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1760 lines
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Plaintext
From 95lnm@cs.williams.edu Tue Jan 5 20:01:53 1993
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["78981" "Tue" "5" "January" "93" "21:01:40" "EST" "Lisa Masterman" "95lnm@cs.williams.edu " nil "1741" "an offical copy of \"Aeia\"" "^From:" nil nil "1"])
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Message-Id: <9301060201.AA00929@welsh.cs.williams.edu>
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Status: RO
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From: 95lnm@cs.williams.edu (Lisa Masterman)
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To: jfy@cis.ksu.edu
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Subject: an offical copy of "Aeia"
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Date: Tue, 5 Jan 93 21:01:40 EST
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sorry for the delay. I've been extraordinarily busy, but I would love it if
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you could put this updated copy of "Aeia" into the archive.
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Thank you.
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--lisa
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95lnm@cs.williams.edu
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lmasterm@cs.ulowell.edu
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"Aeia"
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PART ONE
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Captain's Log, Stardate 45824.4: The Enterprise has been assigned to map a
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fairly remote region of space close to one extreme of the Romulan Neutral
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Zone. My crew and I have been surprised to discover in this system a class
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'M' planet, something we did not expect to come across in this largely
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unexplored sector. Counselor Troi has given me reason to believe that there
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may be some form of intelligent life waiting undiscovered on the surface.
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"Explain, Counselor."
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Troi shook her head, looking intensely at the floor as if an explanation lay
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hidden beneath the carpet. "I think there is something down there.
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Something very-" She broke off, looking up at the viewscreen for a moment.
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A blue-green planet filled the screen and pushed itself into her mind, along
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with... something. "Something very strong, yet - very elusive." She turned
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to face the captain with a long sigh. "I can't seem to grasp it; every time I
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think I can really sense it, it slips away."
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Commander Riker, sitting attentively to the right of the captain, spoke up.
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"Sir, whether there is something down there or not, it warrants investigation.
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There is a class 'M' planet here that no one knows about."
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"Agreed, Number One. Assemble your away team and report to me if you
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find anything."
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Riker nodded and stood up briskly, striding across the bridge towards the
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turbolift. He turned to nod to Troi and Data, who rose to follow him.
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Entering the turbolift, he tapped his badge communicator. "Riker to
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Engineering. Geordi, report for away team duty," he said as the doors shut.
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Troi let her breath out slowly as she felt a sensation like a weight lifting.
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We're headed in the right direction, she thought.
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----------------------------------------------------
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The team materialized moments later on the crest of a large hill. To their
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right, another hill rose above them with an almost vertical slope. In the
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other direction lay a vast scar on the earth strewn with rubble and large
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rocks towards the perimeter. Before them, a breathtaking valley opened up,
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descending steeply to a large lake. Beyond the lake rose a crescent-shaped
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ridge of spectacular mountain cliffs.
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Home, thought Troi. She shook her head again. Where did THAT thought
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come from?
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Data was busily scanning their surroundings with his tricorder. "Sir, there
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are very strange readings coming from within the steep hill above us. It is
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possible that a large network of caverns exists at this level that extend far
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below the surface. There is a propensity of an element with which I am
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unfamiliar."
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Geordi had walked off towards the rubble to their left. "What happened
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here?"
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Data followed him and bent over a cluster of jagged rocks. After busying
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himself with his tricorder for several seconds, he reported, "It seems to be
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the ruins of a cluster of artificial structures. Origin: unknown."
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Commander Riker stepped carefully through the rubble. "Homes?"
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"Very possibly, sir," responded the android. "Further analysis of the ruins
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might reveal that information."
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"So someone was here," said the Commander quietly. "Can you discern any
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technology?" He frowned at the stones at his feet. They looked like rocks to
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him.
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"At first appraisal the technology of the structures appears to be
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rudimentary, but-"
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"But?"
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"There is insufficient data to say, sir. I would need to collect more
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information to properly reconstruct the original design of the structures.
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Judging from the building materials and the layout of the ruins, however,
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one could pose a hypothesis that these structures were not as simple as they
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first appear."
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"Do you think humanoids lived here?"
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"I cannot say, sir."
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Riker moved across the strewn rocks to a clearer space. The valley spread
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itself out beneath him. The area was green, lush, full of life. He turned back
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to the ruins, and mused on the irony of such devastation cohabiting with
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such beauty. He rhetorically echoed Geordi's earlier question: "What
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happened here?"
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"I don't know," answered Geordi from where he crouched beside a crumbled
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wall. "Whatever it was, it didn't happen that long ago. I'd guess three to
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five years. I'll say one thing, though." He gestured to the rock he was
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studying. It was scