkenton, can you hear me?
|
|
You are aboard the Enterprise . I am Jean-Luc Picard, the captain of
|
|
this ship. Do you understand me?''
|
|
|
|
``Picard... Enterprise ...'', the ill man whispered so quietly that
|
|
Picard had to lean even closer so he could hear him. ``What happened
|
|
to Endeavor ?''
|
|
|
|
``She was destroyed by the attack, Commander. We rescued you from an
|
|
escape capsule; too late to prevent you from suffering some exposure
|
|
injuries. You are in our sick bay, under the care of Dr. Crusher.''
|
|
|
|
``Crusher, good doctor, Academy...'', Tarkenton's eyes cleared a
|
|
little, ``Where are we?''
|
|
|
|
``We are headed for Starbase 57. It is under attack, apparently from
|
|
the same adversary that the Endeavor faced. Can you describe the
|
|
attack that you experienced?''
|
|
|
|
Tarkenton closed his eyes and shook a little. He opened them again
|
|
and there was a gleam of anger in them, ``Three ships attacked us.
|
|
Came from nowhere, very fast. They hit the phaser banks first.
|
|
Captain Yosh managed to disable one of the ships before the phasers
|
|
were completely knocked out . . .seemed to know exactly where to hit
|
|
us. Next went for the shield generators . . .Yosh tried to escape,
|
|
but we couldn't outrun them, Endeavor didn't have enough speed . .
|
|
.tore the ship apart.'' Tarkenton closed his eyes again as his voice
|
|
faded out.
|
|
|
|
``Doctor, is he still conscious?'' asked Picard anxiously. ``There
|
|
are more questions that need answering.''
|
|
|
|
``Yes, he is, but his blood pressure is dangerously high, I can't give
|
|
him more cordrazine. I'll have to substitute something that may be
|
|
less effective.''
|
|
|
|
As the doctor did this, Tarkenton's eyes reopened and cleared again.
|
|
Picard leaned close as he said, ``Commander, the ships which attacked
|
|
you. What kind of weapons did they use?''
|
|
|
|
``The way that the energy drained from the shields, it was something
|
|
very powerful. More than the usual disrupter fire . . .even more than
|
|
a phaser. Never seen anything like it . . .like a jackhammer on the
|
|
shields. Couldn't take it and the aft shields collapsed when we ran.
|
|
Took out the engines next. Was in the outer jeffries tube trying to
|
|
re-tune the containment vessel which had been damaged. Near the aft
|
|
escape pod. Heard the alert klaxon, and made my way to the pod....I
|
|
waited as long as I could, Picard....no one came, I had to jettison.''
|
|
|
|
``No one is blaming you for jettisoning, Commander. It was the only
|
|
thing you could do.'' Picard said dryly. He noticed that Tarkenton
|
|
was quickly fading and there was one more thing he needed to know.
|
|
``Redd, this is important. From what you have experienced, can you
|
|
say whether it was a Romulan force that attacked you?''
|
|
|
|
Tarkenton's eyes opened wide at this question and it looked to Picard
|
|
that if the man could sit up in that bed he would. ``Was it
|
|
Romulan?'' he said hoarsely, ``They came from nowhere and hit with
|
|
the familiarity of an old enemy. Of course it was the Romulans, who
|
|
else could it be in the Neutral Zone?'' With that outburst, Tarkenton
|
|
collapsed and went completely comatose.
|
|
|
|
``Indeed, Commander. Who else could it be?'' Picard said
|
|
thoughtfully as he straightened up.
|
|
|
|
``He can't hear you, Captain. He's unconscious and his vital signs
|
|
are dropping to very low levels,'' Crusher said as she adjusted the
|
|
life support unit.
|
|
|
|
``Thank you, Doctor. I know how difficult it was for you to do this.
|
|
If it's any consolation, he answered many pressing questions. We have
|
|
had too many questions, and precious few answers lately.'' Picard
|
|
turned to leave and then stopped. Turning toward the doctor again, he
|
|
said, ``Beverly, keep him comfortable. He deserves as much. And
|
|
Beverly,'' he paused and touched her arm. ``Thank you.''
|
|
|
|
She looked up at that and smiled at him as she pushed her red hair
|
|
away from her eyes. ``I'll do everything I can, Jean-Luc, but I'm not
|
|
hopeful.''
|
|
|
|
Picard nodded and headed out toward the bridge. On his way he mulled
|
|
over the information that he had just received. He now knew with
|
|
certainty that the enemy had detailed technical information on not
|
|
only Federation starbases but also starships. Only with this data
|
|
could they have hit precisely the areas on their targets that would
|
|
most readily incapacitate them. With an enemy possessing that kind of
|
|
information, Picard knew that the Enterprise was in great danger. One
|
|
thought still troubled him as the turbolift neared the bridge: Why was
|
|
he was so unwilling to believe that the Romulans were responsible for
|
|
all this? As Tarkenton had said, who else could it be?
|
|
|
|
As Picard entered the bridge, Riker beckoned him from the
|
|
communications console, ``Captain, Lieutenant Worf has managed to
|
|
establish a link to the starbase sensors.''
|
|
|
|
``There were difficulties arising from the energy rerouting they are
|
|
doing at the starbase,'' Worf explained, ``In addition, many sensors
|
|
have either been blinded or completely eradicated. I have managed to
|
|
find three which have yet to be hit and have some auxiliary power.
|
|
The station signal is weak, so I do not know how long I can maintain
|
|
the connection.''
|
|
|
|
``Thank you, Mister Worf, display it on the main viewer, please.
|
|
Let's see what we are up against,'' Picard said as he sat in the
|
|
command chair. The scene he saw next drew him back out of it. He saw
|
|
two rather small ships that kept darting in and away from the
|
|
starbase. The ships had a somewhat bulbous bow that seemed to house a
|
|
large sensor array. The weapons blasts were emanating from a ring
|
|
which was just aft of the array. The rear portion of the ships looked
|
|
to be mostly engine, evidenced by two warp drive nacelles that ran
|
|
two-thirds the length of the hull. The configuration of the ships,
|
|
however, was not what drew Picard's attention. It was the intensity
|
|
of the weapons' blasts. Each time one of the ships came in close to
|
|
the station, it fired its weapon. The starbase's shields were only
|
|
partially protecting the station now. As Picard watched, another
|
|
blast came from the near ship that knocked out the sensor from which
|
|
the view was coming. Worf switched to another circuit and the
|
|
spectacle continued. This sensor was located on the top of the
|
|
``mushroom'' living section of the station. From this viewpoint, the
|
|
bridge crew could see some of the extent of the damage to the station.
|
|
Huge holes had been torn in the living section, but they could also
|
|
see the shimmer of the intensified shielding around the mechanical
|
|
section of the station.
|
|
|
|
``It looks like the mechanical section is still fairly intact,'' said
|
|
Worf.
|
|
|
|
``Yes, let's hope that there are still people alive in there to save
|
|
when we arrive. What is our ETA, Mr. Crusher?'' inquired Picard of
|
|
the young helmsman.
|
|
|
|
``Approximately five minutes, Captain,'' responded the young ensign.
|
|
|
|
``Very well.'' He then addressed the entire bridge crew, ``Let's
|
|
prepare ourselves for this confrontation. It appears that the enemy
|
|
has some knowledge of the construction of not only starbases but also
|
|
starships, so we'll have to be very alert. Mr. Worf, go to Red Alert.
|
|
Start energizing the photon torpedoes now. Put targeting control of
|
|
the phasers to your console, Mr. Worf.'' Picard fingered the
|
|
communicator on his chest, ``Mr. La Forge, please report to the
|
|
bridge. I want you up here for this.''
|
|
|
|
``I'm on my way, Captain,'' responded La Forge from Engineering.
|
|
|
|
``All right, people, we have a starbase to save,'' said Riker.
|
|
|
|
``Yes, and stay alive in the process,'' thought Picard.
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER 4
|
|
---------
|
|
|
|
The Enterprise dropped to sublight just at the edge of short range
|
|
sensor ability from the starbase. Using the long range sensors,
|
|
Picard and Riker could determine the ideal trajectory to follow in to
|
|
the starbase. A course that put the bulk of the starbase between them
|
|
and the attackers for maximum sensor screening was laid in at the
|
|
helm.
|
|
|
|
``Sir, sensors are picking up a sizable amount of debris along the
|
|
orbit of the starbase. Apparently the damage that it has sustained is
|
|
causing part of it to break up.'' Data indicated from his control
|
|
console at the front of bridge. ``None of it appears too large for
|
|
the shields to deflect, but it may indicate that we have arrived too
|
|
late.''
|
|
|
|
``Let's hope not, Data,'' responded Riker. ``Can you determine if the
|
|
hostile ships are still at the starbase?''
|
|
|
|
``Yes, Commander, they are. They are also still firing on the
|
|
starbase with the same frequency as before.'' He stared at his
|
|
console for a short time, ``It appears that they are concentrating
|
|
their fire on the engineering section of the starbase, and that they
|
|
are now holding a stationary position with respect to the starbase.''
|
|
|
|
``All right then,'' said Picard, standing from his chair, ``let's go
|
|
in. I believe they have shown their openly hostile intent. Mr. Worf,
|
|
select one of the attacking ships and lock on to it. When we get
|
|
within phaser range, be ready to fire upon it with full phasers, but
|
|
wait for my order. Let's try to even the odds, shall we?''
|
|
|
|
``Aye, sir. With pleasure,'' added Worf.
|
|
|
|
``There is nothing pleasurable about it, Lieutenant,'' snapped Picard.
|
|
``However, we have been left with precious few choices.''
|
|
|
|
``Aye, sir,'' said a chastened Worf. ``I have a lock on the outer
|
|
ship now. Five seconds to phaser range.''
|
|
|
|
``Hold to optimal, Mr. Worf. Steady, steady,'' Picard called, as he
|
|
approached Data's operations console. The Enterprise , he saw, was
|
|
fast approaching on a parabola that would eventually put them between
|
|
the attackers and the starbase. The starbase's engineering section
|
|
had sustained no further damage, but the ship's sensors showed the
|
|
imminent collapse of the shields protecting that section. Picard
|
|
would make certain that the attackers would be forced to deal with the
|
|
starship before they could finish off their defenseless target. He
|
|
wanted to maximize the effect of destroying the outer attacker to
|
|
confuse the remaining attacker so that the starship could get into
|
|
position, and it had to happen quickly. ``Now, Mr. Worf. Full
|
|
phasers.''
|
|
|
|
At that order, four powerful beams of energy leapt from the upper part
|
|
of the Enterprise's saucer section toward the out-lying attacker.
|
|
Apparently taken unaware, the attacker was caught by the full force of
|
|
the attack and the already weakened shields of the alien ship dropped.
|
|
|
|
``His shields have fallen, but his weapons are now energizing for an
|
|
attack,'' Worf urgently warned.
|
|
|
|
``Fire two photon torpedoes, now,'' ordered Picard, bracing himself
|
|
for the shock of the explosion he knew would follow. The Enterprise
|
|
was already closer than was normally considered optimal for torpedoes
|
|
and the blast would definitely light up the shields.
|
|
|
|
Two torpedoes flew from the forward tubes at the base of the hull
|
|
connector. A fraction of a second later they impacted with the
|
|
targeted ship, simultaneously destroying it in a blaze of energy equal
|
|
in intensity to the core of a sun.
|
|
|
|
``A direct hit,'' Worf announced needlessly.
|
|
|
|
``Get us between that remaining attacker and the starbase, Mr.
|
|
Crusher. Full shields, Mr. La Forge, I don't want this mission to end
|
|
here. Will, assist Wesley with the evasive maneuvering, let's try to
|
|
keep on our toes and avoid getting hit.''
|
|
|
|
``Sir, the alien ship has ceased its attack and has increased shield
|
|
strength,'' reported Data.
|
|
|
|
On the screen, the vessel's brightness increased as the shields'
|
|
energy increased. It seemed to hesitate, or at least Picard thought
|
|
it did. Then the shields dimmed and it turned tail and ran.
|
|
|
|
``Alien ship receding and heading into the Neutral Zone,'' Worf
|
|
reported.
|
|
|
|
``Mr. Worf, keep that ship on the sensors. Mr. Data, signal the
|
|
starbase that we have arrived and that we are continuing in pursuit of
|
|
the alien vessel. Mr. Crusher, plot an intercept course and lock it
|
|
in. Will, prepare the saucer section for disengagement. Let's try to
|
|
keep as many people out of the Neutral Zone as possible.''
|
|
|
|
``Captain, it will take five minutes to disengage the saucer section,
|
|
we will lose valuable time,'' Riker warned. ``Considering this is a
|
|
battle zone, is it wise to leave the saucer section here? It's
|
|
already proven to be a dangerous area.''
|
|
|
|
``Infinitely less dangerous than where we are going, Will. Besides, I
|
|
want to give the starbase as much aid as possible. With that in mind,
|
|
I'm putting Dr. Crusher and Assistant-Chief Engineer Rigeur in command
|
|
of the relief effort and the saucer section. Doctors Okawa and Evans
|
|
will be in charge of coordinating efforts to repair that starbase.
|
|
Data, Worf, Geordi, and Counselor Troi, please report to the battle
|
|
bridge immediately. Will, report there as soon as disengagement
|
|
preparations are complete. Mr. Crusher, you will remain with the
|
|
saucer section. I expect this section to remain intact under your
|
|
care, Ensign.''
|
|
|
|
``Aye, sir,'' responded the young ensign, trying to hide his
|
|
disappointment, as his friends filed into the turbolift to the battle
|
|
bridge.
|
|
|
|
``There is nothing glorious about battle, Ensign,'' said Riker to
|
|
Crusher as he read the boy's emotion. ``In time you will come to
|
|
realize that the most glorious achievement is the avoidance of
|
|
battle.''
|
|
|
|
``Well said, Will. Remember that lesson well, Wesley, and when you
|
|
command your own starship, the Federation may well avoid another
|
|
war.'' With that, Picard disappeared into the turbolift.
|
|
|
|
|
|
--------
|
|
|
|
When Riker arrived at the battle bridge he saw Picard looking over
|
|
Worf's shoulder at the tactical console in the back of the miniature,
|
|
functional copy of the main bridge.
|
|
|
|
``So he is heading away at warp six toward the heart of the Neutral
|
|
Zone. Strange, I would have expected him to take the shortest path
|
|
toward Romulan space,'' Picard was saying.
|
|
|
|
``It may be a trap, sir,'' Worf responded typically. ``I seem to
|
|
remember a tactic like this that the Romulans employed about 80 years
|
|
ago.''
|
|
|
|
``Perhaps, Mr. Worf, but we have yet to determine whether these are
|
|
Romulans,'' replied Picard.
|
|
|
|
``Who else could they be, sir?'' asked La Forge. ``After all who
|
|
else inhabits the Neutral Zone?''
|
|
|
|
``You have to keep an open mind, Mr. La Forge. Right, Captain?''
|
|
said Riker.
|
|
|
|
``Exactly, Will. By your presence down here, I assume we are ready to
|
|
separate?''
|
|
|
|
``Yes, sir. All preparations are complete. Dr. Crusher and
|
|
Lieutenant-Commander Rigeur are in the main bridge consulting with the
|
|
starbase crew. By the way, they send their gratitude for our saving
|
|
them from an almost certain fate.''
|
|
|
|
``All right then, begin separation of sections. Mr. Data, lay in
|
|
Ensign Crusher's intercept course. As soon as the sections are apart,
|
|
engage at maximum warp. Mr. La Forge, you promised me some record
|
|
breaking speed performances. Are you ready to `put your money where
|
|
your mouth is'?''
|
|
|
|
``I sure am, sir,'' answered Geordi, smiling. He turned to his
|
|
engineering console, monitoring the matter-antimatter mix. ``In fact,
|
|
captain, without the saucer section we may be able to do a little
|
|
better. I'll eat my VISOR if we can't get to 9.95.''
|
|
|
|
``I'll take you up on that, Commander,'' Picard responded. He then
|
|
turned to Riker, ``Will, commence disengagement of saucer section.''
|
|
|
|
``Aye, Captain. Mr. Data, engage connection seals.'' With that
|
|
command, all interconnecting routes with the large saucer section that
|
|
rode on top of the battle section became closed off by double thick
|
|
doors.
|
|
|
|
``All connections show sealed, Commander,'' reported Data.
|
|
|
|
``Release tang joints.'' Large locking rods withdrew into the battle
|
|
section, similar to dead-bolts being released from a door. After what
|
|
seemed an interminable time, a clunking sound echoed throughout the
|
|
battle section signaling the settling in of the tang joints.
|
|
|
|
``Disconnect interlock.'' This final command signalled thousands of
|
|
small rods to withdraw into both sections. This action made both
|
|
sections fully independent.
|
|
|
|
``All right, Mr. Data, take us out of here. Intercept course with
|
|
that ship. Maximum warp,'' ordered Riker.
|
|
|
|
The battle section sank below the plane of the saucer section and then
|
|
sharply banked on its intercept course.
|
|
|
|
|
|
------
|
|
|
|
``I believe that the alien vessel has detected us following it, sir,''
|
|
reported Worf from the tactical console. ``They must have been
|
|
expecting pursuit. They are now increasing speed to . . .warp 9.6,
|
|
9.7, leveling off at 9.8. They have matched our speed.''
|
|
|
|
``Mr. La Forge, it's now time to give me everything you have. I want
|
|
to catch him,'' said Picard from his command seat.
|
|
|
|
``I'm optimizing the energy path now, sir. Calculations show that
|
|
with some tweaking of the electromagnetic bottle, I can increase the
|
|
matter-antimatter flux through the core, and thus warp us to a higher
|
|
speed.'' Geordi adjusted the settings of several controls on his
|
|
console, ``Speed is increasing now: warp 9.85, warp 9.87, warp 9.90,
|
|
leveling off at this setting, warp 9.91. The interaction neutron flux
|
|
is beginning to increase, captain. Beginning to max out the core
|
|
shielding.''
|
|
|
|
``The intruder is increasing his speed, now at warp 9.91,'' called
|
|
Worf.
|
|
|
|
``Incredible,'' said Picard, ``that whole ship must be engine and
|
|
weapon. However, they cannot increase speed forever. Continue to
|
|
increase warp, Mr. La Forge.''
|
|
|
|
``May I remind you, sir, that we cannot increase speed forever
|
|
either,'' said Data calmly. ``I am already finding the controls
|
|
sluggish to respond. We are clearly pushing the envelope of the
|
|
design specifications of the Enterprise , sir.''
|
|
|
|
``I am aware of that, Commander. We have no choice. Hold this ship
|
|
together long enough for us to catch him. Mr. La Forge, let's have
|
|
that power now.''
|
|
|
|
``Aye, sir, I'll give you all I can,'' La Forge replied. ``But as the
|
|
neutron flux increases, the dilithium concentrators will begin to
|
|
weaken. Inefficiencies will cause apparent power loss before long,
|
|
sir.''
|
|
|
|
``Just long enough, Mr. La Forge.''
|
|
|
|
``Aye, sir,'' Geordi said grimacing as he looked at his status
|
|
readouts. ``Further optimizing the power path, as well as tuning the
|
|
engines for the new input should give us some more push. Hmmm. There
|
|
we go, warp 9.92, 9.93, 9.95. 9.95, sir, that's all I can give you.
|
|
Neutron flux is now creating negative feedback along the core.''
|
|
|
|
``You won't have to `eat your VISOR', Commander,'' commended Picard as
|
|
he shifted nervously in his seat.
|
|
|
|
The ship started making some alarming sounds as it raced toward the
|
|
unidentified vessel. ``The support structure of the hull is
|
|
undergoing some incredible strain, sir, but it will hold together as
|
|
long as we need it. We are gaining on the alien, he has not increased
|
|
his speed above warp 9.92,'' reported Data.
|
|
|
|
``Mr. Worf, lock the weapons on to the alien vessel. When you are
|
|
close enough to make certain, I want four photon torpedoes launched
|
|
with proximity detonation and maximum energy spread. Two to detonate
|
|
ahead of the vessel, and two just behind it, but none are to damage
|
|
that ship. These are warning shots, Mr. Worf, not lethal ones. I
|
|
want to let him know we have a bead on him.'' Picard looked at Riker,
|
|
who nodded his understanding.
|
|
|
|
``Do you think it will work, Captain? Romulans have never been the
|
|
most reasonable beings,'' commented Riker.
|
|
|
|
``If not, Number One, we'll have to resort to more desperate
|
|
measures,'' replied Picard, looking at the ceiling as a particularly
|
|
loud groan resounded through the ship.
|
|
|
|
``We are within firing range now, sir,'' announced Worf.
|
|
|
|
``Proceed, Mr. Worf.'' With that order, the Klingon fired the four
|
|
torpedoes in rapid succession. With classic Klingon precision the
|
|
torpedoes detonated around the alien ship.
|
|
|
|
``Very accurate, Mr. Worf. Your aim is commendable,'' said Riker.
|
|
|
|
``The alien vessel is slowing, sir,'' Data reported.
|
|
|
|
``Match his speed, Mr. Data. Let's let him know we are still here.
|
|
Mr. Worf, open hailing frequencies.''
|
|
|
|
``Aye, sir, hailing frequencies are now open.''
|
|
|
|
``Alien vessel, this is Captain Jean-Luc Picard of the Federation
|
|
Starship Enterprise . You have entered Federation space and have
|
|
attacked a Federation starbase. We demand that you heave to and
|
|
surrender your ship to boarding. If you continue to flee from us we
|
|
will be forced to fire upon your ship, and this time we will not
|
|
miss.'' Picard held up his hand indicating end of transmission.
|
|
``Repeat that on all frequencies.''
|
|
|
|
``He is going into evasive maneuvers, Captain, shall I continue to
|
|
follow?'' asked Data.
|
|
|
|
``Yes, Mr. Data, keep us within phaser range. I believe that we have
|
|
our answer, gentlemen. Mr. Worf, lock phasers onto his engines. Can
|
|
you knock out his engines without destroying the vessel?''
|
|
|
|
``I can try sir. But the speed with which he can maneuver and without
|
|
our knowing details on that ship's design, there is no telling the
|
|
result of that attack,'' replied Worf, as he concentrated on his
|
|
tactical console. ``I can get an intermittent phaser lock, sir. His
|
|
shields are very weak right now, perhaps due to the large power
|
|
expenditure in his engines. The high energy flux readings should be
|
|
sufficient to give me a lock.''
|
|
|
|
``All right, then. Mr. Worf, be gentle with him. Just knock out the
|
|
engineering section.''
|
|
|
|
``Firing phasers, now.'' A continuous beam from the phaser banks shot
|
|
out from the Enterprise to the small vessel they had been pursuing.
|
|
As the phaser fire continued, the shields about the vessel began to
|
|
glow and then collapse. Almost immediately after that, the engines on
|
|
the alien ship lost all power.
|
|
|
|
``He is entering sub-light, Captain, he is now dead in space. Sensors
|
|
read considerable engine damage, but there is still power to the rest
|
|
of the ship.'' Data studied his console, then turned to Picard and
|
|
Riker, ``I read no life signs on the alien ship, Captain, but the hull
|
|
seems intact.''
|
|
|
|
``Possible sensor interference? Maybe a cloaking device hiding the
|
|
occupants from our sensors?'' Riker queried.
|
|
|
|
Data adjusted his sensors before replying, ``I do not believe so, sir.
|
|
I am able to read all other activity aboard that ship perfectly. I do
|
|
not have any readings of electromagnetic fields of the magnitude that
|
|
would be required.''
|
|
|
|
``Captain, I am sensing a vague survival urge from that ship.'' The
|
|
empathic powers of Deanna Troi were well respected by Picard. If the
|
|
beings on that ship wanted to survive, Picard would give them the
|
|
opportunity to save themselves. He ordered Worf to open hailing
|
|
frequencies again.
|
|
|
|
``Alien vessel, this is the Federation starship Enterprise . We
|
|
demand that you identify yourselves. We wish an explanation of your
|
|
behavior toward our starbase and ourselves. I repeat, this is . . .''
|
|
|
|
``Captain,'' Worf yelled urgently from the tactical console, ``A large
|
|
starship has just appeared in near space. The configuration is
|
|
unfamiliar but obviously follows a Romulan design. They have powered
|
|
up their disruptors.''
|
|
|
|
``Full shields, Mr. Worf. Evasive action immediately,'' ordered Riker
|
|
as he grasped the arms of his chair preparing for weapons impact.
|
|
|
|
The engines and gravity compensators whined as the Enterprise
|
|
accelerated into a more favorable position against the newcomer.
|
|
|
|
Gripping on to his console, Worf warned, ``The Romulan ship is firing
|
|
its forward weapons, brace yourselves for impact.''
|
|
|
|
At that moment the Romulan ship fired its disruptors and the
|
|
Enterprise rocked with an explosion.
|
|
|
|
``The Romulan ship has just destroyed the vessel which we have been
|
|
pursuing, Captain.''
|
|
|
|
``What! Why would they do that? Why would they destroy one of their
|
|
own vessels? I don't understand,'' asked the First Officer
|
|
incredulously.
|
|
|
|
``Why indeed, Number One?'' Picard replied thoughtfully.
|
|
|
|
``Sir, a hail coming through from the Romulan vessel,'' Worf reported
|
|
from his position behind Picard.
|
|
|
|
``Hmm.'' Picard stood up, ``Put it on the screen, Lieutenant.''
|
|
|
|
The screen image changed from that of the strange Romulan vessel to
|
|
that of an obviously high-ranking Romulan officer on the bridge of
|
|
that same vessel. ``This is High-Commander Kareel tr'Arwhael, of the
|
|
Imperial Romulan Starcruiser Falcon addressing the Federation starship
|
|
Enterprise . You are accused of numerous crimes, not the least of
|
|
which are invasion of the Neutral Zone and consorting with a ship of a
|
|
type that is known to have participated in the destruction of four
|
|
Romulan Neutral Zone starbases. I demand your immediate surrender.
|
|
If you do not surrender, Captain, I shall be forced to destroy your
|
|
ship and crew as easily as I destroyed your companion. You have one
|
|
minute to reply.''
|
|
|
|
Picard raised an eyebrow and looked toward Riker. ``Curiouser and
|
|
curiouser, Number One.''
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER 5
|
|
---------
|
|
|
|
The two starships lay dead in space not more than five kilometers
|
|
apart, their hulls gleaming dully with the reflected light of a
|
|
million stars. A hint of a shimmer surrounded both vessels as their
|
|
deflector shields indicated their readiness to stop whatever the other
|
|
ship hurled at them.
|
|
|
|
The Falcon was almost as large as the reduced Enterprise . It was
|
|
obviously a descendant of the Romulan war birds which Picard and his
|
|
crew had been encountering in their skirmishes over the past year.
|
|
The biggest difference seemed to be a third warp nacelle along the
|
|
belly of the ship. That, and a few more disruptor emplacements along
|
|
the ``wings'' of the nacelles.
|
|
|
|
On the battle bridge of the Enterprise , Picard paced in the limited
|
|
space he had, all the while wishing he had the openness of the main
|
|
bridge on which to complete his circuit. Finally, he had pieced
|
|
together the puzzle that had been troubling him. ``I believe that is
|
|
the answer,'' he stated with a gleam in his eye.
|
|
|
|
Riker looked up from the tactical console where he stood with Worf.
|
|
``The answer to what is happening here, I hope, Captain,'' he said
|
|
worriedly. He saw on the sensors the Romulans making ready for a full
|
|
assault on the Enterprise . ``We don't have much time here.''
|
|
|
|
``Yes, Number One, the answer to a question which has been bothering
|
|
me for some time.'' Picard then turned to the ops console, ``Mr.
|
|
Data, I would like you to assemble the footage we have on the attack
|
|
of Starbase 57 as well as some scenes of the wreckage of the Endeavor
|
|
and Starbase 59. Be ready to display it on my order.''
|
|
|
|
``Aye, sir. It will take me a few minutes to collect it,'' Data
|
|
responded in his normal calm manner.
|
|
|
|
``According to Commander Kareel, we have considerably less time than
|
|
that, so I suggest that you hurry, Mr. Data.'' Picard then addressed
|
|
Worf, ``Open a channel to that ship, Lieutenant. I believe it is time
|
|
to clear a few misconceptions.''
|
|
|
|
``I have established contact with the Falcon , sir,'' Worf said a few
|
|
seconds later. The main viewer then came to life with the Vulcanish
|
|
features of the High Commander.
|
|
|
|
``I believe that your time is almost at an end, Captain Picard. I
|
|
trust that you have made the wise choice to surrender. Why needlessly
|
|
waste the lives of your crew in a hopeless battle?'' Kareel smiled
|
|
mirthlessly.
|
|
|
|
``I neither intend to do battle with your ship nor surrender to the
|
|
Romulans, Kareel. You are as much in the wrong by being in the
|
|
Neutral Zone as we are. However, we are justified under Article 7,
|
|
Subparagraph 3 of the Treaty of Argonia to pursue vessels that are
|
|
believed to have committed acts of agression against the Federation
|
|
into the Neutral Zone in order to bring the crew of said vessel back
|
|
for trial.'' Picard looked up at the Romulan visage on the viewscreen
|
|
and said intently, ``That is exactly what we were doing when you
|
|
interfered. The vessel that you destroyed was responsible for doing
|
|
severe damage to one of the Federation Starbases along the Neutral
|
|
Zone. It is our belief that your ship destroyed that one in order
|
|
that we not discover its origin. By this act you have interfered with
|
|
an investigation of the Federation, and thus under Article 42 of the
|
|
treaty, it is we who should be demanding your surrender for possible
|
|
complicity in the heinous crime which that vessel committed.''
|
|
|
|
Picard then crossed his arms, stared at the Romulan High Commander and
|
|
said very slowly, ``Therefore I must inform you that you and your crew
|
|
are under Federation arrest and you must unconditionally surrender
|
|
your vessel to our control.''
|
|
|
|
Kareel stared back at Picard from the viewscreen. Riker and Worf
|
|
looked with disbelief at the scene and what followed shocked them even
|
|
more, the Romulan laughed. Not jovial laughter, but the laughter of
|
|
one who had heard a joke and found it to be bad.
|
|
|
|
``You cannot be serious, Picard. Do you really expect me to believe
|
|
that your incursion into the Neutral Zone was not to spy and inflict
|
|
harm on the Romulan Empire? Do you really expect me to surrender my
|
|
ship to you, when the evidence of corroboration is set squarely
|
|
against you? No, Picard, that would be absurd. I once again demand
|
|
your surrender, or face the consequences and be destroyed.''
|
|
|
|
Picard moved up to Data's station and said under his breath so that
|
|
the Romulan commander could not hear him, ``Data, do you have that
|
|
sequence ready?''
|
|
|
|
Data looked up from the ops console, ``Yes, Captain, I can route it
|
|
through Lieutenant Worf's communications console when you are ready.''
|
|
|
|
``Good.'' Picard then turned to the viewscreen again, ``Commander, I
|
|
will not surrender my ship nor my crew to you. However, I am prepared
|
|
to offer proof that what I have said is true. Are you prepared to do
|
|
the same?''
|
|
|
|
``As I have said, Captain, the burden of proof lies upon your
|
|
shoulders. We already have evidence of your complicity,'' Kareel
|
|
replied gratingly. ``You are running out of time, Captain.''
|
|
|
|
``Very well, I shall prove what I say. Be prepared to so the same
|
|
when we are done, or else I will be the one dictating terms.'' Picard
|
|
then turned to the tactical console, ``Mr. Worf, please transmit Mr.
|
|
Data's pictures, and display them on our main viewer.''
|
|
|
|
With that the scene on the viewscreen changed to one of the rubble of
|
|
Starbase 59 when the Enterprise had arrived. The lower corner of the
|
|
screen still showed the Romulan High Commander's face. Troi studied
|
|
this intently, trying to sense the leader's emotions as he viewed the
|
|
scenes of destruction. The view then shifted to the debris field of
|
|
the Endeavor . All the while Data was keeping up a running commentary
|
|
of what the scenes portrayed as they were broadcast.
|
|
|
|
When the scene shifted to the attack of Starbase 57, Picard sat beside
|
|
Deanna Troi and motioned to Worf to cut off the voice sensors in the
|
|
bridge. ``Counselor,'' he said quietly, ``I must know what is going
|
|
on inside his head before I make my next move. What can you tell
|
|
me?''
|
|
|
|
``He was very certain before we started showing the pictures,
|
|
Captain,'' she said while still staring at the viewer, ``but now he's
|
|
wavering. I believe he has seen similar scenes of destruction
|
|
committed against his people, and it is striking an emotional chord
|
|
within him. But, I believe you are going to have to push him just a
|
|
little harder to get him to change his mind about our purpose.''
|
|
|
|
``Thank you, Counselor. He, too, has some convincing to do. But
|
|
first let's clear our own name.'' Picard then stood up as Data's
|
|
description ended with the Romulan ship appearing and destroying the
|
|
vessel that the Enterprise had been pursuing. He motioned to Worf to
|
|
open the bridge voice channel again and to put his image on the
|
|
transmission. ``The weapons that were used against the destroyed
|
|
starbases and starships are unknown to us. However, they resemble the
|
|
effects of a Romulan disruptor enough to cause your people to be the
|
|
prime suspect. Not to mention, the fact that this is occurring along
|
|
the Neutral Zone has caused many within the Federation to point
|
|
fingers in your direction.''
|
|
|
|
``It is not my concern who the people in the Federation are pointing
|
|
their fingers at, Captain,'' Kareel replied evenly. ``It has been our
|
|
experience that the effects of the weapons used against our starbases
|
|
have resembled Federation phasers enough to cause the blame to be
|
|
placed on you. What you have shown me could have been easily created
|
|
in a computer simulation. It is not proof of what you say.''
|
|
|
|
``I have even more convincing proof, High Commander. Physical
|
|
evidence. Within the cargo holds of this ship, we have some remnants
|
|
of the destroyed starbase and starship. I will have some transported
|
|
into the near space around your vessel for you to inspect.'' Picard
|
|
then sat down, ``To do this, however, we must have some form of truce
|
|
between our vessels, since we must lower our shields to do the
|
|
transporting. Will you agree to such a truce, and will you offer a
|
|
similar kind of proof that we can inspect?''
|
|
|
|
Kareel became silent and pondered the issue. Finally he said, ``I
|
|
shall let you know.'' With that the viewscreen returned to a view of
|
|
the Romulan vessel.
|
|
|
|
``Transmission cut off, sir. With your permission, sir?'' Worf spoke
|
|
up.
|
|
|
|
``Yes, Mr. Worf, go on.''
|
|
|
|
``Sir, it would be very unwise to lower the shields in front of a
|
|
Romulan vessel. Especially, since this one already has its weapons
|
|
fully charged. We could not detect them readying their disruptors for
|
|
attack, and we may not be able to retaliate if they activate their
|
|
cloaking device and disappear,'' Worf said adamantly.
|
|
|
|
``I tend to agree with Lieutenant Worf, sir,'' added Riker. ``The
|
|
Romulans are not exactly known for honoring their truces, especially
|
|
when a nice prize in the form of a starship is hanging right in front
|
|
of them. The prestige offered them for capturing a Federation vessel
|
|
would enable Kareel to retire for life and live like a king.''
|
|
|
|
Troi interposed, ``I disagree, Captain. This Romulan is very
|
|
different from those that we have encountered in the past. He truly
|
|
wavered when you brought up physical evidence. Also, he did not
|
|
immediately attack the Enterprise after destroying the alien ship.
|
|
This is not typical Romulan tactics as I understand them. There is
|
|
something else about him. It's difficult to explain, but I sense a
|
|
tiredness within him.''
|
|
|
|
``A tiredness?'' Picard asked, raising one of his eyebrows, ``please
|
|
explain.''
|
|
|
|
``He seems almost weary of his command and the need to make the
|
|
decisions which he must. It is almost as if he were thinking, `Oh no,
|
|
not again.' I don't know if that helps.'' She then shook her head.
|
|
|
|
``It may, Counselor, it just may. Thank you for your advice, people,
|
|
but I believe that if we can get this truce going we just might be
|
|
able to find out a little more about this situation. You may be
|
|
asking what is motivating me here. When we came into the Neutral Zone
|
|
a two years ago to investigate the first destruction of an outpost and
|
|
encountered a Romulan vessel, my counterpart on the Romulan ship
|
|
mentioned that their installations along the Neutral Zone were getting
|
|
attacked by an unknown presence. At the time, we discounted it as
|
|
another Romulan tactic. Now, I'm not so sure we were correct in
|
|
making that assumption. This is the golden opportunity to try and
|
|
find out. If both sides are being attacked, then perhaps someone out
|
|
here is trying to start a war and I'd rather not give them the
|
|
satisfaction.'' Picard then set his mouth, ``Besides, if they lower
|
|
their shields, we will have the ideal opportunity for Mr. Worf to
|
|
scan their ship and give us some good information about their newest
|
|
technology, and maybe something on their new cloaking device.''
|
|
|
|
``And them our technology,'' muttered Worf under his breath.
|
|
|
|
``Yes, Mr. Worf, but remember, we only have half our ship here and
|
|
they have all of theirs,'' Picard replied.
|
|
|
|
Worf's console signalled an incoming call from the Romulan ship. He
|
|
indicated so to Picard, who then straightened his tunic and motioned
|
|
for the others to assume a duty station posture. He did not want the
|
|
Romulans thinking that they had the Enterprise crew worried and wanted
|
|
to portray a situation normal impression.
|
|
|
|
``Captain Picard, I have discussed your proposal with my subordinates
|
|
and we have agreed that your idea has some merit,'' came the reply of
|
|
the Romulan High Commander. ``We have some debris from our own most
|
|
recently destroyed starbase that we will allow you to examine.
|
|
However, the issue of whom shall lower their shields first has
|
|
arisen.''
|
|
|
|
``Yes, Commander, I can see how that might be an issue with your
|
|
people. I have terms under which we will lower our shields.'' Picard
|
|
then paused, standing and walking around to the tactical console where
|
|
now only Worf stood. ``We will lower our shields first if you will
|
|
discharge your disruptors. That will give my Chief of Security, here,
|
|
confidence that you will not be able to fire upon us unwarned.''
|
|
|
|
``The Klingon is wise and prudent, Captain. It is agreed. If you
|
|
lower your shields and discharge your phasers, we, too, shall lower
|
|
ours,'' replied Kareel.
|
|
|
|
``Very well, I await an indication that you have done as we request.''
|
|
Picard then looked down at the tactical sensor display, and nodded
|
|
with satisfaction as he saw the bar graph display of the Romulan
|
|
ship's weapon power reduce to zero. ``Well, Mr. Worf, do you feel
|
|
that the Romulans have shown good faith?''
|
|
|
|
``The Romulans never show `good faith', sir. However, they have
|
|
acquiesced to our terms and it would be honorable to fulfill our part
|
|
of the bargain.'' Worf reluctantly replied.
|
|
|
|
``Very well, Lieutenant, please lower our shields,'' Picard announced
|
|
so that the Romulan could hear him over the connection. He then
|
|
continued, ``But keep alert to the first sign of hostility from that
|
|
ship. Be ready to restore shields at a moment's notice.'' Picard
|
|
added in undertones that only Worf could hear.
|
|
|
|
The shimmer of the shields disappeared from the Enterprise hull. The
|
|
ship now lay virtually defenseless to a sudden attack from the Falcon
|
|
. The Romulan High Commander seeing a Federation Galaxy class vessel
|
|
this close undefended almost changed his mind about a truce, but the
|
|
words that the Klingon had uttered regarding honor in combat stilled
|
|
his first impulse. ``Very well, Captain, you have fulfilled your part
|
|
of the bargain. We shall fulfill ours.'' He motioned to his first
|
|
officer who then ordered the shields be lowered on the Romulan ship.
|
|
``Shall we begin the exchange of samples, Captain Picard?''
|
|
|
|
``That is the purpose of all this, is it not?'' Picard then addressed
|
|
Riker, ``Number One, please supervise the transport of some of the
|
|
debris from Starbase 59 and the Endeavor to the Romulan ship.''
|
|
|
|
``Aye, sir,'' Riker replied as he headed to the turbolift for the
|
|
cargo bay.
|
|
|
|
``Commander Kareel,'' Picard called to the Romulan, ``I hope that this
|
|
little exchange of ours enters us into a new level of understanding,
|
|
which we can perhaps use to stop whatever is happening along the
|
|
Neutral Zone.''
|
|
|
|
``Perhaps, Captain Picard, perhaps. But we must first determine
|
|
whether you are deceiving us. I trust you are not, Captain. The
|
|
consequences would be most dire.''
|
|
|
|
``I trust that you understand the same, High Commander,'' Picard
|
|
responded as he gestured to Worf to cut the transmission. ``A most
|
|
irritating dialog, talking with a Romulan of any rank. The higher the
|
|
rank, the more pig-headed they become,'' he said as he dropped into
|
|
his chair.
|
|
|
|
``No, Captain,'' responded Troi. ``I sense that he does not truly
|
|
believe what he says. That much of it is a front for his crew. He
|
|
cannot be seen as weak in front of them, and must talk this way.''
|
|
|
|
``Are you saying that he doesn't wish to fight us, Counselor?'' asked
|
|
Worf incredulously.
|
|
|
|
``That is exactly what I am saying, Lieutenant. Something about that
|
|
man doesn't feel quite Romulan. We have encountered others and they
|
|
have not come across quite like this one. He has a soul, Captain.''
|
|
|
|
``We all have souls, Counselor,'' returned Picard, ``some of us just
|
|
don't listen to them often enough. Perhaps, our Commander Kareel is
|
|
unusual for a Romulan in that he does.''
|
|
|
|
|
|
------
|
|
|
|
Picard sat in the small ready room near the battle bridge. It was not
|
|
nearly as well appointed as the one next to the main bridge, but it
|
|
gave him the privacy he needed to gather his thoughts and prepare
|
|
himself for what lay ahead. He had not expected the Romulan commander
|
|
to agree to his terms so readily. He, too, had misgivings about
|
|
sitting ten kilometers from a known enemy with his shields down. But
|
|
he had to trust his instinct that the Romulans were not part of this.
|
|
|
|
It had taken him too long to make the connection with what was
|
|
happening now and what had transpired in their previous encounter with
|
|
the Romulans. Even when he had replayed the interaction with the
|
|
Romulan Captain, he had disregarded those lines as misdirection. He
|
|
now knew better, or at least he hoped he did.
|
|
|
|
The door chime of the ready room sounded and Picard gave his consent
|
|
for the door to open and in walked an excited Riker. ``Captain, we
|
|
have verified that the damage which created the debris from the
|
|
Romulan starbase was caused by the same weapon that destroyed the
|
|
Endeavor and Starbase 59. We have also done what we can to verify
|
|
that we have the genuine article. As near as we can tell, it is from
|
|
a Romulan starbase.''
|
|
|
|
``How have you been able to determine that, Number One? After all, we
|
|
don't exactly have good records on Romulan installations.'' Picard
|
|
asked.
|
|
|
|
``The material was analyzed for historical stress and strain
|
|
indications, the results we got agree with what the Federation has
|
|
found for long term pressure and spin duress. Furthermore, there is
|
|
crazing along the outer surface that seems to indicate particle
|
|
showers inflicted during extended exposure in spatial vacuum,'' Riker
|
|
replied, knowing that his Captain was well familiar with the standard
|
|
methods. He then added, ``we also tapped into some old records
|
|
gleaned from a captured Romulan vessel twenty years ago that have
|
|
helped us locate just where this piece came from. It was located near
|
|
the power pod of the base, it could not have been removed without
|
|
destroying the base.''
|
|
|
|
``Very good, Will,'' Picard said, adding that he was impressed with
|
|
the thoroughness of the investigation. ``Let's just hope that they
|
|
didn't destroy one of their own bases just to disillusion us.''
|
|
|
|
Picard then granted his assent for his First Officer to take the conn.
|
|
Meanwhile, he went back to studying the transcripts of their previous
|
|
encounters with the Romulans and the current one. He was certain that
|
|
the Romulans were not at the center of all this, but if that was the
|
|
case, then who the devil was?
|
|
|
|
``Captain, an incoming communication from the Romulan vessel,'' Worf's
|
|
voice pierced Picard's thoughts.
|
|
|
|
``Very well, Lieutenant, please pipe it in here.'' Picard's desktop
|
|
viewer then showed the visage of the Romulan commander. ``Commander,
|
|
have you had an opportunity to examine the samples we sent over?''
|
|
|
|
A much sobered Kareel nodded to Picard and replied, ``Yes, Captain, we
|
|
have, as I am sure have you. Your proof is very convincing,
|
|
especially added to your pictures of the act. I regret that we cannot
|
|
offer further proof of our position, other than my word that we did
|
|
not destroy our own facilities.''
|
|
|
|
``Then I must assume that you did not destroy ours, Commander Kareel.
|
|
At least for now. This, of course does leave us with a rather open
|
|
question. That is, if we aren't targeting your bases and you aren't
|
|
hitting ours, who was the agent that did?''
|
|
|
|
``I don't know, Picard. The Romulan High Command was very certain
|
|
that the Federation was behind this. I no longer feel that this is
|
|
the case, and I have already communicated these beliefs to my
|
|
superiors. But without a reasonable solution to our mutual problem,
|
|
my mission is yet incomplete. I would like to discuss possible
|
|
strategies to accomplish our mutual goal, would you be agreeable?''
|
|
|
|
Picard was astounded at the offer. There had been no face to face
|
|
negotiations with Romulans since the treaty had been signed over a
|
|
hundred years ago. The opportunity to learn more about such an old
|
|
adversary would be invaluable. There was only one answer a scholar
|
|
like Picard could give. ``That would definitely be agreeable,
|
|
Commander. I would propose that we meet aboard the Enterprise . We
|
|
have accommodations that can make a meeting of this kind fairly
|
|
comfortable.''
|
|
|
|
Kareel nodded in assent. ``Agreed then, Captain. I shall prepare my
|
|
delegation. Shall we meet in one hour?'' Kareel said.
|
|
|
|
``Very well, Kareel, one hour. Picard out.'' The viewer then
|
|
darkened. Picard looked around his ready room and started to chuckle
|
|
at the unlikelihood of all that had happened. ``What a day, what a
|
|
very remarkable day.''
|
|
|
|
He did not realize just how remarkable that day was yet to become.
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER 6
|
|
---------
|
|
|
|
Conference Room Four was not quite as well appointed as the briefing
|
|
room off the main bridge, thought Riker, but it was still an
|
|
impressive sight on a starship. The main table was made out of black
|
|
walnut, and gave the room an impressive air of formality. It was
|
|
large enough to sit twelve people and still give them room enough to
|
|
work. The chairs, also black, were standard starfleet issue. More
|
|
functional than stylish, the chairs were comfortable enough to sit in
|
|
for the hours that some negotiations could take. Unlike the briefing
|
|
room, this room did not have portals onto space. Instead, large
|
|
viewscreens covered one of the long walls so that audio-visual
|
|
presentations could be made easily. The opposing wall had
|
|
reproductions of paintings by some of the great artists of the
|
|
Federation planets. Riker had not had many opportunities to come to
|
|
this conference room, and so was amazed to see a Picasso from Earth
|
|
next to a T'kthun from the Klingon home world. Although both were
|
|
great works of art, the feeling emanating from each was greatly
|
|
discordant. A feeling magnified by the tension surrounding the
|
|
upcoming meeting to take place in this very room.
|
|
|
|
Riker was broken from his musing by the entrance of Picard with
|
|
Counselor Troi and Lieutenant Worf. ``I want to be very sure that all
|
|
possible security precautions are being taken, Mr. Worf,'' Picard was
|
|
saying to the security officer. ``Once this meeting begins, I want no
|
|
one to be able to enter or leave this room without my orders.''
|
|
|
|
``Of course, Captain. I shall guard this room personally,'' Worf
|
|
replied.
|
|
|
|
Picard then shook his head. ``No, Lieutenant. I want to have you on
|
|
the bridge. We are still deep within the Neutral Zone with an armed
|
|
Romulan battle cruiser of unknown strength in near proximity to us.
|
|
With Commander Riker and myself down here, you will be needed to keep
|
|
close watch on our companion.'' Picard then lowered and softened his
|
|
voice, ``I also want to avoid any unpleasantness that might arise from
|
|
you confronting the Romulans.''
|
|
|
|
Worf stiffened and replied with something close to a hurt look, ``I
|
|
would not allow my personal feelings to interfere with the performance
|
|
of my duty, Captain.''
|
|
|
|
``As I recall, Lieutenant, with regard to the massacre in which your
|
|
parents died you already have done just that,'' Picard reprimanded.
|
|
|
|
Riker winced at the intensity of Picard's rebuke, but knew that such
|
|
strength of admonition was the only way to talk sense into the
|
|
sometimes stubborn Klingon. The reminder of Worf's vengeful killing
|
|
of Duras who had discredited Worf and had murdered his mate K'Ehleyr,
|
|
would sting. The pain of remembrance would, however, convince Worf of
|
|
the sense of Picard's orders.
|
|
|
|
The Security Chief stood silent for a moment and then nodded his
|
|
agreement at his superior officer. ``Aye, sir, you are correct. I
|
|
shall station a pair of guards at the door to the conference room.
|
|
Another pair will be stationed at the entrance to the turbolift, while
|
|
security bulkheads will be sealed to this deck.''
|
|
|
|
The irony of Worf replacing himself with two pairs of guards and the
|
|
sealed bulkheads was not lost on Picard, but he made no comment other
|
|
than turning toward the far side of the room saying, ``Make it so.''
|
|
|
|
Worf turned to leave the room casting a soulful glare in Riker's
|
|
direction. Riker acknowledged him with a slight smile and a nod. He
|
|
then approached the table where Troi had already sat down. As he
|
|
poured himself a glass of water from the pitcher on the table, he
|
|
asked her, ``Do you think you will have any difficulty reading the
|
|
Romulan's emotions, Deanna? With their ancestral relationship to the
|
|
Vulcans, might they have the same ability to mask their feelings?''
|
|
|
|
``I don't know, Will. They certainly may have the potential to do so,
|
|
but the Vulcan ability to deny their emotions comes from centuries of
|
|
philosophic training not just from genetics. Vulcan history indicates
|
|
that the Romulan, or Rihansu as they call themselves, forbears left
|
|
just as Savek's philosophical revolution was taking place.'' She sat
|
|
back and considered what had occurred earlier in the bridge. ``Kareel
|
|
has not, up to now, made any effort to conceal his emotions either.
|
|
That was very apparent in our last conversation.''
|
|
|
|
``Do you think that he may be deceiving us? Disguising his emotions
|
|
so that he can lure us into complacency?''
|
|
|
|
Troi crossed her arms on the tabletop and replied, ``It may be
|
|
impossible to say one way or the other. Certainly not from the data
|
|
we currently have at our disposal. It would, however, be foolish not
|
|
to take precautions. Remember, he is a Romulan starship commander on
|
|
what looks to be a new vessel. He did not get where he is in their
|
|
hierarchy without some amount of ruthlessness.''
|
|
|
|
Picard had been listening to their conversation as he made a circuit
|
|
of the room. He now added, ``And that is why we are taking these
|
|
extreme security precautions. No matter how willing he may appear to
|
|
want to make a truce, one must always view the Romulans with
|
|
suspicion. They have always been rather zealous in their protection
|
|
of the Neutral Zone and it is no time to think that they have changed
|
|
their ways. Even just one of them.'' He stopped next to Riker and
|
|
set his lips grimly. ``A Federation ship named Enterprise would make
|
|
a very nice prize for a Romulan High Commander to bring back to the
|
|
Rihan system. As I understand their government, it would almost
|
|
ensure him of a seat on their Praetorian High Council for life.''
|
|
|
|
As if on cue, Data's voice came over the room's comlink, ``Captain,
|
|
the Romulan vessel has indicated their readiness to beam Commander
|
|
Kareel and two other officers to whatever coordinates we indicate.''
|
|
|
|
``Very well, Commander. Contact Lieutenant Worf and when he indicates
|
|
that the security details are in place send the coordinates to the
|
|
Falcon .'' Picard straightened his tunic and regarded the other two
|
|
officers with a slight smile, ``Well, I believe we are about to step
|
|
into uncharted territory.''
|
|
|
|
Riker grinned back and said, ``That's what we signed up for. Isn't
|
|
it, Captain?'' Well he knew that it was moments like this that his
|
|
captain enjoyed the most. The opportunity to observe Picard use his
|
|
diplomatic skills was one of the reasons Will Riker did not want his
|
|
own command just yet. There was still much to be learned from this
|
|
man.
|
|
|
|
Picard's response was cut short by the distinctive hum of the
|
|
transporter. The three turned to regard the materializing envoy from
|
|
the Romulan vessel. It would have been immediately obvious which of
|
|
the trio was Kareel even had he not already seen him, thought Riker.
|
|
The man emanated an aura of confidence and authority which was
|
|
unmistakable. He was slightly taller than Picard, but had the
|
|
characteristic slightness of build that was a Romulan and Vulcan
|
|
trait. What made him stand out from the other two was his eyes. They
|
|
pierced out from under his slanted eyebrows taking in his surroundings
|
|
and the three Federation officers.
|
|
|
|
After a few moments during which he seemed to be sizing up the others
|
|
in the room, he took a step forward and tilted his head slightly at
|
|
the Enterprise's captain and said, ``Captain Picard, it is indeed an
|
|
honor to meet you and to have the opportunity to set foot aboard your
|
|
ship.''
|
|
|
|
Picard followed suit and stepped toward the group of Romulans. ``The
|
|
honor, High Commander, is all ours. It is a rare occasion when
|
|
citizens of the Federation can meet face to face with representatives
|
|
of the Rihansu.'' Picard paused and then motioned with his hand
|
|
toward Riker and Troi. ``This is my First Officer, Commander William
|
|
Riker, and my ship's Counselor, Lieutenant-Commander Deanna Troi.
|
|
They will be participating as advisors in our discussion.''
|
|
|
|
Kareel acknowledged the two with a nod of his head and indicated his
|
|
companions by turning toward them. ``Accompanying me are my First
|
|
Officer, Commander T'Fara i-Vramnae t'Arwhael, and the Falcon's
|
|
Political Officer, Bkandar tr'Kherst. Rihansu regulations require
|
|
that two officers of command rank be present in negotiations with
|
|
alien species. Owing to the current situation, it was deemed wise to
|
|
have the Political Officer present as well.''
|
|
|
|
Riker turned his attention to the officers accompanying Kareel.
|
|
T'Fara was stunningly beautiful by human and Romulan standards. The
|
|
classic high cheekbones and slanted eyes of her people gave her an
|
|
exotic appearance which Riker found appealing. However, the look with
|
|
which she studied him indicated that this was a strong willed and
|
|
determined lady. The honorific in her name, t'Arwhael, indicated that
|
|
she was the High Commander's wife. Kareel should watch his back in
|
|
bed with that woman, otherwise she might put a knife in it, thought
|
|
Riker wryly.
|
|
|
|
Bkandar was as ugly as T'Fara was beautiful, Riker mused as he studied
|
|
the Political Officer. The rat-faced little man looked with distaste
|
|
at the Starfleet officers. He more fit the profile of the Romulans
|
|
that many citizens of the Federation had come to hate and fear.
|
|
During the whole set of introductions, he seemed to be looking for any
|
|
useful information that could be gleaned from his surroundings. Riker
|
|
was not certain, but thought he had detected a hint of distaste in
|
|
Kareel's manner toward the Political officer as he had introduced him.
|
|
|
|
Picard had continued talking while Riker was studying the Romulans.
|
|
He was addressing Bkandar, ``Your precautions are understandable.
|
|
This is a highly irregular situation and the more irregular the
|
|
situation is, the more protocol should be adhered to.''
|
|
|
|
``Captain Picard,'' sneered Bkandar in response, ``if protocol had
|
|
been adhered to we wouldn't be having this conversation. Your ship
|
|
would either be destroyed or a prisoner of the Empire. It is only
|
|
through the sufferance of the High Commander that you have been
|
|
allowed to live.''
|
|
|
|
``That is quite enough, Sub-Commander,'' interrupted Kareel sternly.
|
|
The look which he cast in Bkandar's direction left little room for
|
|
doubt about the irritation that he felt about this outburst. He then
|
|
turned to Picard and said softly, ``My apologies for my subordinate's
|
|
behavior, Captain. He is inexperienced in such matters as these. He
|
|
does not yet understand the necessity for diplomacy when negotiating.
|
|
Certainly, one does not need to state the obvious in this situation.''
|
|
|
|
``Indeed,'' Picard said softly, but with great force. ``Let me assure
|
|
you that the Enterprise would not have been taken captive, Kareel. If
|
|
our exchange of information had failed to convince you, there would
|
|
have been little choice but to fight. A battle between the Enterprise
|
|
and the Falcon would have resulted in nothing less than another
|
|
full-scale war between our people.'' Picard walked toward the head of
|
|
the conference table. ``War is only avoided when people of vision
|
|
realize that there is either no reason to fight, or greater reason not
|
|
to fight than to fight. I am willing to explain fully the reasons
|
|
which have caused the Enterprise to be in the Neutral Zone, if you are
|
|
willing to lay that same information on this table. If you have only
|
|
come over here to say idle threats and innuendo, we might as well
|
|
start charging our weapons now.''
|
|
|
|
Silence fell over the room as Picard and Kareel's eyes met. Moments
|
|
later, a smile broke out on Kareel's face. ``Well said, Captain. I
|
|
assure you that it was not my intention to threaten. I am determined
|
|
not to allow this meeting between ships to escalate into a war. It
|
|
would serve neither of our stated purposes for being here.'' He then
|
|
approached a seat next to Picard's and slowly pulled it out and sat in
|
|
it. He then placed his hands on the table's surface and said, ``Let's
|
|
see if we can determine a way to satisfy both our goals without
|
|
killing one another. At least not today.''
|
|
|
|
Picard looked down at Kareel and nodded grimly. He gestured for the
|
|
others to take their seats as he lowered himself into his chair.
|
|
``Very well, High Commander. Let us discuss it.''
|
|
|
|
Riker positioned himself to sit across from Bkandar, he wanted to be
|
|
able to keep a close eye on this man. As they began to sit down,
|
|
Bkandar remained standing until he was certain that Riker had taken
|
|
his seat. The glare which the Political Officer gave Riker was enough
|
|
to send chills down his spine. It was obvious to Riker that there was
|
|
no love lost between Bkandar and the Federation, and that he was not
|
|
interested in the peaceful solution which his superior was trying to
|
|
arrange. Indeed, the leer which he cast in Troi's direction made the
|
|
First Officer want to get up and do several non-diplomatic acts to the
|
|
Romulan, himself.
|
|
|
|
Troi sensed this emotion from Riker and looked at him with alarm. He
|
|
merely smiled back at her and shook his head. This was not the time
|
|
nor the place for violence and he well knew it. He then turned back
|
|
toward the Romulan and met his eyes with a gaze that warned him that
|
|
he was being watched very closely.
|
|
|
|
It did not take a Betazoid to sense hostility and Picard was well
|
|
aware of the social dynamic taking place in the room. It was not
|
|
unexpected for there to be tension, but he was confident that his
|
|
First Officer would not to provoke anything unnecessary.
|
|
|
|
Satisfied that all had their attention on the head of the table, where
|
|
he and Kareel were seated, Picard began his presentation by tapping a
|
|
few buttons on the console in front of him. Pictures of the
|
|
destruction of several planetary outposts and starbases began
|
|
appearing on the viewscreens along the long wall. ``Three years ago,
|
|
the Federation began experiencing a series of attacks along its border
|
|
with the Neutral Zone. These attacks on our outposts were being made
|
|
on outposts which were situated along the most narrow section of the
|
|
treaty zone. It was widely assumed that this was a precursor to a
|
|
Romulan attack on Federation space. On Stardate 41956.8, Enterprise
|
|
was sent into the Neutral Zone to investigate these attacks. During
|
|
our surveillance, we encountered a Romulan Bird of Prey under the
|
|
command of T-Bok. A brief exchange of words followed, during which it
|
|
was revealed that T-Bok was investigating similar occurrences along
|
|
the Romulan side of the zone. At a briefing following the incident,
|
|
it was widely assumed that T-Bok's story was a ruse to cover the
|
|
Romulan's more sinister purpose. Especially considering the number of
|
|
incursions into Federation space the Empire has made recently.''
|
|
|
|
``We consider that our space, Picard,'' spoke Bkandar. ``The
|
|
Federation has no claim to the regions near the Treaty zone. Weak and
|
|
foolish people gave those areas away, the strong will take back what
|
|
is rightfully ours.''
|
|
|
|
``The Federation recognizes no Romulan claim to those sectors,
|
|
Bkandar,'' thrust back Riker. ``The Federation has been asked by the
|
|
populated planets in that region to protect them. That doesn't sound
|
|
like you have a rightful claim to them.''
|
|
|
|
Kareel slammed his hand onto the table, the sound getting the
|
|
attention of the two at the end of the table. ``That will be enough!
|
|
The claim of space in and around the Neutral Zone is not at issue
|
|
here. That is an old dispute, one which will not be decided here and
|
|
likely not any time in the near future.'' He then reseated himself
|
|
and addressed Picard, ``Let me assure you, Captain, that those ships
|
|
were not seeking to destroy Federation outposts. They were merely
|
|
attempting to access Federation motives around the region.''
|
|
|
|
``Intelligence gathering, you mean,'' Picard retorted.
|
|
|
|
The Romulan smiled and spread his hands, ``As you wish, Captain. But
|
|
as I stated earlier, that is of no consequence to our current
|
|
situation.''
|
|
|
|
Picard considered this and nodded. ``I agree.'' He then tapped
|
|
another control and his presentation continued. ``Immediately
|
|
following our encounter with T-Bok, the attacks on our bases stopped.
|
|
For about two years there was no openly aggressive activity along the
|
|
Neutral Zone aside from the incursions we just discussed. However,
|
|
the past four months have seen a reoccurrence of the attacks. This
|
|
time with greater frequency and damage.'' The viewscreens now showed
|
|
planetary scenes of large craters and twisted buildings. ``It is
|
|
evident that the weapon used was of tremendous power,'' he added
|
|
needlessly.
|
|
|
|
``As you are aware, starbases and starships near the Neutral Zone have
|
|
also come under attack. However, analysis done by a team on the
|
|
Enterprise indicates that the same weapon was not used. The starbase
|
|
attack profile seems to indicate a knowledge of the defense systems
|
|
employed. Evidence indicates that the same may be true for the
|
|
starship attacks.'' Scenes of the attack on Starbase 57 were being
|
|
displayed as the captain made these statements. ``The ships involved
|
|
in this attack seem to be too small to have done the outpost damage,
|
|
which leads us to suspect that they do not tell the whole tale. The
|
|
desire to get more information about the source of the destruction
|
|
prompted me to order the Enterprise into the Neutral Zone in pursuit
|
|
of the vessel you destroyed.''
|
|
|
|
``It was a necessary tactical decision,'' responded the heretofore
|
|
silent T'Fara. ``We could not be certain that the Enterprise and that
|
|
ship weren't colleagues, so we destroyed the smaller ship. Fighting
|
|
one ship is far easier than fighting two.''
|
|
|
|
Picard acknowledged by saying, ``In your eyes, perhaps it did seem
|
|
necessary at the time. But in retrospect, it was an unfortunate
|
|
decision because it leaves us no closer to the truth. In truth, it
|
|
also casts a shadow over Romulan innocence in the matter. You could
|
|
have been trying to cover something up by destroying that vessel.''
|
|
|
|
``Yes, that could have been our purpose, but it wasn't,'' answered
|
|
Kareel. ``I believe that is my cue to offer our purposes in the
|
|
Neutral Zone.'' He leaned toward the table console in front of him,
|
|
``If I may, Captain?''
|
|
|
|
Picard nodded his assent. It had been arranged earlier to have a
|
|
communications feed from the Falcon to the conference room so that
|
|
Kareel could display the evidence he desired. He entered a key
|
|
sequence and disturbingly similar scenes of destruction appeared on
|
|
the viewscreens.
|
|
|
|
``These are scenes of outpost destruction over the past three years
|
|
along our side of the Neutral Zone. Unlike the Federation, there was
|
|
no pause in the destruction, although it has escalated in recent
|
|
months. We have had more than 100,000 men and women killed in these
|
|
attacks, Captain.'' The scenes shifted to floating space debris.
|
|
``These images are of destroyed starbases, again the damage was
|
|
complete. There have been no survivors of any of the attacks. The
|
|
Falcon's mission was precipitated by the disappearance of the very
|
|
ship you encountered two years ago. T-Bok's last report came ten days
|
|
ago in this sector. We have found no remains of his ship.''
|
|
|
|
The scenes shifted to a sequence of an attack on a Romulan starbase.
|
|
Picard knew that analysts would be studying this for months to come,
|
|
it was the first close up look at a Romulan perimeter base that the
|
|
Federation had been treated to. ``This attack was carried out by
|
|
vessels very similar to the one which you had been pursuing. In fact,
|
|
the last one had just self-destructed when our sensors indicated the
|
|
presence of your ship and its companion. Under those circumstances,
|
|
as my First Officer indicated, we had very few options open to us.''
|
|
|
|
Silence once again came over the group. Picard looked toward his
|
|
Counselor and as their eyes met she nodded slightly. Picard looked
|
|
back at the Romulan trio and said, ``I believe your story. The
|
|
similarities are quite startling, and I'm sure that detailed analysis
|
|
of each others reports from the destroyed outposts would reveal that
|
|
they are identical. It does seem that we have the basis for a
|
|
negotiation.''
|
|
|
|
``Excellent, Captain. I, too, am satisfied with your story. It was
|
|
difficult to believe that if the Federation had a weapon which could
|
|
do the kind of damage we have been seeing, that they would not proceed
|
|
to attack the rest of the Empire.'' He then paused, his face becoming
|
|
more grim. ``Of course, we now must ask why such a thing is occurring
|
|
and what the agency's motives are.''
|
|
|
|
Troi answered, ``I believe that there can be only one answer to that.
|
|
Whoever is responsible for this wants to provoke a conflict between
|
|
the Romulans and the Federation. The most recent attack profile seems
|
|
to confirm that supposition. It can only have been designed to bring
|
|
the two flagships of either fleet into the Neutral Zone and into
|
|
proximity with one another. Why else the self-destruction of the ship
|
|
you were chasing? Why else the delay of the ship we were pursuing to
|
|
engage maximum warp?'' She paused and gestured toward Bkandar and
|
|
Riker, ``With all that circumstantial evidence, it would have been
|
|
easy for hostilities to break out.''
|
|
|
|
Bkandar's eyes narrowed at this slight, while Riker turned slightly
|
|
red, but then smiled and acknowledged her perception. ``Hostilities
|
|
which neither side wants or needs,'' finished the First Officer.
|
|
|
|
``Speak for yourself, human. My people are not afraid to fight,''
|
|
responded Bkandar. ``Dying in a war with the Federation would be
|
|
considered an honorable end to life.''
|
|
|
|
``What do you know about fighting and dying, Bkandar?'' stormed
|
|
Kareel as he rose out of his chair. ``You were not part of the Far
|
|
Wars as was I. You did not see ships destroyed and have comrades die
|
|
in your arms. An `honorable end to life'? There is no honor in
|
|
dying, only grief for the families of the dead.'' He had walked to
|
|
the middle of the table where Bkandar was seated and he now gestured
|
|
toward the Federation officers, ``People on both sides would die and
|
|
where would we be? We cannot conquer all of the Federation, and they
|
|
cannot conquer all the Empire. So where would we be? Probably with
|
|
the same borders we have now, and a lot of anger festering the wounds
|
|
between the sides. Anger prompted by the deaths of so many.''
|
|
|
|
Kareel stopped and seemed to take control of himself as he turned to
|
|
the paintings on the wall. As he looked at them his shoulders slumped
|
|
and he said cryptically, ``We may have won the Far Wars, but we lost
|
|
more than they.'' He then turned toward the Political Officer as he
|
|
touched the communicator on his wrist, `` Falcon this is Kareel. Beam
|
|
Sub-Commander Bkandar back to the ship and confine him to his
|
|
quarters.''
|
|
|
|
As the confirmation came over the communicator, Bkandar stood up and
|
|
stammered, ``You cannot do this. The Praetorate will hear of this.
|
|
You will lose everything.''
|
|
|
|
Kareel coolly regarded the smaller man. ``Yes, Bkandar. The
|
|
Praetorate will hear of how you singlehandedly almost brought us to
|
|
war with the Federation. How you undermined sensitive negotiations.
|
|
And how you disobeyed the orders of a superior officer.'' He lifted
|
|
his wrist and said, ``Energize.''
|
|
|
|
With that order, the man disappeared as the astonished Federation
|
|
officers looked on. The High Commander seemed to nod with
|
|
satisfaction and then turned back to the table. ``I once again must
|
|
apologize for the outburst, Captain. As you have seen, I have taken
|
|
steps to make certain it does not happen again.''
|
|
|
|
Picard knew that this would not be the end of the incident. The
|
|
Praetorian council would not take kindly to having its representative
|
|
locked up. Certainly not after having him disgraced in front of
|
|
Starfleet officers. The removal of Bkandar would make the meeting go
|
|
much more smoothly and for that, Picard was grateful.
|
|
|
|
``Very well, Kareel, what is your proposition to resolve this dilemma
|
|
we find ourselves in?'' Picard finally asked.
|
|
|
|
``I believe you see the same solution that I do, Picard,'' said the
|
|
Romulan as he returned to his seat. ``We must agree to search the
|
|
Neutral Zone together to locate this menace. Thus, we have to arrive
|
|
at some form of a truce between our two ships. However, there can be
|
|
no doubt that there will be distrust between both sides. So, I would
|
|
propose a search pattern which would not provide intelligence
|
|
information about the other side's defenses or ship movements. In
|
|
addition, it should be a pattern which covers the most territory in
|
|
the least amount of time so that we can get this over with. My
|
|
superiors would not support a prolonged Federation presence in the
|
|
Neutral Zone.''
|
|
|
|
``Agreed, in principle, Kareel,'' responded Picard after a few seconds
|
|
of reflection. ``I would propose that you, myself and Counselor Troi
|
|
work out the details of the truce while our first officers plot out
|
|
the tactical arrangements of the search pattern.''
|
|
|
|
After glancing toward T'Fara and Riker, and nodding at his First
|
|
Officer, Kareel turned back toward Picard saying, ``Very well,
|
|
Captain. Let us work out the details.''
|
|
|
|
The complete details of the treaty were neither simple nor quick to be
|
|
resolved. After several hours of haranguing the two senior officers
|
|
had come up with a workable truce which would allow the Falcon and the
|
|
Enterprise to coexist in the Neutral Zone and to share information
|
|
gathered by sensors and science teams. This was the first time any
|
|
joint intelligence agreement had been made by the two sides.
|
|
|
|
In the meantime, Riker and T'Fara had gravitated to the far end of the
|
|
table and had arranged a workable search pattern which would keep the
|
|
respective sides borders just out of reach of the other's long range
|
|
sensors. The trick was doing this and still being able to cover the
|
|
entire Neutral Zone quickly. As it was, they both knew that it would
|
|
take three months to adequately cover the whole of that space. They
|
|
were counting on finding some information sooner than that, however.
|
|
|
|
``Well, Captain Picard, I do believe that we have proven that we can
|
|
work together. I must return to my ship and begin to make
|
|
preparations. We shall begin our search in ten hours, correct?''
|
|
|
|
``Agreed, High Commander. I must say, that after our initial
|
|
uneasiness, this has become a most productive session.''
|
|
|
|
Kareel nodded and smiled, ``It took some getting used to, I must
|
|
admit. But the avoidance of bloodshed was paramount.'' He then
|
|
reached out his hand toward Picard. ``I believe that a handshake seals
|
|
many deals in your society, will you seal this one with me?''
|
|
|
|
The captain was astonished but readily took the Romulan's hand in his.
|
|
``I am honored, Kareel tr'Arwhael. May this be the first of many
|
|
cooperations between our people.''
|
|
|
|
Kareel nodded solemnly and retreated to stand next to T'Fara.
|
|
``Perhaps it will be, Jean-Luc Picard. Perhaps.'' He then touched
|
|
his communicator and the two Romulans transported back to their ship.
|
|
|
|
``Not quite what I expected at all, Captain,'' offered Riker as the
|
|
three Enterprise crewmembers sat back down. ``Bkandar was more like
|
|
the Romulans we have encountered before. Arrogant and ready to do
|
|
battle with us at a moment's notice. Kareel was, well, he was almost
|
|
pleasant to deal with.''
|
|
|
|
``Yet, Number One, he showed one trait that gives us insight as to how
|
|
he progressed so far in the Romulan fleet. He has a certain amount of
|
|
ruthlessness when dealing with subordinates, even important ones.''
|
|
|
|
``Captain,'' interjected Troi, ``there was something else about him
|
|
that I cannot quite fathom.'' She paused as she closed her eyes to
|
|
collect her thoughts on the emotions that had emanated from the
|
|
Romulan commander. She opened them again as she continued, ``He seems
|
|
almost afraid. Not of this situation in the Neutral Zone, I believe
|
|
he has that well under control. I think that he feels genuine fear of
|
|
us, of what we represent to him. I know that this doesn't seem to
|
|
make sense, but it is what I seem to be sensing from him. He is
|
|
however, a very controlled man,'' she added to justify the vagueness
|
|
of what she had sensed.
|
|
|
|
``Maybe it does make some sense, Counselor.'' Picard unfolded a piece
|
|
of paper and lay it on the table. ``When the good Commander shook my
|
|
hand, he palmed this into it. Unfortunately it is written in Romulan.
|
|
Computer, analyze the writing on the paper on the table and translate
|
|
the message to Federation Standard.
|
|
|
|
``Working,'' came back the pleasant, female voice of the computer.
|
|
``The text is hand-written in the High Romulan dialect and states the
|
|
following, `I, Kareel, High Commander of the Romulan Fleet and Chief
|
|
Officer of the Starship Falcon , request political asylum in the
|
|
United Federation of Planets. I would bring with me my wife, T'fara,
|
|
and my Chief Engineer Kafarth, who has served me well and knows of my
|
|
plan. With us shall come knowledge of the technology represented by
|
|
the Falcon and why it represents a great threat to the Federation. I
|
|
request that Captain Jean-Luc Picard of the Federation Starship
|
|
Enterprise , grant us the asylum and help ensure out escape. I have
|
|
tired of wars and the enmity that our people share.' End of
|
|
message.''
|
|
|
|
``Curiouser and curiouser, Captain?'' asked Riker of his astonished
|
|
captain.
|
|
|
|
``Yes, Number One, and now the situation is even more dangerous,''
|
|
Picard then sat back in his chair and allowed a long breath to whistle
|
|
out between pursed lips.
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER 7
|
|
---------
|
|
|
|
Doctor Yasu Okawa stared morosely at the ruin of Starbase 57 through
|
|
the windows of the Enterprise's Ten-Forward lounge. He did not need
|
|
the sensor data written on the thick sheaf of output on his table to
|
|
know that the starbase was in serious condition. He could see the
|
|
large hole that had been torn in the living section of the base. That
|
|
hole covered five deck levels on the base and bit deep into the
|
|
interior of the structure. The release of atmospheric pressure to
|
|
vacuum had blown out many layers of supposedly air-tight doors and
|
|
bulkheads. This had resulted in a weakening of some of the structural
|
|
supports and the deaths of almost fifty crewmembers.
|
|
|
|
Okawa shook his head sadly as more evidence of destruction came to
|
|
view when the Enterprise saucer section continued its orbit about the
|
|
station. One of the large solar collectors along the stem of the
|
|
mushroom shaped station had been completely cut away from its home.
|
|
Visible striations wandered both up the stem toward the living section
|
|
and down it to the engineering section of the starbase. So not only
|
|
did the loss of the collector mean a reduction in base power, it also
|
|
meant that the strength of the stem was in question.
|
|
|
|
More than just in question, thought the elderly Oriental as he sipped
|
|
his saki flavored synthehol. The detailed sensor mapping that the
|
|
saucer section had completed in the past two days showed the outer
|
|
shell of the starbase was in jeopardy. The cracks in the hull were
|
|
beginning to grow and were already affecting the support beams that
|
|
ran along the interior of the shell. Unless Okawa and Evans could
|
|
soon give the engineers of the Enterprise and the station a solution
|
|
to the problem, the starbase would tear itself apart in a matter of
|
|
days.
|
|
|
|
``May I sit with you, Yasu?'' Beverly Crusher had entered Ten-Forward
|
|
while Okawa had been in his funk and she had approached unnoticed.
|
|
|
|
``Certainly, Beverly. Certainly. Can I buy you a drink?''
|
|
|
|
She shook her head and set her glass on the table. ``Nope, I've
|
|
already got one. I see you are still at work,'' she said as she
|
|
pointed toward the stack of output. She refrained from mentioning the
|
|
oddity of computer hardcopy. Okawa was well known for some of his
|
|
idiosyncracies. He was fond of saying that he liked hardcopy because
|
|
he could write in the margins.
|
|
|
|
He glanced at the output and scowled. ``I don't know about that. I
|
|
sent Miriam to her quarters hours ago and I couldn't sleep. But I
|
|
couldn't work either. I thought that a nice round of warm saki would
|
|
relax me so that I could do one or the other, but these damn windows
|
|
keep me brooding. Do you realize that we may only have hours to come
|
|
up with some kind of solution to keep that structure from coming apart
|
|
at the seams? Even if we come up with a solution, I'm not sure that
|
|
the engineers could implement it in time.''
|
|
|
|
He then looked up at Crusher and noticed the faint circles under her
|
|
eyes and the obvious tiredness reflected in her eyes. ``But I wallow
|
|
in my own problems without asking you about yours. I can see that you
|
|
have been putting in some time in sickbay.'' It was more of a
|
|
statement than a question.
|
|
|
|
Beverly ran her hand through her hair as she answered, ``Seventy-two
|
|
hours working on people who have suffered from concussions, anoxia,
|
|
radiation exposure, burst arteries, blown eardrums, . . ., the list
|
|
goes on and on. Sometimes I can't believe what punishment the human,
|
|
and non-human for that matter, body can take and still survive.'' She
|
|
picked up her drink and took a healthy shot at it. As she put it
|
|
down, she became more somber, ``Unfortunately, there were too many
|
|
whose bodies took more than what they could to survive. My pathology
|
|
unit has been kept almost as busy I have. Starfleet demands to know
|
|
why its people die.''
|
|
|
|
She paused as she let out a heavy and tired sigh. ``At least the
|
|
transfer of the starbase personnel went smoothly. One of the nice
|
|
things about these Galaxy class ships is that they have that extra
|
|
room for carrying about dignitaries or marines or colonists. We may
|
|
not have as much space as a starbase, but everyone is comfortable.''
|
|
|
|
``You two look like death warmed over,'' Guinan said as she came to
|
|
their table. ``Plus, it looks like you'll be closing the place, all
|
|
my other customers have left.''
|
|
|
|
The two doctors looked up at the approaching Guinan. She was the
|
|
imperturbable hostess of the Ten-Forward area. No one knew what was
|
|
happening aboard the Enterprise like Guinan, and no one could make
|
|
someone feel at ease like her. She seemed to have a level of empathy
|
|
akin to the ship's counselor, Deanna Troi.
|
|
|
|
``Please have a seat, Guinan,'' motioned Okawa. ``We have just been
|
|
discussing our mutual problems. Do you have any you care to vent
|
|
out?''
|
|
|
|
``None at all, Yasu. And even if I did, what good would it do to let
|
|
them out right now? I have always felt that it is far better to deal
|
|
with problems rather than rant about them. But I could see that
|
|
neither of you were ranting over here. You care to let me in on your
|
|
problems?''
|
|
|
|
Okawa spoke up, ``I think our problems stem from the fact that the
|
|
Federation feels it necessary to put these damn starbases out where
|
|
they can get attacked like this. Do you two realize that I helped to
|
|
design these things almost thirty years ago? I was much younger then,
|
|
and filled with the zeal of youth. The Federation wanted a new
|
|
starbase design that would have both the long range sensor capability
|
|
to monitor activity in the Neutral Zone as well as the defensive
|
|
capability to protect itself in the event of a Romulan attack. These
|
|
starbases were completely unlike any other, in that their purpose was
|
|
not to be a scientific outpost or an interstellar service station for
|
|
starships, but were meant purely as a first line of defense against
|
|
the Romulans.''
|
|
|
|
He stopped for a second to take another sip of his saki and did not
|
|
notice the look which passed between Guinan and Crusher. He then
|
|
continued, ``We designed those things to withstand an attack from a
|
|
Romulan strike force. Obviously we did not do a very good job,'' he
|
|
said bitterly. ``These bases have never been the subject of an attack
|
|
until now. All our careful planning seems to have been for naught.
|
|
Those little ships cut through the defense shielding and the triple
|
|
hulls of the living section like a hot knife through butter.'' He
|
|
slapped his hand on top of his stack of output. ``This data here
|
|
shows me that the job which was started thirty years ago is not really
|
|
completed. If nothing else, I hope we can learn something from this
|
|
and figure out a way to build a border starbase that won't make the
|
|
personnel in it sitting ducks during an attack.''
|
|
|
|
Beverly put her hand on top of Okawa's which still rested on the sheaf
|
|
of output. ``Yasu, you can't blame yourself for the death of those
|
|
people on the three starbases. Thirty years ago you designed a
|
|
starbase that could withstand an attack of a Romulan vessel of thirty
|
|
years ago. Times change, methods of attack change, and technology
|
|
changes. It was Starfleet that made the decision to stay with these
|
|
bases and only make minor changes to them over the years. You had
|
|
nothing to say about it.''
|
|
|
|
``Perhaps, Beverly. Perhaps you are right. I don't really blame
|
|
myself for the deaths. I blame myself for not thinking about these
|
|
bases for the past twenty years. I've buried myself in my research
|
|
and forgot the hand I played in creating these stations. I could have
|
|
continued with the project and helped in the modifications, so that
|
|
this might not have happened. I can right that wrong by figuring out
|
|
a way to save this base, and maybe a way to strengthen the remaining
|
|
bases. Let's face it, I'm the only one who can.''
|
|
|
|
Guinan rose, ``Well, neither of you can save anybody or anything
|
|
looking the way you do. Go get some sleep, there is always time for
|
|
that.''
|
|
|
|
``Yes, Guinan, that is a good idea.'' Crusher picked up the sensor
|
|
output from the table, ``Come on, Yasu, there is always tomorrow. Who
|
|
knows, maybe you'll be inspired in your sleep.''
|
|
|
|
The structural scientist nodded and rose from his seat. He cast a
|
|
final look at the battered starbase before he joined the doctor on her
|
|
way out of the lounge.
|
|
|
|
|
|
------
|
|
|
|
Miriam Evans was busy at her computer station when a wide-eyed Okawa
|
|
burst into the lab. He practically ran to his own terminal unit and
|
|
began to quickly call up a program. She knew better than to interrupt
|
|
her partner when he was like this. His mind went onto a single track
|
|
and any outside interference could easily cause him to lose whatever
|
|
breakthrough he was on. She could only assume that he was onto
|
|
something that could solve the problems they were having with
|
|
stabilizing the starbase. She had a few more stress analysis runs to
|
|
do, so she began them while patiently waiting for the senior scientist
|
|
to let her know what he was doing.
|
|
|
|
Five minutes later Okawa burst out laughing saying, ``I knew it. I
|
|
knew it could be done.''
|
|
|
|
Evans had never seen him quite like this. They had been together in
|
|
the lab for three years now, and he had never been this excited. She
|
|
knew he had been putting in some long hours the past few days, for
|
|
that matter so had she. She just hoped that he hadn't chosen this
|
|
time to completely break down.
|
|
|
|
``Are you all right, Yasu? You seem very agitated and you still look
|
|
like hell.''
|
|
|
|
Okawa realized that he must be making quite a scene. He pulled
|
|
himself together and said, ``Of course, I'm all right, Miriam. In
|
|
fact, I'm better than all right. I have figured out the solution to
|
|
reinforcing that starbase's structure while we make repairs. The
|
|
answer is so simple that I'm surprised we didn't see it before.''
|
|
|
|
He hit some keys on his computer console and a view of the shattered
|
|
starbase floated over the holoviewer. As he talked, the sections of
|
|
the base to which he was referring became highlighted in different
|
|
colors. ``What we need to do is provide some kind of an exoskeleton
|
|
to the starbase that will take the structural stresses normally
|
|
handled by the outer hulls and the support frame within the base.
|
|
We've discussed this before, but haven't figured out the answer to two
|
|
basic problems. One, we need a frame that is easily worked and can
|
|
quickly be put on, but also allows us access to the actual shell of
|
|
the starbase. This seems to indicate a high tensile strength netting,
|
|
which would then seem to indicate a material that is fairly dense.
|
|
Unfortunately, considering the surface area we would have to cover we
|
|
don't have enough free conversion mass aboard the Enterprise or the
|
|
starbase to create the required amount of netting in the mass
|
|
converters. Secondly, you need strong, stable points at which to
|
|
mount the netting. This is so the mount points can take the forces
|
|
that will be applied through the net. For the engineering section and
|
|
the stem this is not a problem. The only major damage to the base in
|
|
these areas was around the destroyed solar collector and this is only
|
|
structurally significant to the collector itself. We can mount the
|
|
net about the base of the engineering section and the base of stem,
|
|
these two areas are designed to take high stress normally.
|
|
Unfortunately, there is no location at the top of the living section
|
|
to affix the netting. Much of the living section was either destroyed
|
|
or weakened and the only section that I trust after looking at the
|
|
sensor scans is the core which runs through to the stem. That,
|
|
however, is not a large enough securing area to get the amount of
|
|
netting that we need on there.''
|
|
|
|
Miriam nodded her head and stared at the highlighted core ring at the
|
|
top of the living section. It had amazed her that the basic
|
|
structural cylinder of the base that ran from the top of the living
|
|
section down to the base of the engineering section had survived
|
|
without any significant damage. Especially after the way the solar
|
|
collector had been torn off. As Okawa had said, however, if the core
|
|
had not survived, they would not be worrying about how to save this
|
|
starbase right now. They would be collecting bodies. ``So, you've
|
|
reiterated the problems with the exoskeleton netting solution. I take
|
|
it you've solved them?'' she prompted.
|
|
|
|
``Yes, I believe I have.'' Okawa fiddled with the keypad at his
|
|
console and the matter converter in their lab hummed with activity as
|
|
a lightweight netting formed in it. He walked over and picked it up.
|
|
``This is a net made out of Null-E polyfiber. The folks at Interspace
|
|
Research have been trying to find a good use for this material for
|
|
months now. Are you familiar with it?''
|
|
|
|
Evans thought for a bit before she responded, ``A little. As I recall
|
|
it is an electron depleted carbon organic fiber. I seem to remember
|
|
hearing about some experiments dealing with the tensile strength of
|
|
the fiber raising when a current is applied to it. But I don't recall
|
|
the results.''
|
|
|
|
Okawa nodded excitedly, ``The results were very encouraging. I went
|
|
to a seminar presented by the project scientists from Interspace back
|
|
at Orinawi Four. Low currents don't have much of an effect on the
|
|
strength of the fiber, but when mega-ampere currents are applied, the
|
|
fiber not only strengthens it also stiffens into whatever
|
|
configuration it happens to be. This makes it brittle, but that
|
|
should only be a problem if the fiber undergoes cross-sectional
|
|
strains. We can set up a configuration of the netting that will avoid
|
|
this.''
|
|
|
|
He walked over to Evans side and called up references on the
|
|
conference he had attended. While she was reading them, he went over
|
|
to the large hydraulic stress inducer in the lab. He began hooking up
|
|
the net to the opposing ends of the test apparatus.
|
|
|
|
Evans looked up at him, ``This fiber is incredible. Has anyone done
|
|
anything practical with it?''
|
|
|
|
Okawa shook his head, ``Not that I'm aware of. I doubt it has been
|
|
taken out of the lab. If you read on you'll see why. After a period
|
|
of time, the fiber begins to undergo stretching. It seems that the
|
|
strengthening of the molecular bonds due to the current begins to
|
|
reduce after a period of approximately thirty days, and it's not
|
|
always the same time span. If we use it, we'll have to have the
|
|
engineering crews working around the clock to get the base in shape to
|
|
hold itself together. If we fail to get it done in time, the base
|
|
will tear itself apart.''
|
|
|
|
She stared at her comrade, ``That doesn't give us much time. Thirty
|
|
days would be a bare minimum I would think. But considering our mass
|
|
problem it may be the only shot we have. What about the second
|
|
problem? Where are we going to attach the fibers at the top of the
|
|
living section?''
|
|
|
|
Okawa looked up from his work at connecting the fiber to a high
|
|
current generator. He smiled a little as he said, ``I'm afraid I will
|
|
have to have a little chat with Lieutenant-Commander Rigeur about
|
|
that. I believe that the saucer section will provide an excellent
|
|
platform for connecting the netting.''
|
|
|
|
|
|
------
|
|
|
|
``You want to what?'' exclaimed Assistant-Chief Engineer Rigeur. It
|
|
was bad enough that Picard had left him in charge of the relief
|
|
effort, but to have to deal with these two labbies was too much.
|
|
``You want me to dock the saucer section with a starbase that is
|
|
tearing itself apart!''
|
|
|
|
Beverly Crusher had joined the group in the ready room of the bridge.
|
|
She had heard Okawa's argument for the fiber and it had seemed
|
|
reasonable, although she admitted some amount of ignorance when it
|
|
came to structural mechanics. She felt some amount of trepidation in
|
|
bringing the Enterprise's saucer section that close to the starbase,
|
|
but she also felt Okawa knew what he was talking about. Especially
|
|
about these starbases. She addressed Rigeur, ``Charles, let's hear
|
|
him out. This man designed these starbases. No one knows as much
|
|
about them as he does.''
|
|
|
|
Rigeur was taken aback at the news that Okawa had designed the border
|
|
bases. Those bases were known to be extremely durable, despite the
|
|
current situation. He knew he had to listen. ``Okay, let's hear what
|
|
you have to say.''
|
|
|
|
Okawa beamed at Beverly, ``Thank you, Commander. I think that this
|
|
may be our only solution. As I have told you, the structural
|
|
exoskeleton must have a strong anchoring point or else it will gain us
|
|
nothing as far as reinforcing the hull. The strongest point on the
|
|
living section is the docking area at the core, but that just doesn't
|
|
have enough area to secure all the netting that we will need. If we
|
|
were to use the docking port at the center of the saucer underside,
|
|
the saucer would sit like a hat atop the living section. We could
|
|
then attach the netting to the lower phaser ring struts of the saucer.
|
|
This would have the advantage of giving a convenient source of power,
|
|
we could tap the phaser generators.
|
|
|
|
``I have thoroughly analysed this, Commander. The docking coupling
|
|
has been designed to more than handle the strains it will undergo. We
|
|
can use explosive bolts on the netting supports to enable us to detach
|
|
quicker, if that would make you feel more comfortable.''
|
|
|
|
``Damn right, it would,'' grumbled Rigeur. He couldn't help but admit
|
|
that the scientist talked sense. Picard had told him that Okawa
|
|
should have carte blanche when it came to getting that starbase
|
|
repaired. He just wondered if his captain knew that might mean
|
|
getting the saucer section in just as bad shape as the starbase. He
|
|
considered the alternatives. He knew he couldn't let that starbase
|
|
tear itself to pieces, it went against his grain as an engineer. As
|
|
long as there was a chance he had to try it.
|
|
|
|
``All right,'' he agreed. He saw Okawa and Evans smile broadly, and
|
|
he continued, ``As long as we are agreed that I have the decision to
|
|
blow the exploding bolts if it looks like we are in trouble. I will
|
|
listen to your arguments, but if the decision has to be made in a
|
|
hurry then I will decide in favor of saving the saucer section. Is
|
|
that clear?''
|
|
|
|
Okawa responded nodding, ``Fair enough, Commander. I will have the
|
|
mass conversion units begin spooling out our netting.'' He got up and
|
|
left the room.
|
|
|
|
Evans looked after him as she stood, ``You must forgive him,
|
|
Commander. Once he gets involved in his work he becomes a very
|
|
determined man. Etiquette isn't his strong point.'' She then hurried
|
|
after her partner.
|
|
|
|
Rigeur shook his head. ``Labbies, try and figure them. Give me a
|
|
techie any day.''
|
|
|
|
Crusher smiled and said, ``Let's hope this labbie's techie background
|
|
helps save that starbase without destroying us in the process.''
|
|
|
|
``Amen to that, Doctor. Amen to that.''
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER 8
|
|
---------
|
|
|
|
``It's a trick!'' stormed the Klingon Security Chief. ``The last
|
|
Romulan defection was a plot to draw the Federation into a war. There
|
|
cannot be any doubt that this, too, is a deception. They are known
|
|
for their treachery, Captain. I say ignore the message. Their
|
|
Commander could be trying to lure us into a trap to accuse us of
|
|
taking one of their senior officers captive. That could be construed
|
|
as an act of war, as we have seen before.''
|
|
|
|
The command officers of the Enterprise were meeting in the briefing
|
|
room off the battle bridge. Picard was trying to size up the mood of
|
|
his officers; clearly Worf was not comfortable with any arrangements
|
|
dealing with the Romulans. Then again, Klingons never did like the
|
|
word ``deal''.
|
|
|
|
``Yes, Worf, it could be a trick,'' responded Counselor Troi, ``but I
|
|
believe that we need to act on this message as if it were real.
|
|
Commander Kareel's tension and fear at that meeting would go hand in
|
|
hand with the turmoil he must be feeling at the idea of defecting.''
|
|
|
|
``I don't know, Counselor,'' spoke up La Forge, ``Worf is right. They
|
|
do have a history of making truces just so they can build up a
|
|
military presence unimpeded and then they attack. Worf's homeworld is
|
|
just such an instance.'' He referred to the incident in which the
|
|
Romulans had attacked Worf's home planet and had killed his parents
|
|
when Worf was very young. He had been found by Federation relief
|
|
troops and subsequently been raised by humans. ``In addition, they
|
|
have never taken the Neutral Zone treaty seriously. They are always
|
|
making incursions into what should be a hands-off zone.''
|
|
|
|
``Yes, yes, this is all very true,'' Picard interrupted. ``The
|
|
Romulans do indeed have a history of deception when dealing with the
|
|
Federation, or anyone with whom they have a treaty or truce. But we
|
|
are not dealing with the Romulans here, we are dealing with one man.
|
|
A man who may have in his possession the secrets about Romulan
|
|
technology that could help end aggression between our people. A man
|
|
who the Counselor says is sincere in his fear. A man with whom I have
|
|
sat face to face and plotted strategy, which I might add is an event
|
|
without precedent.
|
|
|
|
``The Federation has had all too few opportunities to deal face to
|
|
face with Romulans. Most would sooner kill themselves than be taken
|
|
prisoner. That meeting was practically suggested by the Romulan
|
|
commander. He ordered a subordinate who was behaving in an admirably
|
|
Romulan fashion, to shut up or be thrown in the brig. These are not
|
|
`typical Romulan actions'. If we can get this man, then our
|
|
understanding of the Romulans may be drastically altered. It is worth
|
|
the risks, people, if we can stop many people from dying in a war.''
|
|
|
|
He then continued, ``I am in no hurry to die. Even more, I do not
|
|
wish for this ship to be damaged or destroyed. That's one drawback of
|
|
being Captain, you start to care for your ship and her people more
|
|
than yourself. But in this instance, I feel that the good which can
|
|
be accomplished by aiding and allying with this man is greater than
|
|
the potential danger of getting destroyed. We will continue to be
|
|
cautious. We must be. After all, we are in the Neutral Zone and that
|
|
demands readiness for any danger. We will pursue our prime mission,
|
|
to find the antagonist that is destroying our starbases and outposts.
|
|
We can do this all the better with the aid of the Romulan ship.
|
|
Finally, if there is a way, we will help the commander and his
|
|
crewmembers to defect.''
|
|
|
|
There was silence in the room as the officers digested this, and then
|
|
Riker spoke, ``Captain, I stand with you on this. But I must ask that
|
|
while we are in tandem with the Falcon we try to find out as much
|
|
about the ship that we can using active sensors. I believe we have
|
|
tapped out the information available to passives.''
|
|
|
|
Picard considered this, and nodded his assent. ``Agreed, Number One,
|
|
but try to make the active sensors work over short periods, we don't
|
|
want them too edgy.
|
|
|
|
``If that is all, people, then I suggest you all get to battle
|
|
stations. The Neutral Zone is a large area of space and it's going to
|
|
take some time to search it.'' Picard then stood and left the
|
|
briefing room, knowing that he had left some of his officers with more
|
|
questions and doubts than they had coming in. If truth be known, so
|
|
did Picard.
|
|
|
|
Picard went through the battle bridge to his ready room. As he sat at
|
|
his desk, he asked to have his console patched through to the Romulan
|
|
commander. While he waited for the connection to be established, he
|
|
pondered the situation he and his ship were in. Never had a Romulan
|
|
ship and a Federation ship coordinated a joint venture, certainly not
|
|
in the Neutral Zone. Neither government officially tolerated the
|
|
other's presence in the no-man's land of the Zone. Under ordinary
|
|
circumstances, he knew that the Romulan ship would have fired upon the
|
|
Enterprise as it had the vessel that they had been pursuing. That
|
|
lent some credence to Kareel's story. In fact, that was the factor
|
|
which had tipped the scales in Picard's mind. Yet that act, or lack
|
|
thereof, by the Romulan commander must be causing some serious
|
|
problems aboard his ship. He hoped Kareel appreciated just how
|
|
precarious his situation was.
|
|
|
|
Picard was interrupted from his musings by the indication that a
|
|
connection had been made with the Romulan ship. He turned the console
|
|
on his desk to face him as Kareel's face came up on his viewer.
|
|
``Commander, I am pleased to inform you that my officers and myself
|
|
have come upon a consensus opinion to join you and your vessel in a
|
|
search of the Neutral Zone for our mutual adversary.''
|
|
|
|
``Very well, Captain. It is good that I do not have to undergo such
|
|
formalities as the results might not have been so favorable. I
|
|
believe that we should begin our search as soon as possible. Do you
|
|
concur?''
|
|
|
|
``Certainly, Commander. I have my crew setting up the sensor arrays
|
|
as per our plan as we speak. I have taken the liberty to do some
|
|
further calculations. If we can increase the power to our sensor
|
|
arrays by ten percent over what we discussed, we can cover the entire
|
|
Neutral Zone in about twenty days, instead of the thirty we calculated
|
|
originally.''
|
|
|
|
Kareel shook his head wryly, ``I am afraid, Captain, that we cannot
|
|
comply with that suggestion, good as it may be. Our sensor arrays
|
|
will not support more load than we agreed upon earlier. That is why I
|
|
suggested those figures earlier.''
|
|
|
|
``Ah. Well then, I guess we will go with the original plan. The
|
|
results of just one ship increasing its sensor range would be more
|
|
detrimental than beneficial, due to the Kriesling effect.'' Picard
|
|
nodded as he made a mental note to indicate in his log about this
|
|
deficiency in the Romulan sensors. Kareel had already given a
|
|
valuable piece of information. ``Let us begin our first search pass
|
|
in three minutes. My conn will send you heading coordinates
|
|
shortly.''
|
|
|
|
``Very well, Captain, we shall await them. Is there anything else?''
|
|
|
|
Picard wished that he could let him know somehow that plans were in
|
|
the making for aiding Kareel's defection, but he could think of no
|
|
covert way of telling him at this time. ``No Commander, that is all.
|
|
May this not take too very long to find our common enemy.''
|
|
|
|
``Agreed, Captain. Perhaps we can sit down and have a drink when this
|
|
is all over?''
|
|
|
|
Picard again was surprised by this uncommon Romulan. The only way to
|
|
achieve a defection, of course, would be to have him on board the
|
|
Enterprise . ``Yes, Commander Kareel, that would be most
|
|
satisfactory. But first let's get to the bottom of this. Enterprise
|
|
out.''
|
|
|
|
Picard then ordered the helm to lay in the course for covering the
|
|
Neutral Zone. Once this was done, he went into the bridge and walked
|
|
over to Worf and Geordi who were huddled over the sensor console.
|
|
``The Romulans cannot scan as far as we can, let's keep the distance
|
|
down to our prearranged setting. And, Mr. La Forge, enter that piece
|
|
of information in our expanding notebook on Romulan technology.''
|
|
|
|
``Yes, sir, Captain, I'll be glad to,'' the chief engineer replied,
|
|
grinning.
|
|
|
|
|
|
------
|
|
|
|
The course that the captains had agreed upon would take the two ships
|
|
on counter-rotating cylinders about the region which bordered
|
|
controlled space of the two governments. Both ships would remain in
|
|
constant contact via telemetry sharing sensor data, so that the
|
|
computers aboard each ship could analyze the data separately to
|
|
confirm or deny readings. The ships, however, would only meet twice
|
|
each revolution. Picard and Kareel had felt that this would keep the
|
|
opportunity for mishap, or misunderstanding, to a bare minimum. As
|
|
the ships would continue to spiral through the Neutral Zone for thirty
|
|
days, the chances of the old hatreds rising in the crews of the ships
|
|
would become greater and greater. Like steam in a stopped up kettle,
|
|
eventually they would explode. At least this way, the officers had
|
|
hoped, it would take longer for the crews to realize that they were
|
|
actually aiding an old enemy. Events would, however, prove them
|
|
wrong.
|
|
|
|
Picard was sitting at his desk recording into his log the events of
|
|
the last 24 hours. ``...we've been in the Neutral Zone for seventeen
|
|
days scanning for what has become an elusive adversary. The time we
|
|
spend away from the Romulan ship has given Mr. La Forge opportunity to
|
|
repair several engineering subsystems that failed after the high warp
|
|
we used chasing down the vessel which had attacked Starbase 57. He
|
|
now reports to me that we can achieve that warp and perhaps even
|
|
higher with safety. My commendations to our Chief Engineer and his
|
|
entire staff. I also commend my First Officer William Riker and
|
|
Counselor Deanna Troi. Their work in keeping morale high has helped
|
|
keep the crew's minds off of the fact that we are sitting in the
|
|
middle of what has been the most dangerous area of space that any
|
|
Federation vessel has had to patrol.
|
|
|
|
``With regard to the defection of Commander Kareel from the Romulan
|
|
vessel, precious little has been decided. My officers and I have
|
|
agreed that we will most likely have to `play it by ear' and allow
|
|
Kareel to let us know how to get him free. We have not broadcast to
|
|
Starfleet this development for fear that the Romulans may have broken
|
|
our security encriptions.
|
|
|
|
``I must also add that my concerns for the rest of my ship, which is
|
|
still at Starbase 57, have been rising as we search farther and
|
|
farther afield. As per standard procedures near a potentially hostile
|
|
force, we have not been in contact with the saucer section since we
|
|
left it. Nor have they been in contact with us. I can only assume
|
|
that repairs are going well at the starbase and that the crewmembers
|
|
who remained there are still doing well.'' With that Picard halted
|
|
the recording of the log.
|
|
|
|
He stared at his console viewscreen that showed a graphic of the space
|
|
already covered by the starships. He stared, but did not see. Rather
|
|
he envisioned the faces of those crewmembers who he hoped had not met
|
|
with trouble at the starbase. He thought of his old friend and
|
|
confidant, Beverly Crusher. For many years he had known her and her
|
|
husband; he had introduced them and he had been the captain of the
|
|
ship on which her husband had met his death. He had promised to Jack
|
|
Crusher on his deathbed that he would watch over her and their son.
|
|
They had remained close friends and recently they had been getting
|
|
closer. Picard worried about getting much closer, as he was concerned
|
|
about what Beverly's son Wesley would think. More so, he was
|
|
concerned with what that do to the image of Jack Crusher in his own
|
|
mind. Was that being true to that friendship that he had shared with
|
|
the man?
|
|
|
|
Picard's thoughts were interrupted by an urgent call from the bridge,
|
|
which caused him to jump up and cross the distance to the adjoining
|
|
door in what seemed milliseconds.
|
|
|
|
Riker was calling for the image the sensors were picking up to be
|
|
placed on the main viewer. ``Captain, we have picked up on the limit
|
|
of long range sensors what appear to be two or more ships running in
|
|
tandem. Their energy signature is difficult to read, but it doesn't
|
|
look Romulan and it doesn't look like any Federation ship I have
|
|
seen.''
|
|
|
|
``Have you signalled the Falcon for confirmation on this reading,
|
|
Number One?'' queried Picard.
|
|
|
|
``Yes, sir. I had Lieutenant Worf inform them just after summoning
|
|
you. We have yet to receive confirmation. It is my guess that these
|
|
ships are out of their current sensor range, if what they have told us
|
|
is true. Perhaps their interpretation of our readings will shield
|
|
some light on this.''
|
|
|
|
Worf spoke up from the communications console, ``Message coming in
|
|
from the Falcon , sir.''
|
|
|
|
``Very well, Lieutenant, on the main viewer please.''
|
|
|
|
Kareel's now familiar face filled the viewscreen of the battle bridge,
|
|
``Captain, my congratulations on your sensor technology. I am not
|
|
sure our sensors would have deciphered that reading as vessels.
|
|
According to our analysis of your data, it appears to be three ships
|
|
traveling in tandem at warp 5. Their energy signature matches no
|
|
known ships, except those that attacked our main starbase along the
|
|
Neutral Zone. I have had my navigator plot a course which will cause
|
|
us to intercept those vessels in 1.5 of your hours.''
|
|
|
|
``You confirm our analysis, Commander. Very well, we shall plot our
|
|
own intercept course to arrive there just ahead of yourselves. Might
|
|
I suggest that you come in cloaked to add an element of surprise? If
|
|
they think that we are just one ship, it may cause them to make a
|
|
mistake.'' Picard indicated for the helmsman to begin plotting the
|
|
course. ``And, Commander,'' Picard continued, ``I would like to have
|
|
one of those ships intact. The information we could glean might lead
|
|
us to where they are based.''
|
|
|
|
``Agreed, Captain. Although taking prisoners is not the Romulan way,
|
|
we will bow to your expertise in surrendering,'' Kareel added not
|
|
without some bite. ``We will allow you to handle that end of things.
|
|
Just make sure that whatever ship you want to keep intact is out of
|
|
our way, as I intend to wipe out the others.''
|
|
|
|
Picard pressed his lips together grimly. ``Thank you, Commander. We
|
|
shall meet you in exactly, one hour twenty-six minutes. Enterprise
|
|
out.'' Picard then sat in the command chair and addressed the helm,
|
|
``Lieutenant, lay in the course to intercept those ships. I want to
|
|
be there in one hour and twenty minutes. Mr. Worf, take the ship to
|
|
condition red, I want everyone to be ready for this.'' With that the
|
|
alert klaxons sounded and Picard motioned for helm to engage the
|
|
course and vectors.
|
|
|
|
|
|
------
|
|
|
|
As the Enterprise neared the rendezvous point, the sensors confirmed
|
|
the Romulan assessment that there were three ships waiting. It was
|
|
also evident that the Enterprise was not going to take them by
|
|
surprise. The targeted ships had increased speed as the Enterprise
|
|
approached the two-thirds point of their approach. They had not,
|
|
however, increased their speed to what had been evidenced on the
|
|
earlier chase across the Neutral Zone. Picard had ordered the
|
|
appropriate changes in the intercept course and there would be no
|
|
delay in the meeting time.
|
|
|
|
Picard and his first officer sat discussing the tactics of the
|
|
upcoming confrontation as they approached the five minute mark of
|
|
their impending battle. ``Will, we are going to need to separate one
|
|
of those ships from the other two without causing it damage that will
|
|
destroy it. Any ideas that might help us meet this goal?''
|
|
|
|
Riker had been thinking over this issue and believed that he had a
|
|
solution, though one that would put the Enterprise itself into
|
|
jeopardy. The idea which he outlined to Picard involved bringing the
|
|
Enterprise into the middle of the alien ship's formation. They would
|
|
then attempt to force the ship of choice out of the formation by
|
|
nudging it away with the deflector shields and the tractor beam. The
|
|
problem, besides potentially having the two ships touch at warp seven,
|
|
was once the shields of the two ships interposed, energy would be
|
|
drained from the shields that were facing the final two enemy vessels.
|
|
One solution would be to have the other ships busy with fighting off
|
|
the Romulans, if the Falcon arrived in time. If it did not, then the
|
|
Enterprise would have to use the trickier recourse of fighting on both
|
|
fronts. Using the tractor beam on the vessel of choice and the
|
|
phasers on the other two. Another problem, of course, was that the
|
|
vessel of choice would not be a willing participant in this. Thus,
|
|
the Enterprise would find itself a prime stationary target to it.
|
|
|
|
Picard nodded in agreement, ``A dangerous plan, but the only viable
|
|
alternative open to us, Number One. Make it so, and, Mr. Worf,'' he
|
|
said turning to his Chief of Security, ``Don't get carried away and
|
|
shoot at all three ships unless you get an order to.''
|
|
|
|
``I, sir?'' the Klingon asked sardonically, ``I would not consider
|
|
firing without prior orders.''
|
|
|
|
``Yes, Lieutenant, I know,'' Picard replied dryly. ``Mr. Riker, take
|
|
us in there. Let's see if our little plan works.'' Picard turned
|
|
back to the main viewer as Riker stood up and walked to a position
|
|
behind Data at the ops console.
|
|
|
|
``All right, Mr. Data, shields to full intensity. Helm, transfer
|
|
control to Mr. Data's console. Data, plot and lay in a course that
|
|
will put us within that triangular formation and which will shield the
|
|
ship on the left apex from the others. I want our shields to block
|
|
him off from them.'' Riker watched as Data worked with mechanical
|
|
precision at the controls of the Federation flagship.
|
|
|
|
``I have the course plotted, sir. However, if they should change
|
|
their formation radically during our final maneuvering, we may find
|
|
ourselves in a rather vulnerable position, sir.'' Data replied.
|
|
|
|
``Understood, Mr. Data, we know the risks. Engage the course. Mr.
|
|
Worf, lock phasers on the ships at the top apex and the right apex of
|
|
the triangle. I want to keep them busy until the Romulans get here.
|
|
I also want as early a warning as possible on the arrival of our
|
|
Romulan allies.''
|
|
|
|
``Aye, sir. It will give us a good opportunity to test our new
|
|
theories on the Falcon's cloaking device.''
|
|
|
|
``Very well, Lieutenant.'' Riker then leaned closer to the ops
|
|
console as the ship came within firing range of the alien ships. The
|
|
visual scanners showed the now familiar Y-configuration of the ships
|
|
and the peculiar glowing of the energy pods near their engine
|
|
housings. Worf warned of an energy buildup in the lead ship's weapons
|
|
section just before an intense energy beam lanced up to the underside
|
|
of the Enterprise .
|
|
|
|
``The shields absorbed the energy from that attack, sir. No damage
|
|
reported.'' Worf reported from his console.
|
|
|
|
``Good. Mr. Data, prepare to get us into that position. Mr. Worf,
|
|
fire at will at the ships you are locked onto.''
|
|
|
|
``Acknowledged, Commander. Firing first salvo.'' With that twin
|
|
beams of phaser fire leapt from the bow of the Enterprise toward the
|
|
forward vessel. A split second later another salvo followed aimed at
|
|
the second ship. ``Sensors report phaser deflection, sir. The three
|
|
vessels are building up energy for a combined assault.''
|
|
|
|
The bridge crew braced themselves as simultaneous weapons fire erupted
|
|
from the three ships. The deflector shields glowed violently as they
|
|
attempted to absorb the combined energy. They were only partially
|
|
successful as the attenuated beams reached the Enterprise , causing
|
|
surface damage to the outer hull.
|
|
|
|
``Mr. Worf, once we are in position, I want the tractor beam on the
|
|
third vessel,'' Picard ordered. ``We are going to need their shields
|
|
down. Have you pinpointed the shield generators yet?''
|
|
|
|
``I believe so, sir. It is difficult to make positive identification
|
|
due to the large energy signature of their engines. Those ships are
|
|
almost all power plant.''
|
|
|
|
``Understood, Lieutenant,'' replied Riker. ``On my command I want
|
|
enough phaser power applied to that ship to drop those shields.
|
|
Meanwhile, Mr. La Forge, will you make sure that our own shields will
|
|
prevent a hit like the previous one?''
|
|
|
|
Geordi's voice responded from engineering, ``Yes, Commander. Will
|
|
try. That last attack caught us a little off guard. The energy
|
|
compensators were not fully restored after the previous blast. We're
|
|
ready for them now.''
|
|
|
|
Picard spoke up, ``Mr. La Forge, I have no desire to leave pieces of
|
|
the Enterprise in the Neutral Zone. Let's keep on top of things down
|
|
there.''
|
|
|
|
``Will comply, Captain.''
|
|
|
|
Riker sat in his chair next to Picard. ``Mr. Data, on my command get
|
|
us into position as quickly as you can. Mr. Worf, let me know when
|
|
the weapons of those ships begin charging again. When I give the
|
|
order I want you to fire three photon torpedoes with a proximity
|
|
detonation and maximum dispersal at those ships.''
|
|
|
|
A few seconds passed and Worf warned of the impending attack. ``Fire
|
|
those torpedoes, Mr. Worf.'' At Riker's order, the three torpedoes
|
|
launched from the forward tubes beneath the pod where the saucer
|
|
section normally resided. When they got near the three alien ships
|
|
they detonated forming a large energy cloud that momentarily obscured
|
|
their sensor readings.
|
|
|
|
``Get us into position NOW, Data,'' Riker ordered. At his order, the
|
|
precise android maneuvered the Enterprise quicker than any human could
|
|
have. That speed combined with the sensor scrambling which the
|
|
torpedoes had provided caused only one of the ships to directly hit
|
|
the Enterprise on the response attack. The other two only managed
|
|
glancing blows. The deflectors were able to handle all the load this
|
|
time. Once the ship was in position, Worf continued with the battle
|
|
plan and fired at their target ship. In a matter of seconds the
|
|
shields on that vessel collapsed in a fiery blaze as the Enterprise's
|
|
phasers overloaded and destroyed its main shield generator.
|
|
|
|
``Lock tractor beam on target, Mr. Worf. Mr. Data, once the beam is
|
|
secure, let's start slowing him down and moving him out of position.
|
|
I want the shields facing that ship to be at full power, Mr. Worf. We
|
|
can't allow him to nail us now.'' Riker began to look satisfied that
|
|
all was beginning to go their way. He was further gratified when Worf
|
|
reported a spatial gravitational disturbance that indicated the
|
|
presence of the Romulan vessel. ``I never thought I'd say I was happy
|
|
to see a Romulan warbird,'' quipped the First Officer.
|
|
|
|
The alien ships again fired upon the Enterprise , and once again the
|
|
shields deflected all the energy from their blast away from the hull.
|
|
Immediately after the attack, the Falcon dropped its cloaking device
|
|
and began firing heavy disruptor fire on the two offending ships. The
|
|
Enterprise continued drawing their victim away from the onslaught and
|
|
began slowing them down to sublight speeds. Occasionally their prey
|
|
would fire on them, but it became obvious that the ship was spending
|
|
the majority of its energy on the engines attempting to escape from
|
|
the Enterprise . The tractor beam continued to hold fast the captive.
|
|
|
|
The Romulan ship began wearing down its adversaries with rapid fire
|
|
from their disruptors and occasional highly charged photon torpedoes.
|
|
Finally, they broke through the shielding of one of the ships. Within
|
|
seconds of this event, the Falcon fired from its secondary disruptor
|
|
array which up to that time had lain dormant. This attack proved to
|
|
be too much for the defenseless vessel which was destroyed in the
|
|
fire. The remaining ship attempted to escape, but this laid open its
|
|
shield generator to the full brunt of the Romulan attack. The
|
|
Romulans quickly broke through the shields of the fleeing ship and
|
|
then destroyed it.
|
|
|
|
Picard and his crew noted the ongoing battle with grim satisfaction,
|
|
but had to quickly return their attention to their own adversary.
|
|
|
|
Data warned from the operations console, ``There is an energy buildup
|
|
in the main core of the ship we are towing that may be indicative of
|
|
an impending explosion. They may be overtaxing their engines in their
|
|
attempt to escape, or they could be attempting to self-destruct in
|
|
order to destroy the Enterprise .
|
|
|
|
``Mr. Worf,'' Picard said turning to the tactical station, ``Can you
|
|
destroy their engine pods without wiping out the rest of that ship?''
|
|
|
|
``Perhaps, sir, but it will be a very delicate operation. Similar to
|
|
a heart transplant with a bludgeon,'' Worf replied with irony heavy in
|
|
his voice.
|
|
|
|
``We don't have a great deal of choice, do we? Fire when ready, Mr.
|
|
Worf.''
|
|
|
|
Worf quickly made the targeting settings at his console. When he was
|
|
ready he fired four simultaneous phaser shots at the struts holding
|
|
the engine pods to the main body of the alien vessel. His intent was
|
|
to sever the connection there and get the pods free of the ship. He
|
|
could then destroy the pods with full phaser blasts. The chances of
|
|
success were small, because any miscalculation could cause the
|
|
captured ship to tear apart if the structural stresses became too
|
|
great. He was partially successful, as the left pod came free of the
|
|
main body without incident. The right pod came only partly free as
|
|
the aft strut did not give entirely. Before he could fire a second
|
|
burst to free it, the pod tore away taking a third of the hind section
|
|
of the ship with it. Worf swore and took his anger out by launching
|
|
full energy phaser blasts at the free engine pods, completely
|
|
obliterating them.
|
|
|
|
``The danger has been averted, Captain,'' Data indicated from his
|
|
console, ``but there currently are no energy readings from the ship at
|
|
all. I might add, that there were no discernable life sign readings
|
|
aboard the ship either before or after the attack.''
|
|
|
|
``Excellent job, Mr. Worf. Number One, you are to be commended for
|
|
the way the operation was carried out.'' Picard then asked Data,
|
|
``There were no life signs aboard that ship? What about the others?
|
|
Were you able to scan them before the Romulans destroyed them?''
|
|
|
|
``Yes, sir, I was. Our sensors indicated no life sign readings on any
|
|
of the ships we just encountered. They may, as we hypothesized
|
|
earlier, be blocking our sensors from reading life signs. Or there is
|
|
another explanation. The ship could either be unmanned, or manned by
|
|
something which does not register as life on our sensors.''
|
|
|
|
``Yes, agreed.'' Picard nodded and continued, ``Data, can you give me
|
|
an estimate on how long our prisoner will last until it breaks up
|
|
entirely?''
|
|
|
|
``The ship is fairly stable currently, Captain. But I would say that
|
|
it is only a matter of minutes before the stresses which it underwent
|
|
as the engines were being removed will begin to tear it apart.''
|
|
|
|
``Very well. Number One, I would like you to lead an away team to the
|
|
bridge of that vessel. You will have no longer than ten minutes
|
|
aboard that ship so make them count. Find out all you can about where
|
|
it came from and who it belongs to.''
|
|
|
|
``Aye, sir. May I take Worf and Data, along with Mr. La Forge? Their
|
|
insight could prove valuable.'' Riker asked as he began heading
|
|
toward the turbo lift entrance.
|
|
|
|
``You can take Data and Geordi, but I would like Lieutenant Worf to
|
|
remain. We are still in the Neutral Zone with an armed Romulan vessel
|
|
nearby. We may need some quick hands at the weapons console.''
|
|
Picard gestured for Data to join Riker, and motioned for Worf to move
|
|
from the security console to Data's operations and control console.
|
|
``Meanwhile, I will notify the Falcon of what we are doing. Be
|
|
careful over there, Will. There's no telling what may be waiting.''
|
|
|
|
With that Riker and Data disappeared into the turbolift, leaving a
|
|
slightly puzzled Picard. Puzzled at wondering just what they were
|
|
fighting against. A new life form? Or something more mundane and
|
|
sinister?
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER 9
|
|
---------
|
|
|
|
When the away team materialized on the captured vessel, Riker was glad
|
|
that they were wearing the protective life-belts that provided both a
|
|
force field about each member as well as an atmosphere to breath. It
|
|
was immediately evident that the ship had begun to tear itself apart.
|
|
Several structural supports had fallen from the ceiling in the small
|
|
bridge, making movement difficult.
|
|
|
|
Riker motioned for La Forge and Data to spread out and find what they
|
|
could. The bridge area, or at least what the sensors had told them
|
|
was most likely the bridge, was a small area with many consoles lining
|
|
the walls. There were, however, no chairs for crewmembers. In fact,
|
|
there were no crewmembers. Apparently the ship was either remotely
|
|
controlled or controlled by an internal computer. If the latter, then
|
|
this was a most impressive achievement. Ever since the M5 incident 75
|
|
years ago, the Federation had stayed clear of self-controlled
|
|
warships. In the interim, none had been seen from any other source
|
|
either.
|
|
|
|
``Captain, it looks like this ship was completely without crew. The
|
|
bridge is not set up for any lifeform to control it. Although,
|
|
judging from the setup of equipment in here, whoever designed this
|
|
ship planned on humanoids to equip and repair it.'' Riker reported
|
|
over his communicator. ``I have Data and Geordi looking for clues as
|
|
to the origin of the ship, but I'm not altogether hopeful since there
|
|
is no power going to the consoles.''
|
|
|
|
``Find whatever you can, Number One, but do it quickly. A revised
|
|
estimate of the breakup of that ship is about five minutes.
|
|
Regardless of what happens there, I have instructed Chief O'Brien to
|
|
bring you back when that time expires or on our orders. If we see the
|
|
ship starting to go, we'll beam all of you back.''
|
|
|
|
``Acknowledged,'' responded Riker as he inspected his surroundings,
|
|
``from the looks of things, if the ship holds together five minutes,
|
|
we'll be lucky. Riker out.''
|
|
|
|
He noticed that Geordi was inspecting what looked like a display
|
|
console. Riker avoided several pieces of equipment to take a closer
|
|
look.
|
|
|
|
``Commander, this looks like a way into whatever computer was running
|
|
this ship. If I can get some power to it, we might be able to tell
|
|
where this came from. The backup power conduits run behind the
|
|
console and they look like they are still carrying power.''
|
|
|
|
Riker had learned long ago that the VISOR that the Chief Engineer used
|
|
to replace his sight allowed him to see things that no one else could.
|
|
It made him invaluable on away teams and helped him out immensely as
|
|
chief engineer. ``Can you get it running in less than two minutes?''
|
|
|
|
``I don't know, Commander. But I'll give it my best shot.'' Geordi
|
|
began taking the front panel off the console.
|
|
|
|
Meanwhile, Data had ventured to the bow section of the bridge and was
|
|
using his tricorder to investigate a large cylinder that seemed to be
|
|
the focal point for a large number of conduits. Riker made his way to
|
|
the android only to find him shaking his head, a peculiarly human
|
|
gesture thought Riker.
|
|
|
|
``Any idea what this is, Data?''
|
|
|
|
``I believe that it is the central brain of the ship, Commander. The
|
|
other computers here handled the running of specific shipboard
|
|
systems, while this unit correlated their data and made the command
|
|
decisions. According to my tricorder, the structure of the data paths
|
|
within this unit is very similar to my own.''
|
|
|
|
``Are you saying that this is a positronic brain, Data?'' Riker asked
|
|
incredulously. ``I had thought that only your creator, Noonian Soongh,
|
|
had solved the problems encountered in making one.''
|
|
|
|
``Perhaps, Commander. I did say the structure is similar. But it is
|
|
not identical, nor is it as advanced as my own makeup.'' Coming from
|
|
anyone else this would have sounded boastful or cocky, but not from
|
|
Data who could feel no pride. ``I would estimate that this unit is
|
|
about one-third as fast as myself, and much more limited in design
|
|
function. Its whole purpose is to make the decisions in battle for
|
|
this ship. I cannot be sure that we could even get it to tell us
|
|
where its home world is, more likely it would make the decision to go
|
|
home and another computer would lay in the course and send the ship on
|
|
its way.''
|
|
|
|
``Similar to the command compartmentalization on our own ship.
|
|
Enlightening, Data, but it doesn't give us anything definite as to its
|
|
origin.''
|
|
|
|
``On the contrary, I believe that it may give us a clue. The
|
|
positronic brain is incredibly complex. However, there is more than
|
|
one way `to skin the cat'. I believe that is the correct idiom. This
|
|
unit is so like my own brain that the original design could only have
|
|
come from Soongh's laboratory. Therefore, whoever made this ship and
|
|
this positronic brain had to come from the Federation.''
|
|
|
|
Riker knew that Data was making sense, although he tended to go the
|
|
long way about making a point. Riker had to admit that no one knew
|
|
positronic brains as well as Data. So they had gained a precious bit
|
|
of knowledge here.
|
|
|
|
``Commander, Data, come here. I believe I have something here.''
|
|
Geordi called from the console. As Riker and Data approached, he held
|
|
up a small capsule. ``I believe that this may solve our problems. I
|
|
think that this is a recorded log from the system which this console
|
|
governed. If so, then we can read it aboard the Enterprise and
|
|
perhaps find out where the ship came from.''
|
|
|
|
``Geordi,'' Data replied, ``there are five other consoles just like
|
|
this one in this area. The log will only tell us where the ship is
|
|
from if this console was connected to the navigation computer.
|
|
Unfortunately, there is no way to tell without the power being on in
|
|
here. We will need to get the others to be sure.''
|
|
|
|
As Data said this, the whole ship rocked violently, throwing the three
|
|
officers into various pieces of wreckage. All three managed to stay
|
|
on their feet as they heard O'Brien's voice come over their
|
|
communicators that he was beaming them aboard. As the ship rocked
|
|
again and a terrible wailing sound echoed up from the bowels of the
|
|
stricken vessel, the tingling sensation of the transporter took hold
|
|
of them. Riker's last view of the ship was of a tear being made in
|
|
the wall opposite him and the stars of empty space shining through.
|
|
|
|
|
|
------
|
|
|
|
Captain Picard sat at the conference table massaging his temples.
|
|
What he was hearing from his officers was not making him a happy man.
|
|
The evidence that a Federation presence was somehow behind all that
|
|
was happening here in the Neutral Zone did not make sense, unless it
|
|
was an experiment that had somehow gone horribly awry. Either that or
|
|
a dark force from within the Federation that had access to some of its
|
|
closest held secrets.
|
|
|
|
``Mr. Data, in your opinion, there is no question that the design for
|
|
the positronic brain on the alien ship came from Soongh's lab?''
|
|
Picard repeated the question hoping to get a negative answer and clear
|
|
this all up as if it were a bad dream.
|
|
|
|
``No, sir. There is some room for doubt, after all there were some
|
|
subtle differences in materials and neural pathways. Still, the basic
|
|
design is very similar to that of my own brain. There are many
|
|
different ways to design a positronic brain, the chance that two
|
|
completely different groups happened upon such a similar design is
|
|
very small. Thus, even if Soongh did not build this brain himself, he
|
|
must have a hand in the design.''
|
|
|
|
``And therefore,'' continued Riker, ``one must assume that there is
|
|
some Federation influence at work here. Either that, or someone
|
|
somehow got ahold of the plans for that brain from Soongh. Perhaps by
|
|
underhanded means.''
|
|
|
|
Picard nodded grimly. He then noticed that La Forge was looking
|
|
rather uncomfortably at something on his computer console. ``Well,
|
|
Mr. La Forge,'' he asked his chief engineer, ``if you have found
|
|
something please let us all in on the secret.''
|
|
|
|
``Well, Captain, ever since I got a close look that ship I thought it
|
|
rang a bell. Something I had seen in a journal or a text back at the
|
|
academy. I have been running some queries in the technical historical
|
|
database using a loose pattern matching scheme to see what I could
|
|
come up with. The computer has just given me an answer.''
|
|
|
|
Geordi then activated the main viewer in the conference room to give
|
|
everyone a view of the computer's results. ``On the top you see an
|
|
image of the unknown ships we have encountered in the Neutral Zone.
|
|
On the lower part of the screen is what was known as Starfleet Project
|
|
Nimbus. Note the great similarities in shapes of the two vessels.
|
|
The long thin body accented by the warp pods sticking out along the
|
|
tail end. The bulbous nose on both craft house the sensor arrays, and
|
|
just behind are where the weapons emplacements are housed.''
|
|
|
|
Picard felt himself growing even less happy at this development.
|
|
``They are remarkably similar, Commander. It looks like we are
|
|
staring at some fairly damning evidence against the Federation in the
|
|
Romulan's eyes. What more can you tell us?''
|
|
|
|
Geordi scanned the readout in front of him before continuing,
|
|
``According to the records, the Nimbus project was started
|
|
approximately 30 years ago and was finally scrapped 23 years ago after
|
|
it was deemed too costly to continue.
|
|
|
|
``The mission of the project'', he read, ``was to create a series of
|
|
deep space probes that could function unmanned or manned. They were
|
|
supposed to allow quick inexpensive expeditions to uncharted space, so
|
|
that the Federation could pick and choose where they would send their
|
|
manned heavy cruisers for the more detailed and more expensive
|
|
exploratory missions. There was also a desire on the part of the
|
|
military branch to modify these ships so that they could function as
|
|
quick strike vessels with minimal loss of resources. An unmanned ship
|
|
would not be as devastating a material or personnel loss, if one
|
|
should meet a disastrous end.''
|
|
|
|
``Yes, I seem to recall something about that project,'' Picard mused.
|
|
``There was more to it than just cost overruns that led to the
|
|
cancellation of Nimbus.''
|
|
|
|
``Aye, sir,'' responded La Forge. ``The one feature about Nimbus that
|
|
made it unique, beside the unmanned capability, was that it employed a
|
|
whole new energy concentration system. They wanted to get away from
|
|
the dilithium crystal concentrators for the matter/anti-matter
|
|
reaction, and go to what was a theoretically more efficient method
|
|
using the hyperion channel. As is many times the case, however, there
|
|
is a large difference between theory and practice. The hyperion
|
|
channel proved more tricky than they had ever expected, from the looks
|
|
of these reports. After six years of trying to get it to work, they
|
|
decided to revert to the dilithium concentrators. Once they did this
|
|
the maximum speed of the Nimbus went down about thirty percent, due to
|
|
a necessarily smaller power plant. After this was taken into account,
|
|
along with a lack of success with expert systems to control the craft
|
|
in unmanned mode, the Federation council along with the support of
|
|
Starfleet, decided to scrap the project.''
|
|
|
|
``So, we may be looking at a successful military version of that
|
|
craft,'' rumbled Worf.
|
|
|
|
``More successful than you may realize, Worf,'' replied the engineer.
|
|
He then stood up and went over to the main viewer, ``I have been
|
|
analyzing the sensor data of the energy signature that these ships
|
|
emit. I just asked the computer to compare that signal with known
|
|
drive systems both practical and theoretical, and it should display
|
|
the answer in a matter of seconds.''
|
|
|
|
Picard already had a feeling what the answer would be when it flashed
|
|
on the screen. There was little doubt according to the graphic
|
|
displayed that what they were seeing was a successful application of
|
|
the hyperion channel drive. The comparison graph, he noticed, was
|
|
from actual data. ``Mr. La Forge, that graphic implies that a
|
|
successful version of the hyperion channel drive was implemented.''
|
|
|
|
``Correct, Captain. Although the Nimbus project had been killed,
|
|
Starfleet persuaded the Federation council that the hyperion channel
|
|
drive could be of great benefit. The council gave some minimal
|
|
funding and, approximately two years after the Nimbus project was
|
|
scrubbed, a successful flight test of the hyperion drive, as it had
|
|
become known, was made. Good data was acquired until mysteriously the
|
|
ship was destroyed during an acceleration test. No one was killed due
|
|
to the tests being done under remote control. It was generally
|
|
assumed that the accident occurred due to an imbalance in the hyperion
|
|
channel, although not all were convinced.
|
|
|
|
``The wrap-up on the hyperion drive experiments seems to indicate most
|
|
were convinced that, while it seemed to offer immense possibilities as
|
|
far as increased energy throughput, there were far too many
|
|
imponderables to continue with the experiment. There was a small
|
|
group which insisted that only through the use of the hyperion channel
|
|
would trans-warp ten become a reality.''
|
|
|
|
``It appears, Geordi, that they may have been correct.'' Picard was
|
|
staring at the facts as they lay before him. A thirty year old ship
|
|
design using an experimental powerplant that was abandoned twenty
|
|
years ago. The only place that these could have come from was within
|
|
the Federation. A positronic brain that could only have come from the
|
|
mind of one man . . . ``Mr. Data,'' Picard turned toward his android
|
|
third in command, ``judging from the design of the positronic brain in
|
|
the ship you just explored, and extrapolating from the design of your
|
|
brain, how many generations before your own do you suppose that brain
|
|
was?''
|
|
|
|
``It is difficult to say, sir, since I have no direct recollection of
|
|
Dr. Soongh's previous works. However, a reasonable extrapolation
|
|
would give about five generations.'' Data then guessed at Picard's
|
|
next question. ``If we assume that my creation was five years before
|
|
I was discovered, and assuming that a generation would be once every
|
|
two to three years, that would put the date range of that brain's
|
|
design at 22 to 27 years ago.''
|
|
|
|
``I believe that we are starting to see a trend here.'' Picard shook
|
|
his head sadly. Hoping to see the situation from a different angle,
|
|
he turned to his chief of security. ``Mr. Worf, have you had time to
|
|
analyze the attack strategy of our friends out there?''
|
|
|
|
Worf raised an eyebrow quizzically, ``Friends, Captain?''
|
|
|
|
``A figure of speech, Mr. Worf.''
|
|
|
|
``A peculiar human oddity calling adversaries `friends','' rumbled
|
|
Worf. ``I have had the opportunity, while the away team was
|
|
investigating the wreckage, to interpret the attacks which have been
|
|
made on us since entering the Neutral Zone.'' Worf pressed a few
|
|
buttons on the console in front of him and an exterior view of the
|
|
Enterprise appeared on the viewer, as he continued pinpoints in red
|
|
appeared on the image. ``The red pinpoints are where the attacks
|
|
seemed to be centered on the ship. There always seems to be the same
|
|
order to the attacks. The first targets are at the base of the saucer
|
|
connector, then an attack is made at the midsection of the underside
|
|
of the battle section. Finally, attacks are made at both the
|
|
matter/antimatter nacelles and the fore portion of the topside of the
|
|
battle section.''
|
|
|
|
Riker then spoke, ``That doesn't make sense. None of those targets,
|
|
aside from the matter/antimatter nacelles are particularly sensitive.
|
|
If the target is reached, we would only be inconvenienced, not
|
|
incapacitated.''
|
|
|
|
``No, Will, that's not it at all. Is it, Mr. Worf? You've seen what
|
|
the pattern is, haven't you?'' Picard calmly inquired.
|
|
|
|
Worf nodded crisply, ``Yes, Captain. If, instead of having the
|
|
Enterprise on the screen, we impose the image of a Ambassador class
|
|
vessel, the Galaxy class' predecessor, we get an entirely different
|
|
picture.'' As he spoke a smaller, but very similar ship took the
|
|
Enterprise's place on the viewscreen. ``Notice that now, the impact
|
|
points rest right where the shield generators are located on the
|
|
surface of the ship. The attack points are designed to penetrate the
|
|
shields and then destroy the generators so that the ship can then be
|
|
torn apart by their weapons.''
|
|
|
|
Troi then nodded her understanding, ``Much in the same way that they
|
|
have destroyed the Starbases along the Neutral Zone.''
|
|
|
|
``Yes, Counselor,'' Worf replied. ``Also note how this fits into the
|
|
time scale we have been considering. Twenty years ago, the Nebula
|
|
class starships were the flagships of the fleet. For those twenty
|
|
years, they reigned as the protectors of the border fringe against the
|
|
Ferengi, the Romulans, and the Klingons.''
|
|
|
|
``And during those twenty years, their weaknesses also became well
|
|
known,'' continued Riker. ``You have to admit it does all seem to
|
|
indicate that we are dealing with something that seems to have stepped
|
|
out of time.''
|
|
|
|
``Out of time and right onto our doorstep, Number One. The problem
|
|
now remains that even though we have an idea of where all this may
|
|
have come from, we still don't know who is behind all of it.''
|
|
|
|
``Sir,'' Worf looked up from his console on the conference table,
|
|
``Commander Kareel of the Falcon wishes to know our findings.''
|
|
|
|
Picard puffed out his cheeks and slowly blew out. ``Now comes the
|
|
hard part, seeing the Romulan reaction to all this Federation
|
|
technology. Well, let's not let on to more than we have to, shall we?
|
|
Mr. Worf, please put our ally on the viewscreen.'' At his command,
|
|
the viewscreen images changed yet again to the visage of Kareel.
|
|
``Commander, I understand you wish to know the findings of our away
|
|
team aboard the alien vessel.''
|
|
|
|
``That is correct, Captain. My people have been most anxious that you
|
|
might be withholding information from us. It has taken much to
|
|
dissuade these anxieties. I trust you have some news for us?''
|
|
|
|
Picard realized that Kareel was indicating that he was in trouble.
|
|
``He may be stretching his influence to the limit over there,'' Picard
|
|
thought. ``Let's hope he can hang on for a while longer.''
|
|
|
|
``Yes, Commander, I believe that we may have some revealing
|
|
information. But first, I would like to know if you have ever seen
|
|
anything like this?'' Picard held up to the viewscreen one of the
|
|
data cylinders recovered from the alien ship.
|
|
|
|
Kareel's eyes widened as he studied the image of cylinder. He asked
|
|
Picard to turn it around as he studied it, and then he raised his
|
|
eyebrow in a very Vulcan gesture. ``Yes, Captain, I believe I have.
|
|
If I am not mistaken, that is a data collection cylinder for a
|
|
navigation and tracking computer. They have not been used for years,
|
|
but in their day they were the most dense data storage we had.''
|
|
|
|
It was Picard's turn to look surprised, along with all his officers
|
|
clustered about the conference table. ``Commander, am I to understand
|
|
that this is a Romulan device?''
|
|
|
|
``Of course, Picard. That little cylinder in your hand contains
|
|
approximately 100 gigabytes of computer data. It hasn't been used for
|
|
about 15 years, since we have come up with more advanced molecular
|
|
methods for data storage. If you found that on board the enemy
|
|
vessel, then I fear that there is some Romulan influence involved. I
|
|
then find myself in a deeply embarrassing situation.''
|
|
|
|
``Commander, we shall deal with embarrassments later. There are
|
|
always enough of those to go around,'' Picard said expansively. ``Can
|
|
you read what is on this cylinder and others like it?''
|
|
|
|
``No, Captain. We don't currently have the equipment to do it.
|
|
However, my chief engineer probably can make up the specifications for
|
|
a reader. I believe your synthesization methods are more advanced
|
|
than ours. Shall I have my man send yours the plans in about an
|
|
hour?''
|
|
|
|
Picard nodded, ``An hour would be just fine, commander. With luck,
|
|
the information on that cylinder will tell us exactly where we need to
|
|
go to get to the bottom of all this.''
|
|
|
|
``Yes, Captain. That would be most welcome. I shall be talking with
|
|
you later. Kareel out.'' With that the viewscreen went blank.
|
|
|
|
Riker leaned toward Picard across the corner of the table, ``More and
|
|
more questions, Captain?''
|
|
|
|
``Yes, Number One. Let us hope that all these questions lead us to
|
|
some answers soon.''
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
------
|
|
|
|
Once La Forge had a chance to talk with the Romulan chief engineer,
|
|
Kafarth, it was a relatively simple matter to modify one of the
|
|
Enterprise's data entry consoles to accept the Romulan data cylinder,
|
|
or K'un'tung as they called it.
|
|
|
|
For the most part, the data retrieved was useless. Mostly routine
|
|
internal data collection from systems monitors. Although it did give
|
|
a good idea how long the ship had been in space, the data did not
|
|
indicate of where the ship had started its journey or how often it had
|
|
changed direction.
|
|
|
|
After several hours of pouring over the data, Geordi was beginning to
|
|
become frustrated enough to believe that quite possibly they had not
|
|
found the correct computer aboard the alien ship to give them the
|
|
information they needed. He then came across data that seemed to come
|
|
from the navigation computer. It seemed to have data on star
|
|
locations during the vessel's journey. Geordi called Data in to
|
|
confer on the data and then they went to Picard on the bridge.
|
|
|
|
``Captain, I believe that we have found the location of the marauder's
|
|
homeworld.'' La Forge began. ``Of course, it was on the tenth level
|
|
of the cylinder I looked at, but this data seems to have been relayed
|
|
from the ship's navigation computer.''
|
|
|
|
``We have cross referenced the star referents with our star charts for
|
|
this area and have decided upon a five cubic light-year segment of
|
|
space where it must have originated,'' continued Data. ``The only
|
|
difficulty is that there are no known stars or planets in that area.
|
|
Truly that whole segment is a black box as far as the Federation and
|
|
the Romulans are concerned. Neither side has explored that region of
|
|
the Neutral Zone.''
|
|
|
|
``The Zone was created about the time the two sides were beginning to
|
|
explore that area, and neither side felt it was worth it to incite war
|
|
with the other over potentially useless space,'' finished Geordi.
|
|
|
|
``Very good, gentlemen. Very good. Mr. Data, set a course for that
|
|
`black box' as you call it. Mr. Worf, open a channel to the Romulan
|
|
vessel.''
|
|
|
|
``Opening a channel now, sir. Hailing the Falcon .'' Worf paused as
|
|
he looked at the sensors, ``Sir! The Falcon has just raised her
|
|
shields and is charging her forward disruptor array.''
|
|
|
|
``Shields up, Mr. Worf. Sound red alert. Everyone to battle
|
|
stations. Number One, it looks like the game is up. Mr. Worf, hail
|
|
the Falcon again and demand an explanation.''
|
|
|
|
`` Falcon responding, sir,'' Worf reported from the tactical station.
|
|
``Putting it on the screen.''
|
|
|
|
An image of the Romulan commander's wife, T'fara, appeared on the
|
|
viewscreen. As it did, she spoke, ``Federation vessel, this is the
|
|
Falcon . I wish to report to you that Commander Kareel has been
|
|
charged with duplicity and treason to the Romulan Empire. He has been
|
|
imprisoned and I am now in charge. As commanding officer of the
|
|
Romulan war-bird Falcon , I charge you Captain Picard and your ship
|
|
the Enterprise of entering the Neutral Zone with intent to destroy a
|
|
secret Romulan project. You are ordered to surrender your ship or
|
|
face certain destruction.''
|
|
|
|
``Sub-commander T'fara, your husband was guilty of no treason nor
|
|
duplicity. He gave aid in finding the solution to a mutual problem
|
|
between Romulans and the Federation. You are stretching in trying to
|
|
claim those ships to be a Romulan project, when I know for a fact that
|
|
is quite impossible. I will not surrender my ship, and I will get to
|
|
the bottom of this matter, with your help or not.''
|
|
|
|
``Then you face the consequences, Captain.'' With that T'fara's image
|
|
was replaced by the sensor view of the Falcon discharging its
|
|
disruptor arrays at the Enterprise just before it disappeared behind
|
|
its cloaking device.
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER 10
|
|
----------
|
|
|
|
Lieutenant-Commander Charles Kiley Rigeur was not a happy man. Ten
|
|
days had passed since the Enterprise saucer section had docked with
|
|
the wrecked Starbase 57 and for ten days the sounds of tortured metal
|
|
had echoed through the hull of the saucer. It was starting to get not
|
|
only on his nerves, but also beginning to reduce the crew's morale.
|
|
Now, to top it all off, the damn labbie scientist Okawa was telling
|
|
him that the saucer section's impulse power units would not be able to
|
|
provide sufficient power to the polyfiber which now covered the
|
|
starbase. ``What I wouldn't give to be facing three or four Romulan
|
|
Birds of Prey right now, instead of these incessant problems,'' he
|
|
thought.
|
|
|
|
Okawa was finishing a long diatribe about why he needed more power to
|
|
be supplied to the polyfiber exoskeleton. ``Basically, Commander, my
|
|
original calculations on how much power needs to be supplied to all
|
|
that fiber were in error. There is a non-linear resistance term in
|
|
the power equation that is insignificant as long as you are dealing
|
|
with small fiber distances. As the distance increases, however, the
|
|
non-linear term dominates the equation. As I have done more tests in
|
|
the lab, it has become evident that with all those miles of fiber out
|
|
there we will need about half again as much power for the netting to
|
|
be an effective exoskeleton.''
|
|
|
|
As if to provide a counterpoint to Okawa's argument, the hull
|
|
resounded with a howling screech as parts of the starbase shell ground
|
|
against one another in ways they were never designed to do. It caused
|
|
Rigeur to grind his teeth as shivers ran down his spine. Would this
|
|
little man never get to the point?
|
|
|
|
``All right! What would you have me do, Doctor? The impulse power
|
|
unit can supply the fiber with no more power than you originally asked
|
|
for. Basic life support functions and positioning control of both the
|
|
saucer and the starbase are taking all the rest. Where do you expect
|
|
me to find the additional power?''
|
|
|
|
Okawa patiently waited through the commander's outburst. The Oriental
|
|
knew that what he had to say next would not be taken well by the
|
|
engineer, but there was no other way to solve the problem. ``There is
|
|
one other power source we can tap, Commander. Restart the starbase's
|
|
fusion generators. They can supply a surplus of power and we won't
|
|
have to burden the impulse power unit as much. The engineering
|
|
section of the starbase was not damaged in the attack and the
|
|
generators were working until we docked.''
|
|
|
|
Rigeur was about to object when Okawa held up his hand and proceeded,
|
|
``I know your reasons for shutting down the generators. Sensor
|
|
probing did show that the stem damage from losing the solar converter
|
|
was getting worse. If the cracks continued to grow down into the
|
|
engineering section, the generators could explode and not only destroy
|
|
the starbase but also the saucer section. Now that the fiber nets are
|
|
in place, however, they will take the strain off the stem and the
|
|
cracks should cease to grow. Of course, we will need the generators
|
|
on to enable this to happen.''
|
|
|
|
The Assistant-Chief Engineer now understood that Okawa had backed him
|
|
into this position. Now that his engineers had almost completed
|
|
wrapping the starbase in the polyfiber nets, he would be open to
|
|
criticism if he did not allow them to fulfill their purpose.
|
|
Especially, without at least trying the plan to see if it worked
|
|
first. He looked at the scientist with a renewed respect as he
|
|
realized that there was definitely more to this man than a labbie who
|
|
was isolated from all practical matters. ``All right, Okawa. I will
|
|
let you have those generators. On two conditions, however.''
|
|
|
|
``Name them, Commander. You are, after all, in charge here.''
|
|
|
|
``Sometimes I wonder, Doctor,'' replied Rigeur wryly. ``My first
|
|
condition is that I inspect those generators myself for damage before
|
|
we restart them. I will take Engineer Oslo from the starbase with me
|
|
on that inspection so I can hear his advice. Secondly, I will have
|
|
quarter-hourly sensor scans done of the stem from the moment those
|
|
generators are activated. At the first sign of uncontrollable stress
|
|
fractures spreading to the engineering section I will have the
|
|
generators shut off and the saucer section detached from the starbase.
|
|
My first responsibility is still to this ship, Doctor. Is that
|
|
understood?''
|
|
|
|
A somewhat subdued Okawa responded, ``Perfectly, Commander. I will
|
|
agree to your conditions. How soon can you get me those generators?''
|
|
|
|
Rigeur toggled the communications padd on the command chair and called
|
|
for Oslo to meet him at the docking port. He then turned to Okawa,
|
|
``Right now, Doctor. If the inspection goes well you can have the
|
|
generators as soon as the netting is complete.''
|
|
|
|
Okawa smiled, ``Thank you, Commander. The netting should be complete
|
|
in three hours.''
|
|
|
|
Rigeur stood and began heading for the turbolift, ``Then I should get
|
|
started, Doctor. I hope this plan of yours works. It would be a
|
|
shame for all this effort to have been wasted.''
|
|
|
|
Okawa followed him into the turbolift. ``Yes, Commander. It would be
|
|
a `shame', but the plan will not fail. I know it.''
|
|
|
|
The engineer nodded, he wished he could be so sure. He knew something
|
|
about stresses and strains and was still a little dubious about this
|
|
polyfiber being capable of taking the destructive forces off the
|
|
starbase shell. At any rate, it felt good to be doing some hands on
|
|
work instead of directing it all from the bridge. Even if it was only
|
|
for a few hours.
|
|
|
|
|
|
------
|
|
|
|
Beverly Crusher and her son, Wesley, were sitting in their quarters
|
|
eating dinner when the squealing stopped. It had become such a part
|
|
of every member of the ship's complement's lives that when it finally
|
|
ceased there was a noticeable lack of sound. It caused them both to
|
|
look up from the table at the walls.
|
|
|
|
``They've done it!'' Wesley said with a mouth full of mashed
|
|
potatoes. ``They've applied power to the polyfiber netting and it's
|
|
working, Mom!''
|
|
|
|
His mother looked at him and shook her head slightly, ``That's
|
|
wonderful, dear, now stop talking with your mouth full. I swear, you
|
|
know quantum mechanics inside and out, but your table manners are
|
|
atrocious.'' She loved her son, but there were times she wished that
|
|
she could understand some of the things he could. Perhaps like many
|
|
mothers before her, she understood that a particularly bright child
|
|
required somewhat specialized mothering. Wesley just happened to be
|
|
brighter than most of the above normal children aboard the Enterprise
|
|
, and secretly Beverly was very proud of that fact.
|
|
|
|
He looked at her with that look that said, `there you go treating me
|
|
like a child again', as he swallowed his food. ``Mom, now that the
|
|
netting is activated they are going to start work on the shell of the
|
|
starbase. It'll be an ideal opportunity for me to study first hand a
|
|
procedure that really has never been done on such a scale. Will you
|
|
let me go out to watch them as they do the construction?''
|
|
|
|
Beverly's eyes widened as her immediate impulse was to say absolutely
|
|
not. But when she saw her son's eyes pleading with her, she knew that
|
|
he had already won the battle. She would eventually give in as she
|
|
had done so many other times. Well, even if she couldn't win the
|
|
battle, she'd at least win a few concessions. ``Wesley, I know that
|
|
you feel you are ready to experience free fall from your rating in the
|
|
Vari-Gee chamber. How does Commander Rigeur feel about this? Have
|
|
you asked him?''
|
|
|
|
``Yes, Mom. He told me that he'd allow me to go out under his or
|
|
another senior engineer's supervision as long as you gave your
|
|
permission. He also had a few other restrictions,'' Wesley added as
|
|
he realized they could help him win his case, ``I must be tethered at
|
|
all times either to the polyfiber netting or to the supervising
|
|
engineer while I am out there. Also, I won't be allowed to do
|
|
anything more than observe the construction. As he said, `No backseat
|
|
engineering from the young ensign'.''
|
|
|
|
The doctor laughed at her son's imitation of the stern engineer.
|
|
``All right, Wesley. You've won. Try to stay out of trouble.''
|
|
|
|
``Thanks, Mom!'' Wesley got up to rush out of the room to get ready
|
|
when his mother called him back.
|
|
|
|
``First, you must finish your meal. No going out into the vacuum of
|
|
space without first filling the vacuum of your stomach.'' He looked
|
|
like he was going to argue the point when she pointed to his chair and
|
|
said, ``Now!''
|
|
|
|
|
|
------
|
|
|
|
Miriam Evans entered the lab she shared with Okawa while he was poring
|
|
over the latest stress probe reports. He had been waiting for her to
|
|
return from her tour of the core struts of the starbase. She had been
|
|
sent to take some measurements that the Enterprise's sensors could not
|
|
accurately make. Her numbers would provide valuable data to determine
|
|
how much time they had gained by stringing the netting. Okawa
|
|
noticed, however, that she seemed rather distant.
|
|
|
|
``Miriam, glad to see you are back. How did the core look?'' he
|
|
asked as she handed him the tricorder she had been using.
|
|
|
|
``Not too bad, Yasu. I saw no evidence of buckling on any of the main
|
|
struts.'' She pointed to the tricorder, ``That will show the
|
|
conclusive results, but if the bulk stress is so small that it only
|
|
shows up there, it shouldn't be a problem for weeks. By that time we
|
|
should have the shell finished.''
|
|
|
|
He looked at her as she wandered over to her work bench. He noticed
|
|
that she seemed somewhat tired, but wasn't everybody? What concerned
|
|
him more was the error she had made. He got up from his table and
|
|
crossed to her. ``Miriam, you know as well as I, that if there is any
|
|
buckling of the core supports the whole structure will be weakened no
|
|
matter what we do to the shell. The base will only tear itself apart
|
|
once the stabilization spin is applied.
|
|
|
|
``It's not like you to make a mistake like that.'' He put his hand on
|
|
her shoulder, a gesture he had made many times when he talked
|
|
non-professionally. ``You must be tired putting in all these hours.
|
|
Why don't you go try to get some rest or go down to the exercise hall
|
|
and run a few miles? I bet you haven't done that for a while.''
|
|
|
|
She turned around and gave him a look that he had never seen from her.
|
|
One which spoke volumes of anger. ``Why don't you stay out of my
|
|
personal life, Doctor! Just because I have to work with you doesn't
|
|
mean that you have any right to dictate what I do and don't do.''
|
|
|
|
Okawa moved away from her in distress. They had always talked about
|
|
personal matters and it had never bothered either of them. He did not
|
|
know what had come over her. He tried telling himself it was the
|
|
pressure that they had been under the past two weeks, but he couldn't
|
|
quite bring himself to believe that it could cause such a radical
|
|
personality change. He could think of nothing to say to her as she
|
|
stormed out of the lab.
|
|
|
|
Depressed and confused, the elderly scientist turned to the tricorder
|
|
on his bench. Something very definitely was strange here. The
|
|
initial deep sensor scans of the stem had shown that there was some
|
|
weakening of the core support struts, but now Miriam had said there
|
|
was none apparent. Ordinarily, he would put more faith in her
|
|
judgement than the results of a sensor scan, but not now. Not with
|
|
the way she was acting. It could have affected her observation
|
|
skills, whatever was bothering her.
|
|
|
|
He sighed heavily as he sat at his workstation and began the long
|
|
process of analyzing the tricorder data.
|
|
|
|
|
|
------
|
|
|
|
The space working suit continued to fascinate Wesley. The many
|
|
pockets on the outer layer to hold the anti-torque tools and the
|
|
helmet with the tricorder readouts built in was a marvel of necessity
|
|
being the mother of invention. He reflected how difficult it must
|
|
have been for the old space pioneers of a century ago to move around
|
|
in their bulky suits. The thinness of these suits was made possible
|
|
by a portable force field that protected the occupant from cosmic
|
|
radiation and foreign particles. The force field also served to
|
|
protect the suit from rupture, although this was a minimal concern
|
|
with the new composite fiber structure of the suit.
|
|
|
|
This was Wesley's third trip `outside' with Rigeur, and still he could
|
|
not help but gasp at the beauty of the raw cosmos as he stepped
|
|
outside the airlock on the saucer's underside. Wesley made his living
|
|
piloting the starship through those stars and saw them through the
|
|
main viewscreen of the bridge every day. But this experience compared
|
|
to that was like comparing watching a recorded play on the vidscreen
|
|
in his room to actually living a scene in the holodeck. Until
|
|
something was felt in three dimensions it would always be perceived as
|
|
two dimensional, regardless of what one knew about it intellectually.
|
|
|
|
Rigeur brought Wesley's attention back to the matter at hand by
|
|
snapping the tether line that linked the two of them. Wesley turned
|
|
to the direction the engineer was heading. `Beneath' them stretched
|
|
the starbase covered by the translucent netting. They had exited from
|
|
an airlock that was outside the circumference of the net on the saucer
|
|
section, so they could see the lattice of the net fall away over the
|
|
bulk of the living section of the starbase.
|
|
|
|
Rigeur grabbed one of the utility vehicles which had been docked
|
|
around the airlock. As soon as Wesley took the back seat they jetted
|
|
off along the netting toward the base's stem. The young helmsman
|
|
could see work crews gathered along the shell of the living section
|
|
and glimpsed occasional sparks of phaser welding units. The past days
|
|
had seen rapid progress as the null gravity engineers had removed the
|
|
most heavily damaged sections of the living quarters and put in
|
|
reinforcing struts linked to the core of the starbase. If Doctor
|
|
Okawa was right, they had only a matter of two or three weeks to get
|
|
the starbase into such a condition that it could support itself. That
|
|
was when the polyfiber would finally become useless.
|
|
|
|
They rode in silence to the area where the solar collector that had
|
|
been torn away had once been. This was the area which caused Okawa
|
|
and Rigeur the most worry, and so far the work here had gone very
|
|
slowly. This was due to the fact that most of the damage here had not
|
|
been done by enemy weapons fire, but by the physical act of the
|
|
collector breaking away. The collectors were fastened directly to the
|
|
core by long high tensile strength beams. They were also fastened to
|
|
beams that ran along the length of the stem, and here was where the
|
|
problem lay. The attacking vessels had concentrated on breaking away
|
|
the panel by severing the core connectors and for the most part they
|
|
had succeeded. Thus, the core had sustained only minor damage. The
|
|
most damage was on the surface beams which had not been severed by
|
|
weapons fire. As the collector tore away from its core connectors due
|
|
to the centrifugal force of the starbase's rotation, it bent and broke
|
|
the surface beams. In many places, the shell of the stem was broken
|
|
and striations had been found on the beams all along their length.
|
|
What made matters worse was that new damage was being found near the
|
|
engineering section. Rigeur hoped that could be stopped before
|
|
getting so bad that he had to shut down the starbase's fusion
|
|
reactors.
|
|
|
|
As Rigeur halted their vehicle, Wesley saw the senior starbase
|
|
engineer approach them. Over the past week, Oslo and Wesley had
|
|
become friendly and each had a respect of the other's knowledge and
|
|
intuition. Something which Wesley knew Rigeur did not share with him.
|
|
It sometimes took a long time for an adult to get over Wesley's age
|
|
and treat him with something approaching equality. He had gotten used
|
|
to it, sort of.
|
|
|
|
Oslo came to a stop near them. He moved by clambering like a monkey
|
|
along the polyfiber netting that covered the damaged stem. As he
|
|
spoke, his voice came through Wesley's communicator, ``Welcome
|
|
gentlemen, I hope you can give us some kind of help here. The fiber
|
|
had slowed the growth of the striations, but they have begun radiating
|
|
again.''
|
|
|
|
Rigeur grunted and said, ``Are they still propagating in the same
|
|
direction as before, or has that changed since the net has been
|
|
activated?''
|
|
|
|
``Funny you should say that, sir,'' Oslo made as if to scratch his
|
|
head and looked annoyed that he couldn't due to the helmet. ``They
|
|
have changed direction somewhat and not all are growing. Some are
|
|
just remaining stable. You must have an idea, asking such a
|
|
question.''
|
|
|
|
Rigeur shook his head in negation. ``Not my idea, Oslo, the young
|
|
ensign's here,'' he pointed at Wesley and indicated for him to give
|
|
voice his idea.
|
|
|
|
Wesley blushed slightly as he spoke up, ``Well, it's more of a theory
|
|
than anything else, sir.'' He paused as he reflected that Rigeur
|
|
might have more respect for him that he had previously thought. He
|
|
got some courage from that.
|
|
|
|
He continued, ``I think that the netting in this area may be
|
|
improperly laid for the stresses which are occurring here. Professor
|
|
Okawa is right about the solid forces that normally occur in this
|
|
region, but with the one solar collector gone and the other still
|
|
attached the forces are dramatically altered. That, coupled with the
|
|
random ruin of the lateral support beams along the stem is causing
|
|
somewhat abnormal aberrations in the forces along in this region.
|
|
Okawa's force diagrams aren't showing it because the aberrations are
|
|
not affecting the net. It is handling the forces it was placed to
|
|
handle. The stem's shell, however, is shifting underneath the
|
|
exoskeleton in this area. This is due to the connection points being
|
|
at each end of the stem and none really in the middle.''
|
|
|
|
``So, the change in direction of the striations is due to the
|
|
reduction in the force that the net is handling and the subsequent
|
|
prominence of the remaining force,'' Oslo stated.
|
|
|
|
Rigeur nodded and finished, ``Exactly. At least that's the
|
|
hypothesis.'' Rigeur twisted his face in distaste at the word. It
|
|
was a labbie word, not a techie word. This was a situation, however,
|
|
that both had to work together. ``What we need to do is fasten down a
|
|
subnet in this area, have its fibers run in the new direction of the
|
|
striations and then anchor it to the current netting. This should
|
|
stabilize the region.''
|
|
|
|
``Great, let's get to work,'' Oslo moved off to assemble a team to
|
|
help with the netting.
|
|
|
|
Wesley and Rigeur moved together to the edge of the hole and the
|
|
engineer began to make tricorder readings of the forces about the
|
|
wound in the starbase. He looked up at Wesley who was watching him.
|
|
``What are you standing around for? Let's get some readings. I think
|
|
you've gold-bricked enough out here. It's time I got some useful work
|
|
out of you.''
|
|
|
|
Wesley grinned and saluted, ``Yes, sir. Be happy to, sir!'' They
|
|
both settled down to work about the hole.
|
|
|
|
Hours passed as the group of engineers worked to fasten the netting.
|
|
It was not as easy a task as it had first seemed. Attaching the thin
|
|
fibers to the shell had been difficult enough when there was a rigid
|
|
stable point to connect it to. Now they were dealing with an already
|
|
brittle area that kept breaking away as the net was welded to its
|
|
surface. Once that task had been accomplished, they started to splice
|
|
it to the outer netting. This part went even more slowly than the
|
|
previous stage in order to reduce the possibility of damage to the
|
|
load bearing outer netting.
|
|
|
|
Wesley was beginning to tire. He was not used to such an extended
|
|
period in zero gravity, but he did not want to lower himself in
|
|
Rigeur's eyes by admitting he was tired.
|
|
|
|
A Lieutenant-Commander did not make it to his position by not knowing
|
|
the limitations of his men, and he was keeping an eye out for his
|
|
charge. As he saw Wesley slow down, he ordered him to tether himself
|
|
to the netting by the utility vehicle for some rest and to take in
|
|
some fluids from the dispenser on the vehicle. Wesley gratefully
|
|
accepted the offer.
|
|
|
|
As he sat next to the transport vehicle, Wesley observed the activity
|
|
around him. The splicing of the netting, he saw, was actually almost
|
|
complete. Fifteen of the engineers had spent the past several hours
|
|
on it; hopefully, they could all get some rest and get back to
|
|
reinforcing this area more permanently.
|
|
|
|
Something drew the young ensign's attention down the hole where the
|
|
solar collector had once been. He was sure that he had seen the spark
|
|
of a welder down there. Normally, that would not have been too
|
|
unusual except that Oslo had assembled all the available workers to
|
|
help with the netting. He figured that there were some pressing
|
|
repairs down near the core that needed to be worked on so that one
|
|
welder had been spared. Curiosity overcame Crusher and he untethered
|
|
himself and dove down the hole. He should be back before his absence
|
|
was noticed, he thought.
|
|
|
|
As Wesley pulled himself along one of radial support beams toward the
|
|
center of the stem he took in the extent of the damage here. It was
|
|
strange that the radial beams had no apparent damage beyond the
|
|
breakaway point, while the cylindrical and the lateral supports had
|
|
been twisted and broken. A lot of work would have to be done here.
|
|
But he knew that the starbase was safe as long as the four core
|
|
supports remained sound. They alone were holding the starbase
|
|
together and they had shown no signs of weakness.
|
|
|
|
As Wesley approached the welder he could begin to make out what the
|
|
person was working on. Something was very wrong here. The welder was
|
|
applying his beam to one of the junctions between a load bearing
|
|
radial beam and a core support. From the location of the phaser
|
|
contact, the welder was concentrating the arc on the core support more
|
|
than the radial beam. Any amount of welding would weaken the support
|
|
and endanger the entire base and the Enterprise's saucer section.
|
|
|
|
Wesley yelled out and launched himself at the welder. Surprised, the
|
|
welder turned about just as Wesley impacted with him. The two tumbled
|
|
along the airtight tube that the core supports surrounded. The welder
|
|
was proving to be too strong for the already fatigued Wesley to
|
|
handle.
|
|
|
|
He realized that he would have to find out the welder's identity and
|
|
the only way to do that was to reach the polarizing control for the
|
|
face mask of his opponent's suit. He could already feel himself
|
|
blacking out as the worker's hands tightened about his throat. With
|
|
one final burst of strength, Wesley grabbed the polarizer control and
|
|
twisted it hard to clear the face mask.
|
|
|
|
The ensign's eyes widened in surprised recognition as he saw who the
|
|
saboteur was. It was the last thing he saw before he blacked out.
|
|
|
|
|
|
------
|
|
|
|
The sickbay doors opened and Beverly Crusher rushed in crying out,
|
|
``Wesley!'' as she saw her son on the diagnostic table. Her
|
|
assistant, Doctor Mbawa, looked up and restrained her from going to
|
|
her son.
|
|
|
|
``Beverly, he's all right. He's still comatose, but there is no
|
|
damage to the brain that we can detect. I believe he'll be all
|
|
right,'' Mbawa cursed his lousy bedside manner not for the first time.
|
|
``He suffered some anoxia and a blow to the head, but I believe we got
|
|
to him before any permanent damage could be done. It's just a waiting
|
|
game now.
|
|
|
|
Crusher turned from Mbawa to Rigeur, who had brought her son to the
|
|
sick bay. ``What happened to my son, Commander?'' she demanded.
|
|
|
|
``I'm not sure, Doctor. We were working on the stem setting up a
|
|
netting to relieve some abnormal strains that are occurring down
|
|
there. I told him to take a rest. A few minutes later, I heard him
|
|
yell over my communicator. I turned and he had disappeared. By the
|
|
time we had gotten his location he was unconscious near the core of
|
|
the stem. Nearby there was a phaser welding unit which had obviously
|
|
been used to weaken one of the core supports.''
|
|
|
|
Rigeur paused to run his hand over his day's growth of beard, a
|
|
familiar sign of him being in thought for those who knew him. He
|
|
continued, ``Your son is a hero, Doctor Crusher. He stopped a
|
|
saboteur from destroying the starbase and possibly the saucer section.
|
|
|
|
``If you'll forgive me, I've got to make sure that the core support
|
|
isn't damaged beyond repair. I promise you, Doctor, I will find out
|
|
who did this to your son. They will pay for this. Let me know when
|
|
he comes to, I need to talk to him.'' With that Rigeur turned and
|
|
left.
|
|
|
|
Bev Crusher slumped in a chair next to the diagnostic table. She
|
|
looked at her son's sleeping body and put her head in her hands and
|
|
cried.
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER 11
|
|
----------
|
|
|
|
When the Falcon wavered and then disappeared, Picard had hastily
|
|
ordered Data to take the Enterprise into evasive action. Data's
|
|
lightning reflexes allowed him to maneuver the Enterprise so that the
|
|
disruptor fire from the Romulan ship glanced harmlessly off the
|
|
starboard shields, instead of impacting the ship head on.
|
|
|
|
``Mr. Worf, can you give me the location of the Falcon ?'' Picard
|
|
queried his tactical officer.
|
|
|
|
``No, sir,'' replied Worf. ``Their new shielding seems to evade our
|
|
traditional methods of piercing it. Gravitational fluctuations in
|
|
this area are scrambling the signal. We had them for a only few
|
|
seconds after they disappeared. From what I could make out then, they
|
|
seemed to retreat at warp speed.''
|
|
|
|
``They definitely seem to have solved that little power problem,
|
|
Captain,'' commented Riker.
|
|
|
|
``Yes, Number One, much to our detriment. Mr. Worf, stand down from
|
|
red alert. Stay at yellow alert and rotate battle stations. Maintain
|
|
defensive shielding. I do not believe, however, that they will attack
|
|
again.''
|
|
|
|
``You think that they will trail us to find out just what we have
|
|
discovered about our mutual enemy.'' Riker made more of a statement
|
|
than a question.
|
|
|
|
``I believe,'' began Picard, ``that T'fara and Bkandar think that this
|
|
truly is a Romulan battle experiment set up in the Neutral Zone. We
|
|
and, I believe, Kareel know better. Neither side is yet powerful
|
|
enough to bait the other one in this manner. Not even these probes
|
|
have proven themselves to be able to handle this ship or the Falcon .
|
|
No, this is not a Romulan trick.''
|
|
|
|
Picard then tapped his communicator padd, ``Mr. La Forge, can you give
|
|
us more precise coordinates on the location of the homeworld of that
|
|
Nimbus probe?''
|
|
|
|
``No, Captain. I cannot seem to get the information narrowed down any
|
|
farther. The data we have on that section of the Neutral Zone is just
|
|
too sketchy,'' replied the chief engineer over the comlink.
|
|
|
|
``Very well. Lieutenant Shriver,'' he addressed the helm officer,
|
|
``Please lay in a course for the estimated coordinates. If the
|
|
Romulans wish to follow us, let them. Mr. Worf, continue monitoring
|
|
the space behind us. Let's see if we can pick up our Romulan tail.
|
|
Engage Warp factor three.''
|
|
|
|
``Engaging, Captain. Setting to autohelm,'' called Shriver from her
|
|
console.
|
|
|
|
``Thank you, Lieutenant. Mr. Data, I have another little job for you.
|
|
Please consult the Starfleet records for a time period of twenty to
|
|
twenty-five years ago. Look for ships which were lost, or
|
|
mysteriously destroyed during that period around the Neutral Zone or
|
|
around your homeworld, Arcturus Five. Once you have gotten that list,
|
|
try to find a correlation between members of the crews on those ships
|
|
and the Nimbus project or the Hyperion channel project. Report to
|
|
Commander Riker your results.''
|
|
|
|
Picard then wearily rubbed his eyes and stood up. ``Number One, I am
|
|
going to try to get an hour or so of sleep, you have the conn until I
|
|
return.'' To the rest of the bridge crew, he announced, ``I highly
|
|
suggest that you all try to get in a few hours sleep while we travel
|
|
to our destination sector. We will all need to be at the top of our
|
|
performance when we get there. You may take that as an order.'' He
|
|
then disappeared behind the door of his ready room.
|
|
|
|
|
|
------
|
|
|
|
Picard was awakened by the sound of the door chime to the ready room.
|
|
He came alert instantly, something which long years as a Starfleet
|
|
officer had deeply ingrained within him. ``Come,'' he called as he
|
|
got to his feet and straightened his tunic.
|
|
|
|
Riker and Data walked in and something in Riker's eye drew Picard's
|
|
attention. ``Well, Mr. Data, have you found something useful?''
|
|
|
|
``I believe so, sir,'' began Data. ``The search was difficult at
|
|
first due to the laxness of my search parameters. `Mysterious
|
|
disappearances' is not a very well defined category in Starfleet
|
|
records. I found several hundred ships had disappeared or been
|
|
destroyed under mysterious circumstances during those years, ranging
|
|
from small pleasure craft to ships of the line. Once, however, I
|
|
restricted the search to those that might have contained personnel
|
|
that were involved with the Nimbus project, the number was
|
|
considerably reduced.''
|
|
|
|
Picard was well acquainted with Data's sometime annoying habit of
|
|
going the long way about of explaining his methodology, so he decided
|
|
to stop him. ``All right, Mr. Data, could you please just tell me
|
|
what you found?''
|
|
|
|
``Yes, sir,'' answered Data, somewhat chagrined. That is, Picard
|
|
thought, if he could be chagrined. ``There were two ships which fit
|
|
the profile. One, the Kirin , disappeared twenty-one years ago
|
|
approximately five light years from Arcturus Five. The Kirin was a
|
|
light cruiser which had been visiting Soongh's labs on that planet and
|
|
was heading for Earth when it disappeared. Its mission was to
|
|
communicate with Dr. Soongh about his artificial intelligence
|
|
projects.''
|
|
|
|
``This would have given them ample opportunity to gain access to the
|
|
records regarding the positronic brain. Soongh may even have given
|
|
them details to report to Starfleet,'' Riker supplied. ``The
|
|
connection to the Nimbus project is the first officer of the Kirin .
|
|
He was a lieutenant assigned to then Rear Admiral Esax, the head of
|
|
the Nimbus project.''
|
|
|
|
``I see.'' Picard nodded toward Data, ``and the second ship?''
|
|
|
|
Riker interjected before Data could respond, ``Here's where it gets
|
|
interesting, Captain.''
|
|
|
|
Data looked at the first officer and then his captain, ``Indeed, sir,
|
|
it does `get interesting' here.
|
|
|
|
``The second ship is the Dooley ,'' Data presented.
|
|
|
|
``The Dooley !'' Picard ejaculated. ``That ship is very well known to
|
|
me. It was captained by Esax for twelve years before it
|
|
disappeared.''
|
|
|
|
``Yes, Captain,'' agreed Data, who was incapable of showing excitement
|
|
at the find. ``The same Esax who was in charge of the Nimbus project.
|
|
He specifically requested the Dooley after the Nimbus project was
|
|
terminated. For two years they continued to patrol Federation space.
|
|
Then, almost twenty years ago, it disappeared along the Neutral Zone
|
|
border. The Federation has always maintained that the Dooley was
|
|
destroyed by a random Romulan attack across the neutral territory.
|
|
The mystery is that no evidence of the wreckage was ever discovered.
|
|
|
|
``Finally,'' Data said as he stared at Picard, ``the Dooley
|
|
disappeared two days after the Kirin did. That is about the same time
|
|
that it would take to travel at warp 6 from Arcturus 5 to the Neutral
|
|
Zone.''
|
|
|
|
The air in the ready room fell silent as Picard absorbed this
|
|
information. He stood up from his desk and walked to the wall view
|
|
screen which was showing the current starfield. He stood there and
|
|
pondered it for a minute. Then he shook his head.
|
|
|
|
``You are telling me that a man who dedicated his life for what the
|
|
Federation stood for became some kind of a traitor? Do you know what
|
|
his record was like?''
|
|
|
|
``Yes, sir. Shall I review it for you?'' responded Data.
|
|
|
|
``Of course you do, I'm sorry.'' Picard pointed to the starfield,
|
|
``Gentlemen, that man was making these stars safe for you and me for
|
|
years before we were born. He was something of a hero to me. You
|
|
could scarcely grow up in the Federation and not hear of the glorious
|
|
exploits of Captain Esax and the Dooley . The man has been written up
|
|
in textbooks in the academy. His treatise on the Romulan military
|
|
organization was required reading while I was there.''
|
|
|
|
``It still is, Captain,'' intoned Riker softly, ``but the connection
|
|
is still unavoidably there. He was one of the small intransigent
|
|
group which believed the Nimbus project should continue. He had
|
|
staked no small portion of his reputation on that project and it had
|
|
been labeled a failure. The computer records show that Esax had heard
|
|
about Dr. Noonian Soongh's success with the positronic brain. He
|
|
submitted a proposal which outlined using the new technology to solve
|
|
the problem of independent, unmanned operation. This proposal was
|
|
rejected rather brusquely by Starfleet. No explanation was given by
|
|
the review committee aside from insufficient cause.
|
|
|
|
``The rest is mostly conjecture. Spurned by the organization to which
|
|
he had dedicated his life, he decided to go on with the project
|
|
anyway. He got copies of the Nimbus plans, which was probably not too
|
|
difficult with his clearance. He arranged for his former subordinate
|
|
to get the designs of the positronic brain from Noonian Soongh.
|
|
Finally, he located a planet in the Neutral Zone where the Federation
|
|
would never dare search. Remember, the Dooley was on a mapping
|
|
mission of this area of space when it disappeared. That mission was
|
|
never continued on the basis of not being critical when tensions with
|
|
the Romulans decreased.''
|
|
|
|
``Yes. Yes. All very neat and tidy, Commander. But if it is true,
|
|
where did he get all the non-Federation technology? Why is he
|
|
destroying both Romulan and Federation outposts and ships? And where
|
|
is he getting the manufacturing capability, not to mention the weapons
|
|
beyond what Romulans and Starfleet have developed? No gentlemen,
|
|
there is more to this than just Admiral Frederick Esax wanting revenge
|
|
on the Federation.''
|
|
|
|
``Yes, sir,'' agreed Riker. ``Perhaps the answers will be found where
|
|
we are headed.''
|
|
|
|
``Perhaps, Will.'' Picard said, wearily, ``and perhaps we will finally
|
|
have more answers than questions for a change.
|
|
|
|
``Has Mr. Worf been able to locate the Falcon yet?'' Picard continued.
|
|
|
|
``No, sir,'' replied Riker. ``He has been searching with the advanced
|
|
neutrino spray methods which have proven successful on other Romulan
|
|
warbirds, but so far, no luck with this one.''
|
|
|
|
``I hope that our friend, Kareel, is working on something over
|
|
there,'' said Picard. ``It would be handy knowing that we didn't have
|
|
too many enemies in the Neutral Zone.''
|
|
|
|
``Aye, sir,'' said Riker, ``perhaps he has a few surprises of his
|
|
own.''
|
|
|
|
``Perhaps, perhaps. Mr. Data, what is our ETA?''
|
|
|
|
``Approximately three hours at our current speed, Captain,'' replied
|
|
Data.
|
|
|
|
``Very well, gentlemen, you may resume your posts.'' Picard sat back
|
|
at his desk and called back Data, ``Mr. Data, were you able to analyze
|
|
the in depth technical specifications of the hyperion drive?''
|
|
|
|
``No sir. All files on the exact specifics of the hyperion drive are
|
|
classified to an Orion clearance or higher. You are the only person
|
|
on board who can legally look at them.''
|
|
|
|
``Damn and blast security clearances!'' Picard spat out, ``Sometimes
|
|
I think that the only purpose of security is to keep those who need
|
|
information from getting it.'' He sat for a moment collecting his
|
|
thoughts and then looked up at his officers. ``Sorry gentlemen, I
|
|
believe that the tension is starting to wear on all of us. It seems
|
|
that until we reach our destination, I have a little work to do
|
|
analyzing the Nimbus data.''
|
|
|
|
He then turned to the console on his desk as Data and Riker left the
|
|
room.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
------
|
|
|
|
``Captain's Log Supplemental. We are nearing the location which
|
|
Lieutenant-Commander La Forge has indicated was the origin of the
|
|
so-called Nimbus probe which we boarded one day ago. In an effort to
|
|
find weaknesses in the probes I have been analyzing the classified
|
|
technical specifications of the hyperion channel drive. In accordance
|
|
with Starfleet Regulation 10429.B, I have waived the clearance
|
|
restrictions pertaining to this data in order to discuss findings with
|
|
my Chief Engineer. He and I believe that we can modify some of our
|
|
photon torpedoes to emit an extremely intense burst of Wrontian
|
|
radiation which could disrupt the hyperion energy channel. The only
|
|
problem is, do we have the time to make the modifications?
|
|
|
|
``Our arrival time is not thirty minutes away, and I do not believe
|
|
that we can afford to delay our approach. Not knowing what is
|
|
happening aboard the Falcon , I cannot assume that when we stop we
|
|
won't be attacked by them. I also must assume that whatever is
|
|
waiting for us in Sector 145.6 has already detected us and is ready.
|
|
That being the case, I have decided to give them as little time as
|
|
possible and am continuing our approach. Hopefully, Mr. La Forge can
|
|
get something together in time, but I am not hopeful.''
|
|
|
|
Picard sat back on the couch in his ready room and shook his head.
|
|
Too many questions were circling in his mind. The hyperion drive and
|
|
the positronic brains aboard the probes were explainable if Mr. Data's
|
|
conjectures were correct about Commodore Esax. But Esax was a great
|
|
man in history's assessment, without a blot on his record aside from a
|
|
tendency to get too enthusiastic in a specific project. But who could
|
|
blame him here? The hyperion drive was the most exciting project of
|
|
its day, and Esax had seen its potential. Could the abandoning of the
|
|
Nimbus project by Starfleet have discouraged him enough to turn on the
|
|
organization which had nurtured him? Could he have convinced the
|
|
entire crew of a starship to join him? Picard considered that this
|
|
indeed could have happened. Esax was an extremely charismatic man, as
|
|
Picard remembered from seeing lectures by him in the academy. In
|
|
fact, Picard had petitioned to be assigned to the Dooley just before
|
|
it had disappeared. Yes, he admitted, he had been very taken with
|
|
Esax as had many of his classmates.
|
|
|
|
Esax aside, there was also the question of Romulan technology aboard
|
|
the probes. The recorder was no doubt a small sample of what was
|
|
probably a considerable contribution. The probe's main weapon was
|
|
definitely not of Federation origin. The energy signature of the
|
|
weapon indicated a Romulan disruptor. This was no evidence of
|
|
complicity, however, as the weapon also had a distinct phaser
|
|
signature. There was the added complication that this weapon could
|
|
not have caused the widespread destruction of the planetary outposts.
|
|
If either side had that technology, it would have already been a
|
|
deciding factor in the balance of power along the Neutral Zone. This
|
|
brought up the possibility of yet another interested party. ``It's
|
|
getting a little crowded here,'' mused Picard.
|
|
|
|
The red alert klaxons broke Picard out of his reverie and he jumped
|
|
from his couch to the bridge door in one leap. As the door opened,
|
|
Riker turned and explained what was going on.
|
|
|
|
``Captain, we have just entered sector 145.6. Long range sensors are
|
|
picking up six of the Nimbus class probes coming from a K class star
|
|
system located in the thirteenth quadrant. They seem to be on a
|
|
course to intercept in ten minutes.''
|
|
|
|
``Very well, Number One. Helm, plot a hyperbolic intercept course to
|
|
close with those vessels. I want to be as close to that star system
|
|
as we can be. Engage when ready.'' Picard sat at the command chair
|
|
as the bridge crew went about the job of preparing for battle. He
|
|
then called down to engineering, ``Mr. La Forge, we are minutes from
|
|
battle. I need a status report.''
|
|
|
|
La Forge responded over the com, ``No progress with the modified
|
|
torpedoes. I have encountered some unexpected problems creating the
|
|
right frequency for the burst, but I'm working on it. Shields are
|
|
ready and are working at 100 efficiency. The frequency timing
|
|
modifications should do the trick, if we can supply the shields with
|
|
the power that they need. Modifications made to the power shunts will
|
|
enable the shields to use whatever power we give them.''
|
|
|
|
``Very well, Mr. La Forge. Carry on. Estimate engagement in three
|
|
minutes.''
|
|
|
|
``Aye, sir, we'll be ready.''
|
|
|
|
Picard turned to the tactical console and his Klingon security chief.
|
|
``Mr. Worf, ready phasers and photon torpedoes for firing. Prepare to
|
|
lock on when we get within range, but fire only on my command.''
|
|
|
|
He then looked at Riker and and the counselor, who had just entered
|
|
the bridge and had sat next to Picard. ``I am open for some
|
|
suggestions as to how to engage these ships.''
|
|
|
|
To his surprise, Troi spoke first. ``There is nothing to indicate
|
|
that these ships will follow an attack pattern different from the
|
|
first ships. I am detecting no emotional flow from them, therefore no
|
|
immediate sentient ability to alter the attack. I would say that we
|
|
should assume they will use the same attack strategy and use that
|
|
against them.''
|
|
|
|
Riker nodded, ``Agreed, Captain. However, I believe that the strategy
|
|
will alter due to our proximity to their homeworld. If the battle is
|
|
being monitored, they will adjust the automated attack plan to
|
|
something more original. We must be ready for that.''
|
|
|
|
``Very well. Mr. Data, slow to impulse power. Align us for a frontal
|
|
attack. Mr. Worf, full shields up. Ready phasers to attack the
|
|
probes as they split to come along side. Assume that they will take
|
|
the same positions as on the previous attacks. The profile we are
|
|
presenting will give you the longest period to lock on and fire.
|
|
Shoot at the main engineering compartment between the engine
|
|
nacelles.''
|
|
|
|
``Aye, sir. Shields are up and phasers are ready to lock on.
|
|
Estimate probes to be in range in ten seconds,'' Worf replied.
|
|
|
|
Picard punched the time information into the command chair padd and
|
|
contemplated it when Worf indicated that the probes were now within
|
|
range. ``Very well, Mr. Worf. Lock phasers on first two targets and
|
|
prepare to fire on my mark.'' He continued to stare at the padd as
|
|
the seconds ticked by and the first probes began firing upon the
|
|
Enterprise's midsection, identically to the previous engagement.
|
|
``Fire phasers, now.''
|
|
|
|
Bright beams of energy emitted from the main phaser array atop the
|
|
saucer connection pod, spearing the shields of the two probes. Within
|
|
seconds the shields had collapsed and the two ships were reduced to
|
|
floating debris as their engines exploded more from their own suddenly
|
|
released energy than that of the Enterprise phasers.
|
|
|
|
Those seconds, however, had been enough time for the second pair of
|
|
ships to take up position aft of the Enterprise 's nacelles. As they
|
|
began firing, the Enterprise rocked slightly as the initial burst of
|
|
energy leaked through the shields before they could adjust to the new
|
|
frequency. Now the phaser banks located along the leading edges of
|
|
the nacelles came to life and fired upon the probes. As with the
|
|
first probes, these were soon destroyed under the intense energy of
|
|
the Enterprise's weapons.
|
|
|
|
As soon as these ships were destroyed, the final pair broke off their
|
|
approach and retreated toward their home planet at high warp speed.
|
|
Picard ordered pursuit and soon the Enterprise was close enough to
|
|
dispatch these ships in a similar manner to their predecessors. The
|
|
Enterprise then continued the approach to the star system.
|
|
|
|
As the starship came closer to the probes' homeworld, Worf announced
|
|
that sensors were picking up a fleet of ships around that planet, and
|
|
one larger vessel.
|
|
|
|
``Any identification on that vessel, Mr. Worf?'' Riker asked tensely.
|
|
|
|
``No, sir. We are still too far away for definite identification.
|
|
Parts of the attendant fleet are breaking away, though. We have ten
|
|
ships heading our way. Twenty others are remaining close to the
|
|
planet.''
|
|
|
|
``Well, we can't assume that the attack strategy will be the same this
|
|
time. They will probably have learned their lesson.'' Picard then
|
|
ordered Data to get the Enterprise in orbit around the fourth planet
|
|
of the star system, a gas giant with a large ring system which rivaled
|
|
Saturn's. ``If they are going to change their attack strategy, I want
|
|
to give them as few options as possible.''
|
|
|
|
Riker nodded and said for Troi's benefit, ``The planet and the ring
|
|
system will give us some protection from attack from those directions.
|
|
They will also give us a slight advantage in sensors, if they are
|
|
using twenty year old technology.''
|
|
|
|
``Exactly, Number One. Let us hope that their sensors are as limited
|
|
as I think.''
|
|
|
|
Data directed the Enterprise into an orbit which lay in one of the
|
|
gaps between the planetary rings. Soon the probes began to follow the
|
|
starship, but they maintained a distance just out of range of the
|
|
Enterprise's phasers. They then approached en masse at high speed and
|
|
fired simultaneously upon the warp engine nacelles of the Enterprise .
|
|
The probes continued to move toward and away from the Enterprise in a
|
|
highly coordinated and synchronized maneuver that kept them safe from
|
|
the starship's phasers. The shields flared ominously as they
|
|
attempted to compensate for the wide frequency ranges of energy that
|
|
they were forced to deal with. Although La Forge's newest creation
|
|
worked, there just wasn't enough power to stop all of the energy from
|
|
getting through.
|
|
|
|
``I cannot hit them!'' Worf expressed with frustration, ``They are
|
|
moving so fast that it is impossible to maintain a phaser lock.''
|
|
|
|
The ship then rocked violently as a particularly strong burst of
|
|
energy passed through the shields. La Forge's voice called through to
|
|
the bridge, ``Captain, I am losing the warp drive. They have targeted
|
|
the nacelles and the shields cannot stop all the power they are
|
|
throwing at us. I think I can deflect all the energy if I feed the
|
|
shields more power.''
|
|
|
|
Picard's mouth drew tight with a frustration that surpassed his
|
|
security chief's. ``Geordi, shut down the warp drive. Redirect all
|
|
power from the matter-antimatter reactor to the shields. Will this
|
|
provide enough power to stop them from damaging us?''
|
|
|
|
``Unknown at present, Captain. But that won't be the case for long.
|
|
I am redirecting now.'' Seconds later the Enterprise was rocked again
|
|
by the combined energy blast of the ten ships which darted about their
|
|
target.
|
|
|
|
Riker then reported from his station that the hull had been breached
|
|
about the starboard warp nacelle. ``Obviously, this is not enough
|
|
power to the shields,'' he concluded wryly.
|
|
|
|
Picard raised his eyebrow in Riker's direction, ``Save your wit for
|
|
later, Number One. Mr. La Forge, can you estimate power needed to
|
|
keep the Enterprise from further damage?''
|
|
|
|
``I'm trying, sir. Their energy seems to fluctuate with the frequency
|
|
that they use. In the combined attack, frequencies, and therefore
|
|
power, are hard to tie down. My estimate is that if we apply
|
|
everything we have to the shields, they will hold off the attacks.
|
|
And by everything, I mean weapons, unnecessary life support, the
|
|
works, Captain.''
|
|
|
|
``Understood, Mr. La Forge. Make it so. Mr. Worf, charge up all
|
|
photon torpedoes in the tubes to maximum and all the phaser arrays to
|
|
what they can hold, we'll have one shot with them, so let's not waste
|
|
it. Helm, get us to a stable orbit, we won't have power to change it
|
|
once we put the power to the shields.''
|
|
|
|
``Aye, sir,'' came the response from various sources. Once all his
|
|
officers had indicated their readiness, Picard addressed the crew.
|
|
``This is the Captain speaking. As you know we are currently involved
|
|
in a battle where our only recourse is to set up a good defense in
|
|
order to give us time to effect repairs to the warp drive. In order
|
|
to do this I have ordered all unnecessary life support systems to be
|
|
shut down. This means all Class Three deck areas will be completely
|
|
shut off and that all other decks will go to minimal lighting and no
|
|
artificial gravity. All hands whose battle stations are in Class
|
|
Three areas should report to group areas A and B and ready themselves
|
|
for zero gravity. All hands should take preventative space sickness
|
|
medications immediately. Zero gravity will go into effect in two
|
|
minutes, repeat zero gravity will go into effect in two minutes.
|
|
Captain out.''
|
|
|
|
With that he pressed the key sequence on his command chair padd
|
|
sounding the alert klaxons. Seconds later the distinctive triple
|
|
klaxon indicating impending null gravity sounded on all decks of the
|
|
ship.
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER 12
|
|
----------
|
|
|
|
The Enterprise lay dead amid the floating detritus of the ringed
|
|
planet. All exterior lights were dimmed and the characteristic blue
|
|
of the warp drive was now a dull grey as all power was rerouted to the
|
|
shields. An alert viewer would notice a faint glow about the ship
|
|
caused by those shields as myriads of small particles were annihilated
|
|
or deflected continuously.
|
|
|
|
When their continued attack had proven itself ineffective against the
|
|
increased shield strength of the Enterprise , the ten probes moved
|
|
away from the ship, awaiting reinforcements which were now en-route
|
|
from their homeworld.
|
|
|
|
As Picard stared at the circling probes, he was reminded of vultures
|
|
waiting to pounce on a dying prey. In this case, however, hawks would
|
|
be a more accurate analogy. That is, unless he could do something to
|
|
even the odds. Yes, perhaps the rabbit might just give the hawks a
|
|
bad case of indigestion.
|
|
|
|
Picard turned to Worf and Riker who were floating at the tactical
|
|
console. ``Gentlemen, it's time for us to do something rather than
|
|
wait for those ships out there to find the right combination which
|
|
will overload our shields. So far they haven't been able to penetrate
|
|
the shields since we increased the input energy, but with those
|
|
additional ships arriving they may just stumble upon it.''
|
|
|
|
Worf replied, ``Sir, they are out of phaser range. We have also seen
|
|
that photon torpedoes are almost ineffective against their superior
|
|
speed. It would seem that our options are severly limited,'' he
|
|
commented with a tone of anger more than anything else. ``Without
|
|
teeth, the tiger is defenseless against even the jackal.''
|
|
|
|
``Yes, Mr. Worf,'' Picard explained as he pushed himself away from the
|
|
chair, spun and rebounded off the ceiling toward the tactical console,
|
|
``but you should be thinking more of the cuna of Arianus Four. Like
|
|
the turtle of earth, he waits inside his shell while dangerous foes
|
|
are around. He also uses the shell as a place to wait until the right
|
|
moment to strike back at his attackers, when he can come out and
|
|
pounce on them unexpected.''
|
|
|
|
``So, our job is to wait in our shell? This is not the action of a
|
|
warrior, it goes against my grain.''
|
|
|
|
``No, Lieutenant,'' spoke up Riker grinning at Picard, understanding,
|
|
``What the captain is suggesting is that we plan and plot our way out
|
|
of our shell and while we do that see to it that the predator never
|
|
gets to the shell. The warp drive will not be down forever and when
|
|
we have it back, it will be time to strike.''
|
|
|
|
``Yes, Number One,'' Picard nodded. He turned his attention to the
|
|
Klingon, ``A warrior, Mr. Worf, is one who not only knows when to
|
|
fight, but when it is wise not to fight. When one cannot out-maneuver
|
|
his enemy, one should reconsider the fight.
|
|
|
|
``To those ends, we should look to reinforcing our defenses and
|
|
getting the warp drive fixed faster.'' Picard turned to Riker,
|
|
``Number One, Mr. La Forge will be short-handed on zero gravity
|
|
trained personnel due to us leaving many of them to help with the
|
|
starbase repairs. I believe that he would appreciate your help.
|
|
Meanwhile, Lieutenant Worf and I, with Data's help, will be
|
|
reinforcing our defenses using some very old ideas.''
|
|
|
|
``Aye, sir, I will be in engineering if you need me,'' Riker said as
|
|
he pushed his way to the turbolift doors.
|
|
|
|
Picard pushed his way after him and caught up to him as Riker was
|
|
stopping at the door. Picard then whispered under his breath to his
|
|
First Officer, ``Will, unless you would like someone to find you
|
|
splattered all over the walls of the turbolift, I suggest that you,
|
|
too, use a very old idea and take the jeffries tube.''
|
|
|
|
Riker reddened as he realized his mistake. He nodded and pushed off
|
|
toward the ready room. In front of that door was the access portal to
|
|
the jeffries engineering access tubes which ran throughout the ship
|
|
between decks. He entered the correct key sequence to open the portal
|
|
and pushed his way through the hole. As the portal closed, Riker could
|
|
hear Picard begin explaining to Worf and Data what he wanted from
|
|
them.
|
|
|
|
``Gentlemen, what we need to do is prevent those probes from closing
|
|
on us at will and striking in a concerted effort as they have been.
|
|
We need to give them something to think about. I propose that we use
|
|
the photon torpedoes in a passive proximity mine mode to do this.''
|
|
|
|
``I see,'' answered Worf who now understood Picard's plan. ``We will
|
|
fire our currently charged torpedoes into a defensive perimeter about
|
|
the Enterprise . The torpedoes will drift about the ship much like
|
|
the ring matter that is there now, so they will be difficult to pick
|
|
up with sensors. Then when one of those probes comes within the
|
|
passive sensor range, the torpedo will fire its engines, close with
|
|
the target and destroy it.'' Worf grinned an almost feral grin,
|
|
``Very elegant.''
|
|
|
|
Picard nodded, ``I rather thought so, Lieutenant. What we need to do
|
|
is calculate the optimal mine field distribution, so that we cover the
|
|
greatest number of access routes and the most likely.''
|
|
|
|
As they voiced their agreement Picard said, ``Let's get to work
|
|
then.''
|
|
|
|
|
|
------
|
|
|
|
Riker swore.
|
|
|
|
For the third time, he had misjudged a jump and had slammed into a
|
|
bulkhead. This time a particularly painful jolt to his collarbone
|
|
caused him to wonder if humanity should perhaps have stayed nicely
|
|
confined to the womb of Earth. Muttering, he righted himself and
|
|
pushed off, cautiously, to the next bulkhead.
|
|
|
|
Riker began to muse over the predicament in which he and his crewmates
|
|
found themselves. Probes which were apparently technology from two
|
|
decades ago were using unknown weaponry and positronic intelligence to
|
|
wreak havoc on both sides of the Neutral Zone. What's more, it seemed
|
|
that the known technology being used was not only from the Federation
|
|
but also Romulan. Not many people had access to sources of both
|
|
technologies. Ferengi? Perhaps, but where was the profit in
|
|
provoking a war that could potentially close down valuable trade
|
|
lanes, and probably bring many other peoples into the conflict? There
|
|
was no profit in death and the trader people of the Ferengi were
|
|
nothing if not profit driven.
|
|
|
|
What about Admiral Esax and the Dooley ? There was no question that
|
|
Esax had the access to the information needed to develop these probes.
|
|
The evidence Data had uncovered seemed very damning in pointing toward
|
|
Esax as the guilty party. The disappearance of the Dooley and the
|
|
Kirin so close in time seemed too coincidental. The proximity of the
|
|
Neutral Zone to the Dooley's last location only reinforced Riker's
|
|
suspicions. Riker was willing to bet that the mother ship in orbit
|
|
about the third planet was the Dooley . When the stakes were this
|
|
high he seldom made a bad bet.
|
|
|
|
He broke out of his musings in another collision with a badly placed
|
|
bulkhead. Rubbing his shoulder, Riker swore.
|
|
|
|
|
|
------
|
|
|
|
``Sir, Lieutenant Worf and I have mapped out a high probability
|
|
mine-field,'' Data reported from the operations console in front of
|
|
Picard.
|
|
|
|
``Likelihood of individual mine activation, Commander?''
|
|
|
|
``Initially, 78.3 percent, sir. As collisions take place, and as the
|
|
probes become aware of the danger, the likelihood will decrease
|
|
rapidly. Judging from how quickly these units have `learned' from
|
|
their mistakes, I would say that no more than four of the probes will
|
|
be destroyed by the mines.''
|
|
|
|
``Four is better than none, Mr. Data. Do you concur with Mr. Data's
|
|
assessment, Lieutenant?''
|
|
|
|
Worf responded from the rear of the battle bridge, ``Aye, sir. I do
|
|
not like the idea of launching all of our currently available
|
|
torpedoes, but I see no favorable alternative given our current
|
|
status. It will buy us some time to repair the engines and enable us
|
|
to fight a more honorable battle.''
|
|
|
|
Picard grunted his agreement but said, ``Honor in battle, Lieutenant,
|
|
is hard won. Often the most `honorable' wind up being on the losing
|
|
side to a less honorable opponent. Better to use the weapons one has
|
|
at one's disposal to one's greatest advantage and worry about honor
|
|
later.''
|
|
|
|
Worf considered this and nodded his understanding, but Picard could
|
|
tell that the warrior was still unswayed. ``Mr. Worf, in a battle,
|
|
only the living can speak of who was honorable and who wasn't. Think
|
|
about it.
|
|
|
|
``Meanwhile, gentlemen, we have a mine field to lay. Lieutenant,
|
|
prepare to launch the torpedoes. Initial impulse propulsion only. I
|
|
don't want those probes to be able to determine what we are doing.
|
|
Inertial braking on the torpedoes when position is met.'' Picard
|
|
keyed in a sequence on his padd which changed the main viewer to a
|
|
schematic of the Enterprise and the space around it, so he could watch
|
|
as the torpedoes drifted to position. ``Engage when ready.''
|
|
|
|
``Aye, sir,'' Worf replied. He and Data worked as a unit to program
|
|
the torpedoes for their individual flights. Once they left the launch
|
|
tubes there would be no way to correct the flight paths, at least not
|
|
without giving away the plan. Each tube was set to provide a
|
|
different inertial velocity to its torpedo. The idea was to enable the
|
|
torpedo to come to a halt with minimal effort.
|
|
|
|
Once the programs were laid in, Worf announced that he was beginning
|
|
the launch process. Over the next four minutes the plan would be at
|
|
its most vulnerable stage as the torpedoes left their tubes and
|
|
drifted through the ring matter to their stations. Each tube
|
|
catapulted a torpedo into space. Normally, upon exit of the launch
|
|
tube the torpedo would fire a modified short haul warp unit to deliver
|
|
it to target. Here the torpedoes were allowed to drift, slowly
|
|
rotating about their long axis. Arriving at its predetermined
|
|
position, the torpedo released a short burst of gas which brought it
|
|
to a halt. At this point each torpedo went independent, turning on
|
|
its passive sensors waiting for a shiplike object to come into range.
|
|
|
|
``Mine field is now in place, Captain,'' reported Data.
|
|
|
|
``All units reporting functional, sir. Functional and armed.'' Worf
|
|
said, emphasizing the latter.
|
|
|
|
Picard released a breath of air that he hadn't realized he had been
|
|
holding. ``Now we wait, gentlemen. From the looks of our sensors, it
|
|
won't be too long.''
|
|
|
|
The reinforcements had arrived; now the vultures numbered sixteen.
|
|
But the turtle's shell was somewhat thicker, and it had a bite.
|
|
Perhaps now porcupine better described the Enterprise and her quills
|
|
could kill with certain lethality.
|
|
|
|
|
|
------
|
|
|
|
Riker wrestled with the mechanism on the access hatch. It had become
|
|
stuck for some unknown reason, and he had not been able to secure his
|
|
body so that he didn't counterrotate from the direction he wanted to
|
|
turn the locking wheel.
|
|
|
|
By this time, he was aching from the effects of many collisions with
|
|
the walls of the jeffries tube and wanted to get into the relatively
|
|
open space of a corridor. He hoped that he would be in some kind of
|
|
shape to help out in engineering when he finally got there. ``If I
|
|
ever get there!'' he grunted out loud.
|
|
|
|
Finally the wheel started turning, after Riker had contorted his body
|
|
so that his feet were actually turning the wheel while he held on to
|
|
the nearest supports with his hands. He pushed it open and proceeded
|
|
to go through the hatch and found himself flat on the floor of the
|
|
corridor, so enthusiastic was his push off. He looked around to make
|
|
sure that no one had seen the Enterprise's second-in-command in such
|
|
an undignified situation and proceeded down the corridor.
|
|
|
|
Here there was more room to maneuver and he could make better time.
|
|
The greater room allowed for more time to anticipate when to spin to
|
|
get his feet into position to brake. As he passed some doors, he
|
|
could swear he heard the sounds of people with uncomfortable digestive
|
|
systems within. Riker shook his head, more zero-g training at the
|
|
academy should be required, he thought. Just then he caromed into the
|
|
ceiling of the corridor after a particularly errant push off.
|
|
Definitely more training, he ruefully thought.
|
|
|
|
|
|
------
|
|
|
|
``Captain, the probes have begun their attack,'' Worf reported from
|
|
the tactical console. The tone of his voice indicated the ire he felt
|
|
that his station was now largely a passive data collection point
|
|
rather than a place of action. In the space about the Enterprise ,
|
|
the action had already begun.
|
|
|
|
A torpedo on the perimeter of the mine-field scanned near space. It
|
|
noted and compared all objects in its range with those found in the
|
|
previous scan. It eliminated those objects which were following a
|
|
close to natural flight path. It also eliminated those objects which
|
|
were smaller than what it had been set to scan for. The remaining
|
|
objects it checked against the pattern which had recently been entered
|
|
into its matching program by Data. A possibility had been selected,
|
|
the third such trigger since the torpedo had been deployed. As with
|
|
the previous instances, the probe increased the scan rate and
|
|
decreased the scan area and tracked the object. Previously, the
|
|
intensified scanning resulted in a null target. This time was
|
|
different.
|
|
|
|
The torpedo confirmed its target and began to orient itself for the
|
|
attack run. The target had to be within a predefined region about the
|
|
torpedo in order for the drive to activate. Owing to the potential
|
|
speed of the probes, the only chance for a torpedo to hit was to take
|
|
the probe by surprise and not give it any time to react. As the lead
|
|
probe continued into the torpedo's region of influence, the unit
|
|
recalculated the target run hundreds of times using current data to
|
|
redefine the flight path. When all criteria were satisfied the
|
|
torpedo activated its propulsion unit.
|
|
|
|
The probe didn't have a chance.
|
|
|
|
As Picard watched the lead probe vaporize in a cloud of destruction,
|
|
he gave a nod of satisfaction. One down, fifteen to go. Two more
|
|
probes met similar fates before the rest backed away from the
|
|
Enterprise and its field of lethality.
|
|
|
|
``Well, Mr. Data, three out of four isn't bad. Too bad your figures
|
|
couldn't be more accurate.''
|
|
|
|
Data turned to Picard, ``Sir, my calculations were based purely on
|
|
statistical conjecture. Statistics are only as good as the data upon
|
|
which they are based. Obviously, there are factors which I failed to
|
|
take into account. Such as the proximity to an autonomous controlling
|
|
entity, or a faster positronic brain than we had surmised, or better
|
|
sensors, or ...''
|
|
|
|
Picard held up his hand, ``Point well taken, Mr. Data. The fact
|
|
remains that we have not bought ourselves much time.''
|
|
|
|
As if to emphasize the point, the probes regrouped and came at the
|
|
Enterprise in groups of three. This time at high enough speed to not
|
|
give the photon torpedoes time to lock on to their targets. This
|
|
caused several to mistakenly fire their propulsion units making them
|
|
easy targets for the probes had which remained stationary. To make
|
|
matters worse, the probes which came at the Enterprise began to score
|
|
brief hits on the shields. The shields held but, Picard wondered, for
|
|
how long?
|
|
|
|
``Sir, I am picking up a localized spatial disturbance between us and
|
|
the probes, it looks very similar to the effect we saw when the Falcon
|
|
originally appeared.'' Worf reported tensely from the tactical
|
|
station.
|
|
|
|
Picard's attention affixed to the viewer as the Falcon did indeed
|
|
coalesce into view when it dropped its cloaking device. The attacking
|
|
probes once again retreated at the sight of this new development, but
|
|
not before the Falcon had the chance to destroy two of them with quick
|
|
shots from the disruptors.
|
|
|
|
Worf got Picard's attention. ``The Falcon is hailing us, sir.
|
|
Commander Kareel wishes to talk with you.''
|
|
|
|
``Kareel, eh? Glad to see he managed to escape the brig. On the
|
|
screen, Lieutenant.''
|
|
|
|
The viewscreen came to life with the image of the Romulan Commander on
|
|
the bridge of his ship. Weapons burns could be seen on the walls and
|
|
equipment behind him. Kareel himself had obviously been in a battle
|
|
to regain control of his ship. New wounds showed on his face and
|
|
arms, but he still had the proud manner of his race and his position.
|
|
|
|
``Captain Picard, we meet again. Though I see that the conditions are
|
|
not nearly so favorable for you as they are for us. It is a shame
|
|
that your warp drive has been disabled by these probes. Just how long
|
|
do you think your shields will hold up? Four, maybe five hours? A
|
|
fairly inglorious end to the Federation flagship. A pity,'' Kareel
|
|
said without much pity in his voice.
|
|
|
|
Picard narrowed his eyes as he studied Kareel. He felt he knew this
|
|
man, and he knew that Kareel was posturing for his crew. Or was he?
|
|
Just how tenuous was his control of the Falcon ?
|
|
|
|
``What do you want, Kareel?'' Picard responded ``Do you want to
|
|
gloat? Do you want to finish the job that these probes started? A
|
|
job you couldn't do yourself? I should have known that this was all a
|
|
Romulan deception to get the Enterprise .'' Picard hoped he had
|
|
guessed right.
|
|
|
|
Kareel glared back at Picard, but as he nodded his head he said,
|
|
``Romulan deception, Picard? Nonsense. This is none of our doing.
|
|
Though I must say I admire what they have achieved. Proof that
|
|
Romulan technology is superior to that of the Federation.''
|
|
|
|
``What do you mean?''
|
|
|
|
``Surely you have figured it out by now, Captain. The weapons which
|
|
they are using are experimental phasing disruptors developed nearly
|
|
twenty years ago on Romulus. The project was scrapped, but obviously
|
|
someone should take a second look at it. Considering a Galaxy class
|
|
starship can be so easily disabled by them.
|
|
|
|
``But I have not come here to gloat. No. I have come to be your
|
|
savior.'' Kareel said expansively, ``I will disperse these insects
|
|
and save your miserable hides. The price, Picard, is the
|
|
unconditional surrender of your vessel to the Romulan Empire.
|
|
Considering your position, you are in no shape to bargain. You have
|
|
one minute to accept, or I leave you to these vermin and come back to
|
|
pick up the pieces later.''
|
|
|
|
With that the viewscreen blanked out. Picard floated dumbfounded in
|
|
front of it, while Worf let out a low growl and hit his console so
|
|
hard that he rebounded off it and into the ceiling.
|
|
|
|
``Mr. Worf, if you don't gain some self control you will bring injury
|
|
to yourself and may find yourself confined to quarters,'' Picard
|
|
reprimanded his volatile security chief. ``Counselor, is he
|
|
bluffing?''
|
|
|
|
``It is difficult to tell, Captain. If he still intends on defecting,
|
|
he must put on a show for his crew and it must be believable even to
|
|
minor telepaths, such as the Romulans. He is holding back something
|
|
and he is also feeling some grief, perhaps at what had to be done to
|
|
regain his ship.''
|
|
|
|
``Yes, his wife would have had to be killed. It is the Romulan way.
|
|
Bluff or not, we have no choice. We'll deal with the decision later,
|
|
he may not have the power to enforce a surrender after he deals with
|
|
those probes. Mr. Worf, hail the Romulan vessel.''
|
|
|
|
Kareel's tired face filled the viewscreen once again, ``What is your
|
|
decision, Picard? To die here now or to perhaps die later?''
|
|
|
|
``I prefer not to think of it in those terms, Kareel. I accept your
|
|
terms, under the condition that no harm come to my crew. My ship's
|
|
actions are my responsibility and as such, I am to be held
|
|
accountable, not them.''
|
|
|
|
``I did say, `unconditional', did I not, Captain?'' Kareel replied
|
|
sardonically. ``But we Romulans are humanitarians. I accept your
|
|
condition. Prepare to drop your shields in order to be boarded,
|
|
Enterprise .''
|
|
|
|
Worf began to growl. Picard motioned for him to cease. ``Commander,
|
|
is boarding really necessary? As you have said, we are hardly going
|
|
anywhere.''
|
|
|
|
``Nonetheless, Captain. I want to be sure you keep your part of the
|
|
agreement. Drop your shields and prepare to receive guests at your
|
|
coordinates. Kareel out.''
|
|
|
|
Picard stared at the image of the Falcon which was now in the viewer.
|
|
Could he have been wrong? Could Kareel have been acting all the
|
|
while? Had he just handed his ship over to the enemy? Was all of
|
|
this indeed a Romulan farce set up just to capture the Enterprise ?
|
|
|
|
Troi interrupted his thoughts, ``Captain, I sense that Kareel very
|
|
urgently wants that boarding party on the Enterprise . He became very
|
|
agitated when you suggested he not send it. He is definitely hiding
|
|
something, but I think more from his crew than us.''
|
|
|
|
Picard considered this, he had trusted this woman's feelings
|
|
implicitly in the past and she was seldom wrong. He hoped that she
|
|
wasn't mistaken here. ``Mr. Data, lower the shields. Mr. Worf,
|
|
prepare to defend the bridge from hostile boarding party.''
|
|
|
|
Worf moved to an advantageous position and drew his phaser. As Data
|
|
lowered the shields, the low hum of a transporter effect filled the
|
|
silence of the battle bridge.
|
|
|
|
|
|
------
|
|
|
|
Riker had finally made it to the Engineering deck. Covered in
|
|
bruises, he swore he'd get back at Picard for sending him down here.
|
|
What kind of help could he offer in his condition? He hoped Geordi
|
|
wasn't in too desperate need of hands. His were all raw from grabbing
|
|
and pushing off from supports.
|
|
|
|
He pushed off for the last time and righted himself in front of the
|
|
doors to main engineering. He entered the admission sequence on the
|
|
padd by the door. Turning to enter the heart of the ship, he was
|
|
shocked to be greeted by the smiling face of a Romulan in full battle
|
|
outfit.
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER 13
|
|
----------
|
|
|
|
Riker momentarily stared in open astonishment at the Romulan in front
|
|
of him. He reflexively reached for his phaser and grasped at nothing
|
|
but air. One didn't tend to go around one's own ship armed. Not
|
|
seeing any other recourse, he launched himself at the midsection of
|
|
the Romulan officer.
|
|
|
|
The combined momentum of the two caused them to fly across the
|
|
engineering deck. Geordi La Forge noticed what was happening and
|
|
yelled to Riker, ``Commander, no! Wait. It's all right.''
|
|
|
|
Riker didn't know what La Forge was talking about, but figured he'd
|
|
better try to stop his and the Romulan's progress and find out. He
|
|
managed to spin the two of them around so that his back was facing the
|
|
direction they were drifting. Pushing the surprised Romulan away from
|
|
him, he was able to stop the Romulan's momentum. Unfortunately, this
|
|
meant that once again, Riker had the velocity he had launched himself
|
|
off with, and he was now racing backwards toward the matter-antimatter
|
|
intermix chamber. He curled into a ball and spun himself around just
|
|
in time to reach out to the railing surrounding the chamber and grab
|
|
ahold of it to stop his momentum.
|
|
|
|
Rubbing his already painful shoulder, now made more painful by the
|
|
forces which had just acted through it, he pushed himself toward the
|
|
Chief Engineer who was assisting the Romulan officer. ``Commander, do
|
|
you mind telling me what the hell is going on here?'' Riker asked of
|
|
La Forge.
|
|
|
|
``Obviously the Captain hasn't had a chance to explain,'' Geordi
|
|
replied. ``We were under attack from those probes, and they were
|
|
beginning to get the hang of how to get around the torpedo mine field
|
|
we had set up for them. Once they had figured that out, they were
|
|
coming at us and testing the strength of the shields. Right about the
|
|
time when the probes were coming in groups for combined assaults, the
|
|
Falcon appeared and interposed itself between us and them. From what
|
|
I understand, the Romulan commander demanded our unconditional
|
|
surrender in exchange for protection from the probes.''
|
|
|
|
``What!'' exclaimed Riker. ``The captain refused, of course.''
|
|
|
|
``On the contrary, Commander,'' the Romulan spoke to Riker for the
|
|
first time. ``Your Captain had very little choice in the matter. As
|
|
a result of the surrender of the Enterprise , my commander sent over a
|
|
boarding party to your bridge. Me.''
|
|
|
|
``You? You're it?''
|
|
|
|
``Yes, Commander, I am it. You see, I am Sub-Commander Kafarth, Chief
|
|
Engineer of the Romulan warbird Falcon . I am also now a defector to
|
|
the Federation.''
|
|
|
|
Riker shook his head at all this, ``Can you perhaps start at the
|
|
beginning?''
|
|
|
|
``There is no time, Commander. Let me summarize quickly. Kareel and
|
|
myself have served together now for almost twenty years. The decision
|
|
to defect was a mutual one, based on what we knew the Empire's purpose
|
|
for the Falcon is. One which your captain has already surmised. When
|
|
Kareel was thrown in the brig by his wife and the political officer, I
|
|
released him. Together we convinced the crew that T'fara's act had
|
|
been mutinous. Not two hours ago, we managed to regain control of the
|
|
Falcon . Unfortunately, Kareel's final act in regaining control was
|
|
to kill T'fara.'' Kafarth shook his head sadly, ``He did love that
|
|
woman, I am sorry that it had to come to this.''
|
|
|
|
``Why was it necessary to kill her?'' asked Riker.
|
|
|
|
``Because, Commander, in the Empire, succession is brought about by
|
|
killing your superior in order to make sure they don't try to come
|
|
back and depose you later. This is something which T'fara forgot.
|
|
|
|
``In any event,'' Kafarth continued, ``Kareel could not run to help
|
|
the Enterprise even though he knew your plight was very real. The
|
|
crew was already sensitized to the issue of aiding a Federation
|
|
vessel. The only way he could do it and still retain the faith of the
|
|
crew was to demand a surrender. The final convincing required sending
|
|
a boarding party. Kareel decided that it should be one that could be
|
|
helpful in getting the Enterprise functional again. So he sent me and
|
|
here I am.''
|
|
|
|
``Won't the remainder of the crew get suspicious when they find out
|
|
that the `boarding party' was a party of one?''
|
|
|
|
``Compartmentalization of a Romulan vessel is very great, Commander.
|
|
Communication, after all, is power. The weak stay weak by not knowing
|
|
as much as the strong. It will take a very long time for the crew to
|
|
even suspect that the boarding party was not what it seemed. In
|
|
addition, the crew will be very busy fighting those probes for the
|
|
next several hours, at least. Also, I transported myself after having
|
|
killed our transporter chief under the pretense that he was involved
|
|
in the mutiny. A shame,'' he reflected, ``he was a good man.''
|
|
|
|
Geordi had heard all this already and had filled the time by scanning
|
|
some of the main engine readouts. He called the two officers over and
|
|
told them of his plans for further repairs. They all grabbed up tools
|
|
and began to float in the direction of the first problem.
|
|
|
|
Riker then asked of the Romulan, ``Something still puzzles me. You
|
|
said you transported to the bridge. It must have taken some time to
|
|
explain this to the captain. How did you get here ahead of me?''
|
|
|
|
The Romulan looked at Riker will raised eyebrows, ``Why, Captain
|
|
Picard had me transported down here by your own transporter.''
|
|
|
|
Riker paused with wide open eyes, ``Why didn't he think of that
|
|
before, so I wouldn't have had to go through all these bruises to get
|
|
here?'' he asked incredulously.
|
|
|
|
La Forge looked at him with a grin, ``With due respect, Commander, why
|
|
didn't you?''
|
|
|
|
|
|
------
|
|
|
|
Picard stared through the viewscreen at the battle which had been
|
|
raging for three hours now. The Falcon had successfully destroyed
|
|
eight of the twelve probes which had remained and had begun pursuing
|
|
them across the void to the probes' homeworld. He knew that there was
|
|
no way that the Falcon could win the battle there without the
|
|
Enterprise's help. To facilitate this end, he had ordered gravity
|
|
restored to the ship after the Romulans had driven the probes away
|
|
from the ring system. Now all the engineering crew could work
|
|
efficiently to get his ship battleworthy again. He knew that they
|
|
were working as quickly as they could and yet he itched to get back
|
|
into the game.
|
|
|
|
``Mr. La Forge, what is your estimated time of readiness?'' Picard
|
|
called to his chief engineer.
|
|
|
|
Geordi's voice came over the comlink, ``About thirty minutes less than
|
|
the last time you asked, Captain. I'm sorry but my crews are working
|
|
as fast as they can. We cannot give you warp drive for another ninety
|
|
minutes, with luck the modified torpedoes will be ready just before
|
|
then.''
|
|
|
|
``Very well, Mr. La Forge, try to trim as much time as you can. I
|
|
believe that the Falcon will be needing us before long. Picard out.''
|
|
|
|
Picard then swore to himself. It was very much unlike him to get
|
|
impatient and perturbed as he was now. He credited it more to wanting
|
|
to aid an ally rather than just wanting to get in the thick of a
|
|
battle which they could readily lose.
|
|
|
|
He got up and walked around the crowded confines of the battle bridge.
|
|
Data was efficiently going about his duties as the operations console.
|
|
Keeping the ship in its current orbit was becoming quite a task, even
|
|
for the capable android. Data had assured Picard, however, that the
|
|
orbit would be stable for at least the next ninety minutes.
|
|
|
|
The helmsman, a Lieutenant Shriver, was competently going about her
|
|
business of calculating and recalculating approaches to the third
|
|
planet, the probe's homeworld. Picard noted with satisfaction her
|
|
speed and diligence. If the going got tight, he wanted to be able to
|
|
count on everyone to perform their tasks at top performance.
|
|
|
|
Worf was busily tracking the Falcon's progress as well as checking the
|
|
weapons and shield status of the Enterprise . The tactical subsidiary
|
|
consoles were lit up with phaser and photon torpedo self tests. Worf
|
|
sat in front of them absorbed in the information. Picard knew that
|
|
his security chief did not like the fact that someone else was doing
|
|
his fighting for him, especially Romulans. Worf had a special reason
|
|
for disliking Romulans and Picard respected that. The captain also
|
|
knew that when called upon the Klingon would give the Enterprise the
|
|
edge in a close battle. There was nothing like the instinct of
|
|
millenia of intra- and inter-racial battle to make a great fighter,
|
|
and there was no question that Worf was a great fighter. If only,
|
|
Picard thought ruefully, he could be taught greater patience and tact.
|
|
It's a long voyage, Picard decided, and many things can be brought
|
|
about in a long voyage.
|
|
|
|
He came back around to his command chair and sat down. Troi was
|
|
sitting next to him with a small smile on her face. ``They are a good
|
|
crew, Captain. Nervous with anticipation perhaps, but aren't we all?''
|
|
|
|
Picard looked at her admiringly. Of all his officers, she was the
|
|
closest to his thoughts. Because she could read the crew's emotions,
|
|
she had proven invaluable to him. When the crew not at their peak due
|
|
to nerves or fear she had warned him and his command decisions had
|
|
been adjusted accordingly. She had never steered him wrong yet. Now,
|
|
in a battle situation, her job was simply to monitor crew performance.
|
|
It was not an exciting job when nothing was happening, nor was it
|
|
necessarily one which needed to be done from the bridge. Picard felt,
|
|
however, that with her special talents she could tell him just before
|
|
a bridge crew member snapped, and that might save the ship. She was
|
|
also invaluable when negotiations were being made, being able to
|
|
emotionally read an alien being whose facial expressions may not be
|
|
even remotely human. This was important information to him.
|
|
|
|
``Counselor,'' he said softly to the Betazoid, ``if someone were not
|
|
nervous, I would be worried about them. Keep an eye on them, long
|
|
waits like this can wear on a crew.''
|
|
|
|
She nodded and looked toward her own console. Picard smiled and then
|
|
turned to his command padd and began planning strategy.
|
|
|
|
|
|
------
|
|
|
|
The Falcon had obviously not been completely successful. Some of the
|
|
probes were now returning to the ringed planet and were beginning to
|
|
mass for an attack. Picard counted four probes on their way which
|
|
would be ready for an assault in five minutes.
|
|
|
|
``Geordi, I am going to need those engines very soon. What is your
|
|
status down there?''
|
|
|
|
La Forge's reply heartened Picard, ``The engines are going through
|
|
intermix warmup now, Captain. Normally it would take half an hour to
|
|
fully warm them up. I have modified the process by gradually flooding
|
|
the outer energy exchanger of the intermix chamber with fuel, and then
|
|
passing it through the anterior warp field generators. This way I can
|
|
effectively double the flow. It's not recommended procedure, but it
|
|
will make the warp drive ready in, uh, eight minutes.''
|
|
|
|
``I need it in four, Commander.''
|
|
|
|
``Doable, Captain, but dangerous. I'll see what I can do. La Forge
|
|
out.''
|
|
|
|
``They are beginning to gather, Captain,'' Data reported his sensor
|
|
readings. ``By my calculations the other two ships should be ready
|
|
for their attack run in three point five two minutes.''
|
|
|
|
``Very well, Commander. Helm, plot a course based on Mr. Data's
|
|
projections of where those ships will rendezvous. I want straight
|
|
line trajectories to four points around those ships, and trajectories
|
|
from point to point. Calculate most efficient of the trajectories and
|
|
lay it in.''
|
|
|
|
``Aye, sir.''
|
|
|
|
``Mr. Worf, once those calculations are in, I want you to lay in
|
|
targeting data on each ship from every point. Calculate which phaser
|
|
banks are optimum for each position to hit the closest ship. There
|
|
will not be time to realign the phaser arrays from each point, so use
|
|
only the ones which are the optimum.''
|
|
|
|
``Sir, the phasers can realign in milliseconds, targeting data can be
|
|
laid in to use the same arrays if necessary.''
|
|
|
|
``No, Lieutenant, not this time. I am counting on the sensor
|
|
technology of those probes to be twenty years behind the times. I am
|
|
also banking on whoever is controlling those probes never having heard
|
|
of the Stargazer or the Picard Maneuver. The Enterprise is somewhat
|
|
superior to the Stargazer in her warp drive, I am going to use that to
|
|
our advantage. However, by my calculations, at warp nine there will
|
|
be a matter of nanoseconds between each stopping point of the
|
|
tetrahedron. The sensors of the probes should not be able to track us
|
|
and it will appear that we are still here and at the four points
|
|
around them at the same time. By the time they can regain a lock on
|
|
us, I want them all heavily damaged or destroyed.''
|
|
|
|
``Aye, sir. Beginning to calculate targeting data.''
|
|
|
|
``Very well, one minute to attack.''
|
|
|
|
Riker came through the turbolift doors and sat down by Picard. He
|
|
reported that engineering had completed the modification of two
|
|
torpedoes to nullify the Hyperion drive and was taking them to be
|
|
loaded now. Picard explained his plan of attack and Riker agreed with
|
|
taking the chance that the probe's sensors were old technology and
|
|
would not be able to track the Enterprise . He then set up his
|
|
console to monitor ship's performance and damage.
|
|
|
|
``Sir, the probes have gathered and are assembling for their attack
|
|
run.''
|
|
|
|
``Acknowledged, Mr. Data. Mr. La Forge, are the engines ready?''
|
|
|
|
``As ready as they will ever be, Captain. I can give you whatever you
|
|
need.''
|
|
|
|
``Very good, prepare for emergency acceleration to warp nine. Mr.
|
|
Data, we'll need precise bursts of power to get us to those points.''
|
|
|
|
``Agreed sir, I have calculated the power needed down to six
|
|
significant figures, it is possible that I am in error, but...''
|
|
|
|
``But we have no time for error checking,'' Picard finished. ``Very
|
|
well, Mr. Worf, lay in your targeting information based on current
|
|
position of those probes. Set all phaser emplacements to key off of
|
|
Mr. Data's console. Lieutenant Shriver, transfer helm control to
|
|
Commander Data.''
|
|
|
|
All positions indicated their readiness. Picard gave the attack
|
|
order. With that order, the idling warp drive flared into full power.
|
|
The Enterprise was flung to four points in a rough tetrahedron about
|
|
the gathered probes. From each point a separate phaser array on the
|
|
Enterprise fired upon a probe. Each combined blast from the phasers
|
|
met the minimal shielding on the probes and, after a short interaction
|
|
interval, passed through the shielding and tore through the hulls of
|
|
the probes. When the tetrahedron was complete the Enterprise backed
|
|
away from the sight of the destruction and halted.
|
|
|
|
The sight that met Picard's eyes was one of total decimation. The
|
|
lack of strong shields on the probes was their downfall. They relied
|
|
upon their speed for protection and when that speed was nullified the
|
|
probes were helpless. There had once been four deadly vessels in that
|
|
area of space, now there was nothing but debris and a growing
|
|
fireball.
|
|
|
|
Picard nodded with satisfaction and ordered, ``Lay in a course for the
|
|
Falcon , let's see if we can't help them out a little. Engage maximum
|
|
sublight.''
|
|
|
|
|
|
------
|
|
|
|
The Falcon was located midway between the two planets. Picard needed
|
|
to save the warp drive while it recuperated from the emergency
|
|
acceleration, and thus it took several minutes for the Enterprise to
|
|
cross the distance between the ships. As the Federation vessel
|
|
approached, the bridge crew could see that they were just in time.
|
|
Currently fifteen of the probes were harassing the Romulan ship and
|
|
appeared to be having the best of the battle. The Falcon was
|
|
obviously damaged in the outer hull and her shields were already
|
|
starting to fade.
|
|
|
|
Picard noted this grimly, but there was one piece of business which
|
|
had to be taken care of before the probes could be handled. As he
|
|
stood and walked toward the viewscreen, he ordered Worf to hail the
|
|
Romulan ship.
|
|
|
|
Kareel's visage once again flashed up on the main viewer of the battle
|
|
bridge. He nodded at Picard, ``So, Picard, I see your crew has
|
|
finally been able to get that ship of yours spaceworthy again.'' The
|
|
Romulan's face, however, did not reflect the implied arrogance of the
|
|
statement.
|
|
|
|
``Strong words for someone in the situation you find yourself in,
|
|
Kareel,'' Picard replied. He then looked down at Data's console, ``My
|
|
sensors show that your warp drive is leaking coolant, your main
|
|
deflector shields are at half power, and you have sustained severe
|
|
damage to your secondary hull. Not exactly a position of dominance.''
|
|
|
|
``No, Captain, it is not,'' Kareel agreed. He then straightened up,
|
|
``However, we have taken more than they. Sixteen ships have gone down
|
|
to the might of the Falcon , and more will fall before we fail.''
|
|
|
|
``Don't talk nonsense, Commander. Your ship cannot sustain any more
|
|
battle damage without enduring severe systems failure. I, however, am
|
|
prepared to offer you a way out of your predicament.'' Picard
|
|
straightened his uniform, cleared his throat, and looked at the
|
|
Romulan with a triumphant gleam in his eyes, ``As a representative of
|
|
the United Federation of Planets I ask for the unconditional surrender
|
|
of the Romulan warbird Falcon . I assure you that all arrangements
|
|
will be made for the disposition of your crew, but that you,
|
|
Commander, will be made to stand trial for entering the Neutral Zone
|
|
and attempting to destroy a Federation vessel. In return, the
|
|
Enterprise will attempt to protect your ship from further harm against
|
|
a common enemy. The same terms, Commander, that you offered us. And,
|
|
I believe, your time has run out as to whether you will accept them.''
|
|
|
|
Kareel nodded grimly, and not without some amusement, thought Picard.
|
|
``You play the game well, Captain. Very well, you shall have our
|
|
surrender. May we both live long enough to see it through.''
|
|
|
|
``Agreed, Kareel.'' Picard closed the connection with the Romulan.
|
|
He was glad that that was over with, it gave Kareel the out he needed
|
|
to come over. If only they would both be there to play the end game.
|
|
|
|
``Mr. Worf, prepare one of Mr. La Forge's special torpedoes for
|
|
launch. Maximum burst, maximum energy. Target the center of that
|
|
group of ships. Signal the Falcon to move to local coordinates
|
|
35-35-2-10.''
|
|
|
|
``Torpedo is ready, sir, and the Falcon has begun to move out of the
|
|
field of combat. Some of the probes have begun to pursue.''
|
|
|
|
``Fire torpedo, Mr. Worf. Proximity detonation.''
|
|
|
|
The modified torpedo sped away from the Enterprise . When it reached
|
|
the center of the hoard of probes, it disappeared in a spark which
|
|
gradually expanded into a large blue fireball which continued to grow
|
|
and engulf the probes. After the image of the fireball had faded,
|
|
none of the probes were apparently damaged.
|
|
|
|
``Sir, no external damage on the probes detected,'' Worf reported.
|
|
|
|
Picard replied steadily, ``Check for hyperion radiation signatures.''
|
|
|
|
Worf checked his sensors, shook his head and rechecked. ``No hyperion
|
|
radiation signatures, sir. They are lying dead in space.''
|
|
|
|
``Very well, let's finish the job. Lieutenant Shriver, take us into
|
|
the pack. This is only a temporary effect so we'll have to be
|
|
quick.''
|
|
|
|
As the Enterprise moved into the mass of slowly tumbling ships, Picard
|
|
walked back to his command chair and said to his tactical officer with
|
|
a hardness in his eyes, ``Mr. Worf ... indulge yourself.''
|
|
|
|
Worf looked up with some surprise, but with mild satisfaction, ``With
|
|
pleasure, sir.''
|
|
|
|
With that the Enterprise , under the direction of her Klingon tactical
|
|
officer, proceeded to lay waste to the twenty ships floating
|
|
helplessly about it. Beams of energy flared out from all phaser
|
|
emplacements on the Enterprise's surface making the ship seem like a
|
|
spider in the midst of a great three dimensional web within whose
|
|
strands the probes were like dead flies. Because the intermix
|
|
conduits of the hyperion drive had been severed even the minimal
|
|
shielding which the probes normally had was not present. They did not
|
|
stand a chance as the phasers tore through their hulls, cleaving some
|
|
of the ships right through. The Enterprise's own shields flared
|
|
violently as they repulsed some of the wreckage from getting too
|
|
close. When it was over, the Federation vessel floated alone in a
|
|
Sargasso Sea of space.
|
|
|
|
Worf reported the completion of his task and Riker grimly concurred.
|
|
As Picard nodded and prepared to ask for a damage report, he was
|
|
interrupted by Data. ``Captain, the mother ship has left orbit about
|
|
the inner planet and is heading toward us on an interception course.
|
|
It is accompanied by the final eight probes. I calculate time of
|
|
arrival at T-minus two minutes.''
|
|
|
|
``Very well, Mr. Data. Mr. Worf, please inform the Falcon of these
|
|
developments.'' Picard wanted the Falcon out of the way for the next
|
|
confrontation. He knew that the Romulan ship would not survive any
|
|
kind of engagement with that ship.
|
|
|
|
``Sir, the Falcon has cloaked and they are not answering the hail.''
|
|
|
|
``I wouldn't have thought they had the power, Captain,'' Riker said
|
|
quietly to his superior.
|
|
|
|
``They don't, Number One. But more so, the cloaking device puts an
|
|
ungodly strain on the ship structure. It may tear them apart. I wish
|
|
I knew what he was up to.''
|
|
|
|
``It's probably not too hard to figure out, sir. Honor is at stake
|
|
now.''
|
|
|
|
Picard nodded his agreement and stared at the viewscreen. ``Mr. Data,
|
|
maximum magnification on the approaching ships. Let's see how
|
|
accurate our guesses were.''
|
|
|
|
The viewscreen image changed its orientation and the bridge crew could
|
|
now get a look at what was coming. A phalanx of eight probes led the
|
|
way for a ship which was about two-thirds the size of the whole
|
|
Enterprise , and yet it dwarfed the probes which accompanied it.
|
|
There was no question as to where the ship had originated.
|
|
|
|
``We are looking at a genuine ghost, Captain. A spectre out of our
|
|
past,'' Riker spoke in almost awed tones. ``The computer has verified
|
|
that it is the U.S.S. Dooley , lost in space twenty years ago under
|
|
the command of Admiral Frederick Esax.''
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER 14
|
|
----------
|
|
|
|
Assistant-Chief Engineer Rigeur walked with purpose along Deck 12 of
|
|
the Enterprise's saucer section. Twelve hours had passed since the
|
|
incident involving Wesley Crusher and he was no closer to discovering
|
|
the truth of the matter. The young ensign had been in a coma until a
|
|
few hours ago when the doctors brought him out of it and into a deep
|
|
sleep. Rigeur was satisfied that he would soon have the information
|
|
he needed, when Wesley finally woke up.
|
|
|
|
The past did not worry Rigeur as much as the future did. As long as
|
|
Wesley was unconscious, the assailant had had nothing to worry about.
|
|
No one could identify him. Now that the boy was coming around, the
|
|
possibility of identification was very real. Soon the saboteur's hand
|
|
would be forced, at least that was what Rigeur hoped. He had made
|
|
sure that the news of Wesley's recovery was well spread about the
|
|
ship. He knew that the next few hours would tell the story.
|
|
|
|
Rigeur had spent the hours preparing with Okawa a front line of
|
|
defense. A series of stress/strain sensors had been placed throughout
|
|
the starbase. The information gathered from the sensors would enable
|
|
them to see changes in the structural integrity of the base the
|
|
instant they happened. Okawa had been busy working on the analysis
|
|
software and had indicated that he was ready to demonstrate it.
|
|
|
|
As Rigeur entered the lab he was astounded at the disarray of
|
|
equipment strewn about the room. It had never been tidy, but this was
|
|
a disaster area. Rigeur shook his head and muttered, ``Labbies''. An
|
|
engineering lab would never be allowed to enter this state of chaos.
|
|
How could someone get any work done, he thought.
|
|
|
|
As he pushed his way about a particularly large piece of equipment he
|
|
spied the elderly Okawa in the far corner of the lab. He noted that
|
|
the scientist was definitely feeling the effects of the past days.
|
|
His small head had slumped even further into his hunched shoulders.
|
|
As Okawa turned to him Rigeur saw how the days had made the old man
|
|
look even more aged with dark circles forming under his eyes. His
|
|
normally happy face had turned slack with lack of sleep.
|
|
|
|
Okawa had had a look of expectancy in his eyes which faded away as he
|
|
saw that it was Rigeur who had entered. ``Oh, it is you. I had been
|
|
expecting Doctor Evans.''
|
|
|
|
``Sorry to disappoint you, Doctor,'' replied the engineer. ``I have
|
|
not seen her today.''
|
|
|
|
Okawa nodded, ``Nor have I, Commander. Miriam finished with the
|
|
installation of the sensors yesterday and I have not seen her since.
|
|
I expect that she is catching up on some sleep.''
|
|
|
|
``As should you, Doctor. If you don't mind my saying so, you look
|
|
like hell.''
|
|
|
|
Okawa smiled at Rigeur and for a moment the playful twinkle came back
|
|
to his eyes, ``When you're my age, Commander, you always look like
|
|
hell. It's because you are so near it. As for sleep,'' he hesitated.
|
|
The twinkle began to disappear as he continued, ``As for sleep, there
|
|
will be time enough for that when this is all over.''
|
|
|
|
As the engineer approached, he noticed what Okawa had been huddled
|
|
over. Rigeur now studied a holographic image of the joined starbase
|
|
and saucer section. Various colors ranging from blue on the saucer
|
|
section to green and yellow on the starbase played along the surface
|
|
of the projection as it rotated slowly above the projector. He
|
|
indicated the image as he said, ``I take it you have finished the
|
|
analysis software?''
|
|
|
|
Energy seemed to flow back into Okawa as he discussed the project
|
|
which he had been working on for the past thirty-six hours. ``Yes,
|
|
Commander, it is done. You are looking at a stress intensity image of
|
|
the starbase/saucer conglomerate. The computer is analysing in real
|
|
time the data from the sensors placed throughout the starbase and the
|
|
saucer. The blue color indicates what would be considered normal
|
|
levels of stress. The color changes from blue through green to yellow
|
|
and finally through orange into red are indicative of increasing
|
|
stresses in the structure of the conglomerate. Colors above yellow
|
|
are what must be avoided.''
|
|
|
|
He paused now and adjusted the controls of the holoviewer and the
|
|
image stopped rotating and the yellow areas began to pulsate. ``The
|
|
current yellow areas are locations which should be given immediate
|
|
attention. As you can see, most are located around the area where the
|
|
solar collector was torn off the starbase. There are already several
|
|
crews in the area tending this, are there not?''
|
|
|
|
Rigeur nodded in affirmation. He then pointed to a location on the
|
|
bulbous living section, ``What about this area? I believe it is
|
|
new.''
|
|
|
|
Okawa nodded and ordered the computer to magnify the area in question.
|
|
As this was done, the two noted that the stressed area was actually
|
|
filled with many tiny striations which were gradually growing. Rigeur
|
|
noted this and signalled via his communicator for a work group to head
|
|
to that location and investigate the damage. ``Well, Doctor, it looks
|
|
like your setup has already given us some valuable information. That
|
|
alone will save us a great deal of time.''
|
|
|
|
Okawa looked up from the image and said with heavy irony in his voice,
|
|
``Not bad for a `labbie', eh Commander?''
|
|
|
|
Rigeur cleared his throat with embarrassment and responded, ``Touche',
|
|
Doctor.'' Suddenly a loud howl emanated from the hull of the saucer
|
|
section. Rigeur looked around and shouted, ``What the devil . . .''
|
|
|
|
At the noise, Okawa had rivetted his attention on the holoviewer and
|
|
had adjusted the view. A violent orange section near the base of the
|
|
starbase stem immediately drew his attention. As he watched it began
|
|
to progress toward the red. ``Something is very wrong, Commander,''
|
|
he reported. ``A previously stable section near the starbase
|
|
engineering section has just undergone some kind of shock.''
|
|
|
|
The same thought ran through both of their minds as Rigeur spoke it
|
|
aloud as if to gain confidence in the thought, ``Our saboteur strikes,
|
|
Doctor. We both know that something like this cannot happen
|
|
spontaneously without outside impetus.'' As he said this, he began
|
|
heading for the door.
|
|
|
|
Okawa nodded as he got up to follow, ``Nature abhors a discontinuity,
|
|
Commander. Let's just hope we are not too late.''
|
|
|
|
Rigeur and Okawa ran to the turbolift. As the engineer held the lift
|
|
for the older man to arrive, he began sending orders to engineering
|
|
and security teams. He ordered the connection portal between the
|
|
saucer and the starbase to be guarded and sealed. He then redirected
|
|
all non-essential engineering crews to the afflicted area. He wanted
|
|
a report on the damage as soon as possible.
|
|
|
|
When the two arrived at the connection portal they each grabbed a
|
|
working suit. They were met by an already suited up security team.
|
|
The Lieutenant in charge of the group handed them both a phaser. When
|
|
Okawa began to protest, Rigeur silenced him. ``Doctor, the emergency
|
|
bulkheads closed immediately following the incident down there. We
|
|
must assume that whoever is responsible for this was caught in there.
|
|
You can rest assured that if they did not care about killing almost a
|
|
thousand people, they won't hesitate to kill you, too.''
|
|
|
|
Okawa acquiesced and took the phaser. Rigeur then addressed the
|
|
security team, ``I want that person alive, people. There are some
|
|
questions that need to be answered. Set your phasers for heavy
|
|
stun.''
|
|
|
|
The group then entered the turbolift which would take them down
|
|
through the core of the starbase. Okawa and Rigeur put on their suits
|
|
as the lift raced to the sight of the damage. As lift began to slow,
|
|
Rigeur raised the leader of the engineering inspection group. ``Oslo,
|
|
how does the damage look? What can we expect down there?''
|
|
|
|
A few seconds later, the starbase engineer responded, ``Commander, I
|
|
wish I could give you a clear idea of what has happened down here. It
|
|
looks like some kind of explosive charges were placed to take out two
|
|
of the four primary supports along the core. From the looks of the
|
|
damage, the charges were placed inside the airtight passage. So
|
|
there's definitely no air down there for you. As near as we can tell,
|
|
the remaining two supports are holding, but you can bet on them not
|
|
doing so forever. I've got crews working on reinforcing those
|
|
supports and we're still working on figuring out how to repair the
|
|
other two. We sure could use that professor of yours out here.''
|
|
|
|
``I've got him with me, Oslo. Doctor Okawa will give you his ideas
|
|
when he gets there. Meanwhile, try to get something rigged up to take
|
|
the strain off those supports. If we have to, we'll disengage the
|
|
saucer section, but let's see what we can do first.'' He saw Okawa's
|
|
look of surprise at this and nodded at the little man, ``Disengaging
|
|
the saucer section will mean disaster for the starbase. We've spent
|
|
too much time for that to happen. Rigeur out.''
|
|
|
|
The turbolift drew to a halt just above the emergency bulkhead which
|
|
had closed when the atmosphere had escaped through the damaged area.
|
|
One of the security personnel knelt down and opened the hatch on the
|
|
bottom of the lift. Once opened, the security team dropped down the
|
|
hatch making sure the area was clear before Rigeur and Okawa dropped
|
|
through.
|
|
|
|
Leaving the turbolift meant leaving gravity. Once through the hatch,
|
|
the bottom dropped out of Okawa's world. Although Okawa had been in
|
|
zero gravity many times he never liked the initial transition to it.
|
|
This time there was no difference as his stomach tried to orient
|
|
itself. He swallowed the extra saliva in his mouth several times and
|
|
forced himself to concentrate on stopping the world from spinning.
|
|
After a couple of minutes he was back under control.
|
|
|
|
By this time, the security team had opened the egress portal in the
|
|
bulkhead. They were now entering the small airlock by twos and from
|
|
there into the damaged section. Already, half of the group had gone
|
|
into the evacuated area.
|
|
|
|
``Back with us I see, Doctor. How are you doing?'' Rigeur inquired.
|
|
|
|
``As well as can be expected, Commander. The initial adjustment to
|
|
zero gravity is always the worst.'' Okawa then pushed his way to the
|
|
airlock and executed a somersault turn which made him wind up with his
|
|
feet toward the bulkhead. His legs stopped him right on the bulkhead
|
|
and he grabbed on to a support. ``Yes, I believe that I am all right
|
|
now.''
|
|
|
|
Rigeur shook his head with amazement, ``You surprise me, Doctor. I
|
|
had no idea that you were so good in zero gee.''
|
|
|
|
Okawa smiled and replied, ``When you design orbital and deep-space
|
|
structures, Commander, you soon find that the engineers who build them
|
|
don't respect you unless you can handle yourself out there in orbit
|
|
with them. I believe you are familiar with this?''
|
|
|
|
The engineer was glad that Okawa couldn't see him blushing. He
|
|
cleared his throat once again and said gruffly, ``I have experienced
|
|
the phenomena, yes.'' He then pushed his way to the airlock and
|
|
indicated for Okawa to enter. Once inside Rigeur softly said to the
|
|
elderly scientist, ``It could be dangerous down there, Okawa. Try to
|
|
stay behind the security guards. I wouldn't want you to get injured
|
|
unnecessarily.''
|
|
|
|
Okawa nodded. ``Thank you, Charles, I shall watch where I step. But
|
|
I am not afraid of death, I would just prefer that it wait a while.
|
|
At least until our job here is done.''
|
|
|
|
Just then the airlock finished cycling, so Rigeur didn't have a chance
|
|
to reply to this statement. As the doors slid open, they could see
|
|
down the lift tube which stretched before them. The explosion had
|
|
disrupted some of the power to this area so only emergency lights were
|
|
functioning. This caused deep shadows along the maintenance shelves
|
|
which ran the length of the tube. Too many places for someone to
|
|
hide, thought Rigeur grimly.
|
|
|
|
A pair of the security team had advanced the hundred meters down the
|
|
tube to the point of the explosion. They now reported the way was
|
|
clear for the scientist and engineer to come down. Rigeur told four
|
|
of the security team to remain at the portal to guard against a
|
|
possible escape by the saboteur. The remaining pair traversed the
|
|
lift tube with Okawa and the Engineering Chief. As they pulled their
|
|
way from handhold to handhold, the four kept warily looking around
|
|
them for any sign of the person who had done this. Their trip to the
|
|
damaged site was uneventful. By the time they reached the explosion
|
|
region, Okawa was paying more attention to his tricorder than to his
|
|
surroundings.
|
|
|
|
``This is not as bad as we first thought, Commander,'' Okawa began as
|
|
he adjusted his tricorder. The intact support struts are holding
|
|
together remarkably well. They were designed to handle the event of a
|
|
single strut failing. With two gone, they are a little more stressed
|
|
than I would like. However, we should have time to reinforce the area
|
|
and make repairs to the damaged supports.'' He continued to wander
|
|
down the tube and analysed his readings. ``There is some stress
|
|
fracturing along the damaged struts which will have to be repaired.
|
|
Perhaps it stretches their entire length. You'll have to get an
|
|
assessment team on it right away.''
|
|
|
|
Rigeur nodded and began to issue orders to the engineering crews
|
|
outside the lift tube. As he looked toward Okawa, he noticed movement
|
|
in one of the shadows behind the doctor. ``Okawa, behind you! Look
|
|
out!'' he shouted as he drew his phaser.
|
|
|
|
Out of instinct acquired in years of zero gravity construction, the
|
|
scientist launched himself away from the handhold he had been
|
|
grasping. With an agility that belied his age, he twisted himself
|
|
about in time to push away from the opposite wall and toward the
|
|
security team. Phaser fire lit up the tube as the shadowed figure
|
|
fired at the spot where Okawa had been and Rigeur fired back.
|
|
|
|
Once the scientist had reached the relative safety of the security
|
|
perimeter, the four guards began to approach the area from which the
|
|
phaser fire had come. They spread out and leapt from shadow to shadow
|
|
as they sought to gain an advantage over the attacker. Suddenly, the
|
|
saboteur launched himself from the shadows and fired upon the security
|
|
team. Taken by surprise, two of the team members were killed by the
|
|
lethal setting of the attacker's phaser. The two others fired back at
|
|
the work-suited figure without effect.
|
|
|
|
``Damn!'' Rigeur swore, ``Those phasers didn't even slow him down.''
|
|
He called to the two pinned down guards, ``Set your phasers to the
|
|
lowest lethal setting. From the looks of things, that'll just stun
|
|
him.''
|
|
|
|
Okawa had pulled his phaser from its holster and adjusted the power
|
|
setting. ``Well, it looks like my help will be needed, eh Charles?''
|
|
|
|
Rigeur nodded as he indicated for the two of them to retreat to the
|
|
next maintenance platform. At the same time he called for two of the
|
|
guards that had remained at the bulkhead to join them. The engineer
|
|
and the scientist positioned themselves on the platform just as the
|
|
saboteur once again launched an attack. One of the security men
|
|
managed to fire on the attacker, momentarily slowing the assailant
|
|
down. As soon as the figure recovered, he fired upon the security man
|
|
disabling him.
|
|
|
|
Rigeur noted the momentary hesitation in the figure and called to the
|
|
one remaining member of the security team and Okawa. ``A single
|
|
phaser at this setting doesn't seem to be enough to stop him. On my
|
|
order, I want all of us to fire upon the saboteur. Hopefully we can
|
|
disable him long enough to bind him.''
|
|
|
|
They did not have long to wait until the figure came out of hiding
|
|
once again, this time even closer to the two technical men. Rigeur
|
|
shouted, ``Now, Doctor, fire!''
|
|
|
|
Okawa hesitated just a second before he brought up his phaser to fire.
|
|
The three converging beams were joined by two others as the backup
|
|
security members arrived adding their support. The suited figure
|
|
writhed in the combined power of the phaser fire. Suddenly all
|
|
movement halted and Rigeur ordered a cease fire.
|
|
|
|
Rigeur and the security men approached the floating body which was now
|
|
bumping up against the wall. Okawa followed slowly as he attempted to
|
|
stop the nervous shaking that had suddenly overcome his body. When he
|
|
arrived, Rigeur had turned and said, ``No, Yasu. You do not need to
|
|
see this.''
|
|
|
|
``What do you mean I don't need to see this?'' he snapped. ``This
|
|
person has been trying to destroy all the work we've been doing. They
|
|
have been trying to destroy a starbase I helped design. I want to
|
|
know who it is.'' He finally pushed his way past the Chief Engineer
|
|
and moved close to the floating body. He noted that the atmosphere
|
|
field was still intact, so the person, if not killed by the phasers
|
|
would be alive for questioning. He moved close to the face mask and
|
|
realized what Rigeur had been trying to keep him from.
|
|
|
|
``It's Miriam!'' he exclaimed.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
------
|
|
|
|
Beverly Crusher looked down upon the supine figure of Miriam Evans on
|
|
the diagnostic table of sickbay. Normally she would not have allowed
|
|
the restraints to be used, but after she had done her initial medscan
|
|
she had insisted upon it. Now Yasu Okawa and Charles Rigeur had come
|
|
to find out the status of Crusher's patient. She was very uneasy
|
|
about what she had to tell them.
|
|
|
|
``All right, Doctor, can you tell me why a dedicated research
|
|
scientist like Evans here would all of a sudden become a killing
|
|
saboteur?'' Rigeur demanded of the Enterprise 's Chief Medical
|
|
Officer.
|
|
|
|
She could tell that Rigeur was at the end of his patience with a
|
|
situation that up to now had been out of his control. Too bad, she
|
|
thought. He's going to have some more unpleasantries in store for
|
|
him. ``What I have to tell you, gentlemen, is something which is very
|
|
disturbing.''
|
|
|
|
``The whole situation is `disturbing', Doctor,'' burst out Okawa.
|
|
``She cannot possibly have done all this.''
|
|
|
|
Crusher replied calmly, ``Rest assured, Yasu, she did not. Her body
|
|
did, but her mind was not responsible for what it did.''
|
|
|
|
``Doctor, I don't pretend to know much about medicine or psychology,
|
|
so don't throw the psychobabble around. What exactly is going on?''
|
|
Rigeur said impatiently.
|
|
|
|
She gave him a look which spoke volumes. Crusher then reached down
|
|
and lifted Evans' head exposing the back of the neck. Here she
|
|
revealed to her visitors a small conical gill which projected through
|
|
the skin and was currently wriggling like a worm.
|
|
|
|
Rigeur's eyes narrowed and he hissed, ``What the hell is that,
|
|
Doctor?''
|
|
|
|
``That, Commander, is something which I had hoped never to see
|
|
again.'' She then turned to a viewscreen on the wall and called up an
|
|
image of Evans' neck and head. It revealed a small scorpion shaped
|
|
creature which had wrapped its legs about her spinal column along the
|
|
neck. ``The only other time I have seen this creature was at Earth
|
|
two years ago. Several of these creatures had attacked the core of
|
|
Starfleet's Admiralty, including Gregory Quinn. They take over their
|
|
victim's body by tapping into the cerebral cortex at the brain stem.
|
|
Once this has been accomplished, the victim no longer has control over
|
|
their actions. The creature also apparently dampens the pain centers
|
|
of the brain so that the body can withstand much more punishment than
|
|
normal, as you experienced in the starbase. According to Captain
|
|
Picard's report on the incident at Starfleet Headquarters, the
|
|
creatures actually form a networked consciousness which centers about
|
|
a mother creature.''
|
|
|
|
Okawa saw immediately what this meant. ``You mean there are more of
|
|
them?'' he said anxiously.
|
|
|
|
Crusher shook her head gently, ``Not on the starbase, no. I have had
|
|
the computer do a complete scan of all crew members of the Enterprise
|
|
and the starbase. There are no other indications of this creature on
|
|
any other personnel.''
|
|
|
|
``It must have attacked her while she was installing the probes in the
|
|
starbase,'' Okawa mused. ``It is really the only time she was alone
|
|
for any period.'' He stopped as realization came to him, ``That would
|
|
mean that it was left by the attacking ships! As some kind of fall
|
|
back measure, perhaps?''
|
|
|
|
``We won't know unless we ask it,'' replied Rigeur. He then turned to
|
|
Crusher. ``Doctor, if you bring her back to consciousness, do you
|
|
think we will be able to ask the alien questions?''
|
|
|
|
She pondered this before answering, ``I can't say for sure, Commander.
|
|
We did not try that back at Earth as we were more concerned with
|
|
removing it from Admiral Quinn. They were pretty voluble in their own
|
|
right, so perhaps this one will be, too. I must insist on stopping
|
|
the interview if Miriam's vital signs become too unusual.''
|
|
|
|
``Agreed, Doctor. We need to find out what is going on here. It may
|
|
tell us why all these starbases are getting destroyed.''
|
|
|
|
The medical officer checked the restraints on her patient before
|
|
reviving her. Her experience with the parasitical creatures made her
|
|
aware of the phenomenal strength they gave their victims. Quinn had
|
|
almost killed Riker and had nearly defeated Worf. She suspected that
|
|
if the relationship continued for any length of time the human host
|
|
would eventually burn out. Once Crusher was satisfied that the
|
|
restraints would hold, she began administering medication to bring her
|
|
patient around.
|
|
|
|
As the life sign readings on the diagnostic table began to approach
|
|
normalcy, Miriam Evans' eyes opened wide. She looked around the room
|
|
and saw her captors. Crusher noted that adrenal levels began to rise
|
|
to suprahuman levels as Evans tested the restraining mechanism holding
|
|
her to the couch.
|
|
|
|
``You might as well stop trying to escape,'' warned the doctor.
|
|
``You'll only injure your host's body.''
|
|
|
|
Evans cleared her throat and spoke slowly to the three standing above
|
|
her, ``So, you have found me out. I take it that since we are all
|
|
still alive that I was not entirely successful in destroying the
|
|
starbase or the saucer?''
|
|
|
|
``Damn right you weren't,'' replied Rigeur angrily. ``You mind giving
|
|
us an explanation for all the destruction you have wrought?''
|
|
|
|
``Not at all, Commander. It was my mission to finish off the job
|
|
which our ships could not do. I was launched aboard the starbase in
|
|
the last attack before your starship managed to route us. Mine is a
|
|
suicide mission. If I succeed, I die.''
|
|
|
|
``I do not believe that is the entirety of the Commander's question,
|
|
Miriam,'' began Okawa, completely unconscious of the name slip. ``The
|
|
real question must be, `Why any of this?' Why are your species
|
|
attacking Federation starbases to begin with?''
|
|
|
|
``We are testing the Federation and the Romulan Empire, Okawa. As
|
|
your races become more technologically advanced, you become a greater
|
|
threat to us. Federation and Romulan explored territories have
|
|
expanded to the point where their fringes border on ours. We are part
|
|
of an initial assault upon your people. Our first attack on your
|
|
Admiralty was an effort to stop exploration toward our space and to
|
|
weaken your defenses in the region closest to us in the event we
|
|
decided to attack. When that failed, we decided the best way to stop
|
|
exploration was to get your people occupied elsewhere. The mutual
|
|
distrust of the Federation and the Romulans was an ideal situation
|
|
which we decided to exploit. A war between your peoples would not
|
|
only divert your resources, but also weaken both sides and give us and
|
|
our allies the time to prepare for a full scale attack on the eventual
|
|
victor. That victor would be so weakened by the war that our conquest
|
|
could be achieved with minimal resistance.''
|
|
|
|
``You and your allies must know from your contacts with our people
|
|
that the Federation always comes seeking peaceful coexistence with
|
|
other races.'' Rigeur prompted, ``Why do you feel that we represent a
|
|
threat which must be stifled?''
|
|
|
|
``The individuality of your species represents the threat to us,''
|
|
spat out Evans. ``Your people are all independent entities with no
|
|
unified goal or purpose. It amazes us that your societies can advance
|
|
at all with such anarchy. The fact that they have advanced in spite
|
|
of this is what we see as a threat. When we conquer you, we Qelb will
|
|
provide the unity that your species needs. We will give your people
|
|
direction and continuity. You will be incorporated into the Hegemony
|
|
as others have been before you.''
|
|
|
|
Crusher expressed the horror that she, Rigeur and Okawa were feeling,
|
|
``If you do that, it will take away from us what we are. Only in
|
|
individuality can genius be expressed.'' She paused to gather her
|
|
thoughts, which were coming in a confused rush. ``You said that your
|
|
allies are amazed that our societies have advanced at all. We've done
|
|
so because individuals who have had great political insight have
|
|
created laws by which the rights of the community outweigh the rights
|
|
of the individual, thus one person cannot impose their will to the ill
|
|
of other people. Individuals, who have possessed great scientific or
|
|
technological insight, have made the discoveries which have allowed
|
|
our people to leave the planets and venture into space, or to create
|
|
new medicines or medical techniques which allow us to regenerate
|
|
organs or cure the common cold. Individuals, who have the talent to
|
|
lead other individuals by knowing how to recognize and utilize each
|
|
person's strengths toward a common good, take us to explore the
|
|
unknown to discover new ideas and beliefs which can benefit all
|
|
people. It isn't non-guided anarchy that we have, it is a unity of
|
|
purpose similar to yours. But a unity which recognizes that only
|
|
through the strength of the individual can society benefit as a
|
|
whole.''
|
|
|
|
Okawa, spurred on by Beverly's speech, added, ``What you plan for our
|
|
people, this single minded Hegemony, would kill us. Although all our
|
|
experiences might be incorporated into the whole, the impetus for
|
|
progress would disappear. The same inspiration which causes a person
|
|
on Rigel IV to paint the twin sunset or for a person to design a new
|
|
mining technique on the moons of Anktiem VI would be no more. It
|
|
would be replaced by some global omniscience, which while it might be
|
|
nice to have the knowledge of races at your command, would also remove
|
|
the desire to innovate. All would be done for the common good, and
|
|
while this is a noble idea, we humans find that we must do for our own
|
|
good occasionally. If we don't, then we perish.''
|
|
|
|
``Someone once said, `All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy',''
|
|
Rigeur said. ``You are asking us to work full time and that sounds
|
|
down right boring. Since your people are of this communal mind, I'm
|
|
sure they have heard all we have said. I just hope they have
|
|
understood, but if they haven't, then I've got one more thing to add.
|
|
We will not accept your assault on our individuality. We will fight
|
|
you until the very last one of us can fight no longer, for our
|
|
independent choice of what's right and what's wrong is something we
|
|
have been blessed with and something we cannot live without.''
|
|
|
|
The Qelb which controlled Evans was silent for a moment and then
|
|
responded, ``Perhaps you are not as anarchistic as we believed. But
|
|
you still represent a threat to us by your differences from us.
|
|
Individuality is not something we can tolerate or coexist with.''
|
|
|
|
``There are other ways of resolving differences besides war,''
|
|
responded Crusher. ``There are always alternatives.''
|
|
|
|
``No, your people will eventually want to explore our space, that is
|
|
your nature. Your ideas of independence would disrupt our society.
|
|
It is best for us to resolve this in our own way, your contamination
|
|
must be controlled.'' The Qelb hesitated, ``Even now, I am having
|
|
difficulty maintaining control over this host. It struggles for
|
|
independence.''
|
|
|
|
``Then perhaps your society is not as perfect or united in purpose as
|
|
you would have us believe,'' commented Rigeur. ``I have heard enough
|
|
of this creature's rhetoric. Doctor, I need Miriam Evans' expertise
|
|
to help us get this job done. Can you remove that thing from her
|
|
brain?''
|
|
|
|
``Yes, I've done it once before. There should be little problem.''
|
|
Crusher then hesitated about telling Rigeur his business, but
|
|
continued, ``Charles, you must warn the captain about this. The Qelb
|
|
threat to the crew aboard the battle section could outweigh that of
|
|
the Romulans.''
|
|
|
|
``Yes, Doctor, I know. Unfortunately, the Captain's last orders and
|
|
Starfleet regulations forbid me from making contact with them. I will
|
|
inform Starfleet of what we have found out, and hopefully they will
|
|
give permission to contact the battle section.'' Rigeur was a man who
|
|
once again found himself with no options as to his next course of
|
|
action. He still didn't like it, but there was one thing he could do.
|
|
|
|
``I will send a security team here, Doctor. Once you remove that
|
|
thing, I want them to kill it. It entered a suicide mission, now it
|
|
can complete it.'' He turned to Okawa, ``Doctor Okawa, soon we'll
|
|
return your comrade to you. Meanwhile, I believe we have a lot of
|
|
work to do.''
|
|
|
|
Okawa nodded slowly as he looked down at his friend and co-worker on
|
|
the diagnostic table. ``You will take good care of her. Won't you,
|
|
Doctor? She is a good friend.''
|
|
|
|
Crusher smiled as she prepared an injection for Evans. ``I'll do my
|
|
best, Yasu. She'll pull through.''
|
|
|
|
``I know she will, Beverly. Thank you.'' As Okawa and Rigeur made to
|
|
leave the sickbay, Wesley Crusher walked in from the hallway. Okawa
|
|
went to him and apologized for the injury which Evans had inflicted on
|
|
the young ensign.
|
|
|
|
``That's all right, Doctor Okawa, I'm fine now. Just a little
|
|
headache is all that's left.'' Wesley grinned as he pointed to his
|
|
head. He then hesitated before he asked, ``I'd like to know if you
|
|
could use any help while Doctor Evans is recuperating. I mean, I
|
|
can't go out to do work in vacuum for a while while I get over my own
|
|
injuries. But I'd really like to help.''
|
|
|
|
Okawa and Rigeur looked at one another and laughed at the young man's
|
|
enthusiasm. ``Of course you can help, Wesley. I have many things
|
|
that an old man like myself could use a pair of young legs to get
|
|
done.''
|
|
|
|
As the sickbay door closed behind them, Beverly Crusher's smile slowly
|
|
faded. She looked down at her anesthetised patient and thoughts of
|
|
atrocities to come came unbidden. She was troubled by thoughts of
|
|
what the battle section could be facing. She whispered a silent
|
|
prayer for Jean-Luc Picard and the rest of the crew in the Neutral
|
|
Zone.
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER 15
|
|
----------
|
|
|
|
The Dooley and her escort quickly approached the Enterprise , which
|
|
lay amidst the ever expanding field of wreckage from the recent
|
|
holocaust so ably brought about by her Klingon tactical officer. The
|
|
shields still glowed as small pieces of the dust of battle impinged
|
|
with them.
|
|
|
|
As the Dooley closed, the accompanying probes broke away from the
|
|
mother ship and surrounded the Enterprise in a ring which held them
|
|
all out of phaser range. Picard noted it also made the effect of the
|
|
one modified photon torpedo that he had held in reserve somewhat less.
|
|
He could disable no more than half the probes with one shot now. With
|
|
the odds still heavily against the Enterprise , Picard knew that half
|
|
would not be good enough. He had to get it down to just the Dooley
|
|
and his ship. The question was, how?
|
|
|
|
Although several of the bridge crew had been surprised to see another
|
|
Federation vessel in Neutral Zone as their adversary, they quickly
|
|
went back to their duties. One did not generally broadcast
|
|
speculation of the command staff to junior crew members unless it was
|
|
necessary and Picard had decided that it would be less mentally
|
|
wearing on the crew if they did not know. Judging from Deanna Troi's
|
|
expression as he looked queryingly at her, he had been right. The
|
|
crew would perform well. However, Troi looked uncertainly towards the
|
|
young lieutenant at the helm.
|
|
|
|
``Mr. Worf, I believe that our host has finally come to greet us.
|
|
Let's not be impolite, open a hailing frequency.'' Picard stood and
|
|
once again walked the familiar path toward the viewscreen. ``U.S.S.
|
|
Dooley , this is Captain Jean-Luc Picard of the Federation Starship
|
|
Enterprise . We are on a reconnaissance mission within the Neutral
|
|
Zone and have been forced into battle with ships which are obviously
|
|
under your control. We request an explanation.''
|
|
|
|
As Riker moved to stand next to his captain, he mentally shook his
|
|
head. Picard's knack for understatement in the name of diplomacy
|
|
never ceased to amaze him.
|
|
|
|
``No response, sir,'' Worf volunteered from his position at the back
|
|
of the bridge.
|
|
|
|
``Repeat on all frequencies, Mr. Worf. He hears us, all right. He's
|
|
letting us sweat for a while. We can wait for him.'' Picard then
|
|
walked up next to the helm and navigation console. ``Lieutenant
|
|
Shriver, how long will it take you to set up a course which will take
|
|
us in a circular path perpendicular to the plane of the probes? I
|
|
want it to have a radius of three times that of the probes' ring.''
|
|
|
|
Shriver, still a little shaken by the experience of seeing an old
|
|
Federation starship in the Neutral Zone, was taken by surprise by her
|
|
captain. She regained her composure, however, and replied a little
|
|
unevenly, ``About two minutes, Captain.''
|
|
|
|
Picard smiled down at her and patted her shoulder, ``Fine, Lieutenant,
|
|
make it so.'' He then turned his attention to Worf, ``Well,
|
|
Lieutenant Worf, tell me about that ship.''
|
|
|
|
Worf shook his head, ``No response to our hail, sir. Sensors show
|
|
that the Dooley has been somewhat modified. Extra weapons bays are
|
|
evident, perhaps with the weapon which we have seen on the probes.
|
|
There are also additional shield generators. I do not pick up any
|
|
Hyperion drive indications, however.''
|
|
|
|
``Very well, Lieutenant, reopen the channel. U.S.S. Dooley this is
|
|
the Enterprise . Your continued silence is doing nothing to allay our
|
|
concern that you are a hostile vessel. Furthermore, considering that
|
|
your ship has been off the starfleet roles for almost twenty years, I
|
|
believe an explanation for your absence is due. If you continue your
|
|
present course of action, we must assume that either the original crew
|
|
has turned traitorous against the Federation, or that the original
|
|
crew has been replaced by a hostile force. In either case, you are
|
|
tempting us to take offensive action against your force.''
|
|
|
|
``We are getting a response, sir, audio only,'' Worf reported. ``I am
|
|
putting it over the speakers now.''
|
|
|
|
``A hostile vessel, eh. Now there's a leap of intuition. Enterprise
|
|
, you are surrounded by eight modified Nimbus probes and a modified
|
|
Nebula class starship all of which have their weapons fully charged
|
|
and screens activated. How can we help but be a hostile force?''
|
|
|
|
Data turned to Picard, ``Sir, voice analysis confirms that we are
|
|
hearing the voice of Admiral Frederick Esax. It is unusual, however,
|
|
that even accounting for aging there is an inexplicable distortion to
|
|
his voice. Almost as if his vocal cords were being twisted.''
|
|
|
|
``Indeed? Then let's be on the alert for other `unusual'
|
|
occurrences.'' Picard began to walk back toward the front of the
|
|
bridge, ``Lieutenant Shriver, as soon as you have plotted your course,
|
|
please lay it in and be ready to execute it at warp three. I want to
|
|
stop when we come back into the plane of those ships and wait just
|
|
long enough for them to begin reacting to the change in our position.
|
|
We will then fire that last torpedo and hope we knock out most of
|
|
those ships. Finally we'll come back around on the continuation of
|
|
the course to a position on the other side of the Dooley . We can
|
|
then use the Dooley as a shield against weapons fire from the probes.
|
|
Hopefully, this will confuse them long enough for us to fire on the
|
|
helpless and non-helpless probes.''
|
|
|
|
``Then we'll have to deal with the Dooley ,'' continued Riker.
|
|
|
|
Picard nodded affirmation, ``Then we will have to deal with the Dooley
|
|
.'' He then signalled for Worf to reopen the channel to the other
|
|
vessel, ``Admiral Esax, it is indeed a pleasure to hear that you are
|
|
still alive. Might I also say that it is quite a surprise as well.''
|
|
|
|
The disembodied voice of the admiral replied, ``Very good, Captain.
|
|
It is nice to see that Federation crews have not decreased in
|
|
efficiency over these past years. And yours, Captain, is one of the
|
|
best. Your ship and her successes are well known to me, Jean-Luc
|
|
Picard. We have attempted to stay in touch with all the goings on in
|
|
both Federation and Romulan space. I must say that you, Picard, and
|
|
your Romulan counterpart, Kareel, are probably the most successful
|
|
commanding officers on either side. We were taken by surprise when
|
|
you did not destroy one another here in the Neutral Zone. We are not,
|
|
however, surprised at your great success against our probes since your
|
|
alliance. It has been a worthwhile fight, it will be a shame to end
|
|
it.''
|
|
|
|
``I believe that thanks for your praise would be somewhat
|
|
inappropriate at this time, Admiral,'' Picard responded. ``Would you
|
|
mind telling me why you are located in the Neutral Zone and just how
|
|
those probes happen to have combined Federation and Romulan
|
|
technology?'' Picard walked back to his command chair and sat down.
|
|
As he did so, he started signalling to Data and Worf from his comm
|
|
padd to make ready for the offensive move.
|
|
|
|
``Picard, you are in no position to make demands. You are outnumbered
|
|
and outgunned. I will tell you, however, because it is a story which
|
|
deserves to be told. But I must warn you, any even mildly hostile
|
|
move on your part and I will be forced to have the probes attack your
|
|
ship. They may not destroy you, but the Enterprise will wind up
|
|
damaged enough that my ship will not have any trouble in dispatching
|
|
you.
|
|
|
|
Esax began his monologue, ``We were patrolling the edge of the Neutral
|
|
Zone. Twenty years ago was the period of the last Romulan agression.
|
|
They had recently attacked a Klingon settler planet and Starfleet had
|
|
come to the rescue. Your predecessor ship, the Enterprise C, was
|
|
destroyed in that battle. I had lost some good friends in that
|
|
engagement and I was out for revenge against the Romulans. I was also
|
|
angry with Starfleet command, because some of those deaths would have
|
|
been avoided had they the foresight to continue with the Nimbus
|
|
project. With the addition of Soongh's positronic brains, they would
|
|
have been fair match for the Romulans and no lives would have been
|
|
lost. As you can see, I was right. The probes are a superior fighting
|
|
force.''
|
|
|
|
Picard did not bother to respond, and Esax did not wait to continue.
|
|
``We happened across a Delebrian cargo vessel during our patrol along
|
|
the Neutral Zone. After we ascertained that it was not a Romulan
|
|
ship, we opened communication with it and asked to board her to make
|
|
sure it was not trading with the Romulans. When the boarding party
|
|
returned, they brought the captain of that ship over to negotiate
|
|
their continued passage with me. They had been to the edges of known
|
|
space and had found some very interesting artifacts. They had also
|
|
discovered a previously unknown lifeform, and they were anxious to
|
|
present it to the Federation.
|
|
|
|
Here, Esax paused, obviously choosing his words well for the next
|
|
part. He then seemed to jump ahead in his narrative. ``The Neutral
|
|
Zone, Captain, is a lawless area. Even I could see that twenty years
|
|
ago. Caught between two agressor spheres of influence, it is under
|
|
the control of neither. Thus, a man with ideas of independence need
|
|
only go in there undetected and thus begin to build an empire. My
|
|
patrols had discovered a planet within the Zone which would be an
|
|
ideal base of operations from which to accomplish this. Over the
|
|
years people from both sides have come to join me. With their help,
|
|
our Outlaw world became possible. With their ideas, the probes which
|
|
you have been engaging became a reality. We have weaponry designed
|
|
jointly by the Rihansu and Federation citizens. We have a modified
|
|
Hyperion channel drive which incorporates a technology never seen
|
|
before on either side. While we have waited, we have planned.
|
|
Planned an assault on the short-sighted powers which forced us to come
|
|
here. The attacks on the starbases and outposts along the Neutral
|
|
Zone were against both sides, as you know. They were meant to goad
|
|
the Romulans and Federation into a war. The victor of which would
|
|
then be ripe for conquering. No victor of a war is ever fully able to
|
|
fight yet another enemy.
|
|
|
|
``You have been the foil to that plan twice now, Picard. There won't
|
|
be a third time.''
|
|
|
|
``Twice?'' Picard now asked, truly perplexed. ``I don't recall
|
|
another time.''
|
|
|
|
``You don't? Ah, perhaps I have not been explicit enough. The first
|
|
stage of the attack was to gain control over Starfleet command. With
|
|
them under our control, war would have been a certainty. We even
|
|
tried to get you, Picard, but you managed to evade us.''
|
|
|
|
``Take over Starfleet?'' Riker suddenly had a flash of understanding,
|
|
``Captain, the creatures which took over the minds of the Starfleet
|
|
admiralty and lured us back to Earth. Could it be?''
|
|
|
|
``You have a very perceptive First Officer, Picard. They refer to
|
|
themselves as the Qelb, although they seldom refer to themselves
|
|
alone. They assume a symbiotic relationship with their host, and they
|
|
are linked telepathically with their queen. They actually share the
|
|
consciousness of all their hosts, and the hosts share the Qelb
|
|
consciousness, too. You don't know what you have missed, Picard.
|
|
Perhaps, if you dropped your shields, we might avoid any more deaths
|
|
and you could join us. They are really quite beautiful, you know.''
|
|
|
|
Suddenly a visual feed from the Dooley came onto the screen and
|
|
Picard's eyes narrowed as he stared with horror at Esax's visage. He
|
|
remembered the bulging, pulsating neck of Lieutenant-Commander Remmick
|
|
who had been the host for the Qelb queen back on Earth. Here he was
|
|
seeing the same sight on his viewscreen, no wonder it had sounded like
|
|
his vocal cords were being twisted. He had been repulsed then, and he
|
|
was repulsed now. It was obvious that Esax was no longer the hero of
|
|
the Federation, he was now a captive and a slave of the Qelb. The
|
|
thought of becoming a mindless servant to those scorpion-like beings
|
|
was horrific. ``I'd rather rot in hell, Esax, or whatever you call
|
|
yourself. Now, Shriver. Engage.''
|
|
|
|
Immediately, the Enterprise leaped from a halt in space to Warp 3.
|
|
The superstructure of the ship groaned with the strain of the immense
|
|
forces it had to undergo as she executed the tight turn that
|
|
Lieutenant Shriver had plotted. But Picard knew the limitations of
|
|
his ship, it would hold together.
|
|
|
|
As they halted at the end of the first part of the maneuver, Picard
|
|
called to Worf to hold his fire until ordered. The probes
|
|
automatically began to move as soon as they relocated the Enterprise
|
|
on their sensors. Picard hoped that Esax would not catch on to the
|
|
purpose of the flight until it was too late. As it was, six of the
|
|
probes were now within the blast radius and the last two were
|
|
approaching fast. Seconds ticked by and Picard knew he could wait no
|
|
longer, Esax would not allow the probes to continue on automatic once
|
|
he realized what Picard was doing.
|
|
|
|
``Mr. Worf, fire your torpedo. Mr. Data, resume the maneuver now.''
|
|
The final photon torpedo left the Enterprise and streaked toward its
|
|
target. The probes were already attempting to scatter, but it was too
|
|
late. The torpedo exploded in their midst and the fireball spread
|
|
out, disabling those probes it enveloped. Only one of them avoided
|
|
being incapacitated, and now it headed for the Dooley .
|
|
|
|
Meanwhile, the Enterprise completed another structure straining turn
|
|
and halted abaft the Dooley . Taken by surprise and perhaps slowed by
|
|
the symbiosis of the Qelb, Esax and his crew had not the time to react
|
|
to the Enterprise's swift change of position. Picard took advantage
|
|
of the situation and ordered Worf to fire upon the disabled probes and
|
|
take them out of the fight. Once again, the Enterprise's phasers
|
|
easily destroyed the helpless probes. By the time Worf had completed
|
|
his task, only the Dooley and the one probe remained. The odds were
|
|
now more even.
|
|
|
|
Esax's voice now bellowed over the communications channel his face red
|
|
with fury and his neck rippling with agitation, ``That was a very
|
|
foolish move, Picard. You have left me no choice but to destroy you
|
|
now.'' With that, a beam of energy leapt from the Dooley at the
|
|
Enterprise . The shields deflected a great deal of the energy, but
|
|
even with the modifications that Geordi had made, they could not stop
|
|
all of it. The impact of the beam overloaded the inertial
|
|
compensators and the Enterprise rocked with the force of contact.
|
|
|
|
``What the devil was that?'' called a new voice from the back of the
|
|
bridge. La Forge and the Romulan sub-commander Kafarth had just
|
|
exited the turbolift while the Enterprise had been firing upon the
|
|
Nimbus probes. Now they were picking themselves off the floor.
|
|
Geordi hurried to his engineering console. ``Damage in the outer hull
|
|
along deck seventeen, sir. Inner hull is intact but stressed.
|
|
Personnel are evacuating.''
|
|
|
|
``Sir, energy levels in the shields were off the scale. Starboard
|
|
shields held, but will not be able to withstand another impact like
|
|
that.'' Worf reported.
|
|
|
|
``Mr. Data, present our port side to the Dooley .'' Picard then
|
|
noticed that Shriver, the young Lieutenant, was lying next to her
|
|
console in a pool of blood. The impact of the energy beam had
|
|
obviously slammed her head into her console. Riker had already seen
|
|
this and was kneeling next to her. He looked up at Picard and shook
|
|
his head, her skull had been fatally fractured.
|
|
|
|
``Number One, take over the helm.'' Picard was saddened at the loss,
|
|
but unless he thought of something quickly, they would all be in a
|
|
similar state. Riker sat at the helm console and began to plot some
|
|
evasion courses. It was obvious that the Enterprise would not stand
|
|
up to the impact of that weapon many more times. Data restored helm
|
|
control over to Riker's console. The First Officer's battle instincts
|
|
would outweigh the android's quickness in this situation.
|
|
|
|
Worf called urgently, ``Sir, power build up in the location of that
|
|
last weapons fire. He's getting ready to hit us again.''
|
|
|
|
``Evasive action, Mr. Riker,'' ordered Picard.
|
|
|
|
The Enterprise accelerated to warp one, and executed a hard turn away
|
|
from the Dooley . Just as they did this the Dooley fired, once again
|
|
the weapon impacted the shields and continued on to hit the hull. The
|
|
bridge crew could hear the explosion as the force of it rocked the
|
|
Enterprise hard. Kafarth was thrown down to the lower level of the
|
|
bridge and began to pick himself up from Picard's feet. Picard helped
|
|
him into Riker's chair.
|
|
|
|
Geordi quailed as he read the damage report, ``A hit aft of main
|
|
engineering, Captain. No damage in the engineering section proper,
|
|
but they took out the energy conduits leading to the warp drive.
|
|
It'll take days to fix. Outer hull integrity breach in levels sixteen
|
|
through nineteen aft of bulkhead four. Personnel have been evacuated.
|
|
Dorsal deflector shields have failed, starboard shield has failed.
|
|
All but main phasers are without power.''
|
|
|
|
``And main phasers are reporting coolant leaks, personnel have
|
|
switched to full automatic and are evacuating.'' Worf added.
|
|
|
|
Picard nodded and looked with narrowed eyes at the viewscreen. The
|
|
Dooley was full in the screen and he knew that Esax was just waiting
|
|
to deliver the killing blow. The weapon they were using was well
|
|
beyond Federation or Romulan technology. One side or the other would
|
|
be using it if they had it. Therefore the Qelb or one of their
|
|
conquered races must have supplied it.
|
|
|
|
``Maneuver so our shielded side faces the Dooley , Number One.
|
|
Computer, prepare to execute destruct sequence.'' The bridge fell
|
|
silent when Picard said this. They all knew, however, that the
|
|
Enterprise was in serious danger and that they could not withstand
|
|
another direct hit from that weapon. The only way out was to take the
|
|
Dooley with them in mutual immolation.
|
|
|
|
Data reported that the computer was ready to execute the destruct
|
|
sequence and required positive identification from Picard and Riker.
|
|
The two officers gave it and the computer indicated it was ready.
|
|
Picard chose the countdown time to be three minutes and began the
|
|
countdown.
|
|
|
|
``Sir, we may be too late. The Dooley's weapons are recharged and
|
|
they are maneuvering for the final kill. Energy readings are coming
|
|
off the scale.''
|
|
|
|
``Acknowledged, Mr. Worf. Let's hope the shields hold one more
|
|
time.''
|
|
|
|
``Sir, a cloaked ship has entered near space. Sensors indicate it's
|
|
the Falcon . They are maneuvering between us and the Dooley .''
|
|
|
|
``No!'' Kafarth yelled as the Dooley fired its weapon when the Falcon
|
|
came uncloaked. With the damage the Romulan ship had already suffered
|
|
it could not handle the energy force from that weapon. It absorbed
|
|
the full blast of the beam, and, as the bridge crew of the Enterprise
|
|
watched in stunned horror, it exploded with the brilliance of a small
|
|
sun. The remaining energy of the blast and the debris of the Falcon
|
|
hit the Enterprise and once again the ship rocked under the strain of
|
|
impact.
|
|
|
|
``Sir, the Falcon was closer to the Dooley than us. The Dooley has
|
|
sustained some damage and her shields are down,'' Worf reported.
|
|
|
|
``Mr. Worf, lock phasers on target and fire.''
|
|
|
|
The main phasers fired once again and a direct hit was scored in the
|
|
auxiliary hull of the Dooley . The coolant leak in the main phaser
|
|
array became critical and the phasers initiated their failsafe
|
|
shutdown. The Enterprise now lay helpless against the Dooley .
|
|
|
|
``Mr. La Forge, how long until some weapons or shielding can be
|
|
restored?''
|
|
|
|
``Hours, Captain.''
|
|
|
|
``Understood. Mr. Riker, use impulse power to take us closer to the
|
|
Dooley . Our self-destruct explosion will take him out.''
|
|
|
|
``Sir, the Dooley is charging its weapons again.''
|
|
|
|
``Then this is it, gentlemen.'' Picard sat back as the Enterprise
|
|
closed with the Dooley .
|
|
|
|
|
|
------
|
|
|
|
A lone sentinel had drifted away from its assigned position. It was
|
|
now almost to the point where it would automatically shut down so as
|
|
not to be a hazard. Sensors then located an object which indicated a
|
|
ship. The sentinel sent out a mandatory signal to the vessel for
|
|
identification. When no response was received, the target acquisition
|
|
circuits re-verified the object as a ship and locked on. Once again
|
|
an identity check was sent and this time an incorrect response was
|
|
received. The sentinel's designers had known that enemy forces might
|
|
take over a ship. If that happened all verify codes would be changed
|
|
and if an incorrect sequence was received it would attempt to query
|
|
its mother ship. That failing, it would automatically target and
|
|
fire. The designers had done their job well.
|
|
|
|
|
|
------
|
|
|
|
``Sir, one of the mines has acquired a target and has not received the
|
|
correct verify sequence,'' Worf reported, the triumph in his voice was
|
|
readily apparent.
|
|
|
|
``The Dooley ! Mr. Riker, full reverse power, get us out of here.
|
|
Mr. Worf, acknowledge query and fire.''
|
|
|
|
The Enterprise began pulling away from the Dooley as the energy in the
|
|
weapons system of the Dooley reached maximum. Just then the photon
|
|
torpedo found its mark. Exploding along the connector just below the
|
|
saucer section of the starship, it rended the saucer away from the
|
|
secondary hull. The energy release caused explosions all along the
|
|
outer hull of both sections, tearing great holes along the surface of
|
|
the ship. Finally, the engineering section of the Dooley gave way and
|
|
in the rush of anti-matter colliding with matter both sections were
|
|
immediately vaporized in a flash which blew out many of the sensors in
|
|
the Enterprise . As the Enterprise rocked from the impact of some of
|
|
the larger pieces of the Dooley , Picard had enough presence of mind
|
|
to call the computer to halt the destruct sequence. He then passed
|
|
into unconsciousness when a part of the ceiling collapsed and hit his
|
|
head.
|
|
|
|
|
|
EPILOG
|
|
------
|
|
|
|
The Enterprise's battle section was in one piece. It was battered and
|
|
scarred from the experience it had undergone, but intact.
|
|
Engineering, with the help of sub-commander Kafarth, had managed to
|
|
repair the warp drive so that it was now usable, at least to warp one.
|
|
It would get them to Starbase 57 where better facilities could fix
|
|
them up.
|
|
|
|
There had been many injuries among the crew. Mostly from falling
|
|
debris kicked loose when the Enterprise felt the explosion of the
|
|
Dooley . Even so, none but Lieutenant Shriver had died and for that
|
|
Picard was thankful. He now had his head in a bandage and felt like
|
|
hell, but he, his crew and his ship were alive. Thirty-six hours had
|
|
passed since the incident, and Riker had taken the conn while Picard
|
|
was being tended in the sick bay. The first officer had had his hands
|
|
full with the repair work on the ship and so had not had a chance to
|
|
brief the captain on what had happened. It was now time to remedy
|
|
that situation.
|
|
|
|
``Will, what happened after the explosion? As I recall, there was
|
|
still one of those Nimbus probes left.'' Picard was now on the bridge
|
|
sitting back in his command chair talking with his First Officer.
|
|
|
|
``There isn't much to tell, sir. Once the Dooley exploded, the
|
|
remaining probe sat where it was for quite a while. Recorders
|
|
indicate that it was using sensors the whole time, perhaps scanning
|
|
for survivors. There were none,'' Riker added needlessly. ``After
|
|
about an hour, the probe stopped scanning and emitted an intense burst
|
|
of energy which was probably a signal to the Qelb's allies. It was so
|
|
powerful that all our energy sensors went off the scale. The probe
|
|
then self destructed.''
|
|
|
|
Picard's eyes had widened at the news of the energy burst. ``What
|
|
sector of space, Number One?''
|
|
|
|
``Triangulation has shown it to be the same sector of space to which
|
|
the Qelb had sent their final signal from Earth,'' Riker replied.
|
|
``The junction coordinates appear to be 500 light years away from the
|
|
edge of explored Federation space along the Slinth sector.''
|
|
|
|
Picard nodded. Starfleet would have to be informed of this
|
|
development quickly. Only recently had an attack from another alien
|
|
presence, the Borg, been diverted and the fleet was not yet ready to
|
|
handle another assault. A great many ships had been lost in the
|
|
previous battle and Starfleet was still in the rebuilding stages.
|
|
|
|
``What about the planet? Any signs of additional forces or ships
|
|
located there?''
|
|
|
|
``No, sir. From what we've been able to tell, those that remained
|
|
planetside chose to kill themselves after the Dooley was destroyed.
|
|
All equipment on the planet was destroyed simultaneously with the
|
|
self-destruction of the final probe. They apparently didn't want
|
|
anyone else getting their secrets.''
|
|
|
|
Picard acknowledged this by sighing. ``That is regrettable. The
|
|
information would have been valuable. I would have liked to have had
|
|
a chance to examine those weapons they used on the outposts and on
|
|
us.''
|
|
|
|
There was also some other uncompleted business. Picard turned to
|
|
Kafarth, who had been talking with La Forge at the engineering
|
|
console. ``Sub-Commander Kafarth, I must express my sorrow at the
|
|
loss of your commander and your ship. You must know, however, that
|
|
the Falcon saved us. The Enterprise would not have survived that
|
|
shot. Nor would we have taken the Dooley with us. I will be sending
|
|
a communications beacon to the nearest Romulan outpost with complete
|
|
details of this mission, along with my greatest gratitude for a
|
|
warrior who died in the service of the Romulan Empire.''
|
|
|
|
Kafarth had tears in his eyes, which shocked Picard, he had never seen
|
|
a Romulan display any emotion but anger. ``Thank you, Captain. He
|
|
was a great friend and he deserved better than the Empire gave him. I
|
|
wish to stay and continue what he and I would have done had he
|
|
survived. I will teach your scientists and engineers the secrets of
|
|
the Falcon's modified cloaking device and engines. Perhaps I can also
|
|
give you information about a few other items of which you may not be
|
|
aware.''
|
|
|
|
``Of this, I have little doubt, Sub-Commander. I also wish to thank
|
|
you, for helping get the Enterprise back into one piece.''
|
|
|
|
``This has been my great pleasure, Captain. I have always wanted to
|
|
work with a Federation engineer, and Geordi is one of the best
|
|
engineers I have had the pleasure to work with.''
|
|
|
|
Geordi grinned with pleasure and some embarrassment, ``The pleasure
|
|
has been mine, Kafarth. Your skill is fantastic.''
|
|
|
|
``Enough back patting, gentlemen. You have both done a fine job. Now
|
|
let's get back to Starbase 57. We have some people waiting for us,
|
|
and no doubt still a little work to do.'' Picard then turned to the
|
|
front of the bridge and spoke to the ensign at the helm, ``Ensign, set
|
|
a course for Starbase 57 that takes us out of the Neutral Zone as
|
|
quickly as possible.'' He turned to Riker seated at his side, ``I
|
|
believe that we have been here long enough.''
|
|
|
|
``Agreed, sir,'' affirmed Riker.
|
|
|
|
``Course plotted and laid in, sir,'' reported the helmsman.
|
|
|
|
``Very well, set speed for warp factor one.'' Picard gestured toward
|
|
the front of the bridge, ``Engage.''
|
|
|
|
|
|
------
|
|
|
|
The probe's signal traveled through deep space at a speed which would
|
|
have amazed those in the Federation and Romulan empire alike. Even
|
|
so, it took weeks for it to arrive and pass its destination.
|
|
|
|
The entity which represented the communal intelligence of the Hegemony
|
|
brooded over the information transmitted in the message. Rigeur had
|
|
not been completely correct about the Qelb being in constant contact
|
|
with one another. The telepathy they used had distance limits, hence
|
|
a queen was set on both incursions to Federation space. The core of
|
|
the Hegemony was a cadre of such queens which controlled the billions
|
|
of members of the society. Although information could not be
|
|
transferred over the distance to the Neutral Zone, the queens had felt
|
|
the death of their fellow and were still reeling from it. The message
|
|
confirmed their loss and brought about the time of Decision.
|
|
|
|
The beings in the Federation and the Romulan empire had grown
|
|
considerably and now represented a greater threat than ever. The
|
|
attempt to start a war between these groups of insular beings had
|
|
failed. Perhaps, the queens thought, due to the Qelb's lack of
|
|
experience with such races. But now they had an even greater need to
|
|
act based on the arguments presented by the the humans on the
|
|
Federation starbase. This kind of independence could not be
|
|
tolerated, the one called Rigeur had hit too close to the mark.
|
|
|
|
The Decision was made, unanimously as always. The Hegemony must
|
|
attack and conquer the Federation first and then the Romulans. The
|
|
Romulans were a warrior race and would be the tougher to conquer, but
|
|
the Federation covered a greater volume of space and thus had more
|
|
resources which the Hegemony needed. Also, the Federation might come
|
|
to the Romulans aid if they were asked. The Romulans would do no such
|
|
thing, the entity new with certainty.
|
|
|
|
The Decision now made, the queens set about the task of readying for
|
|
the assault. It would take time. Time was needed to generate a new
|
|
queen to handle the attack and a new queen to handle assimilation.
|
|
But time had always worked in favor of the Qelb, it would be no
|
|
different now.
|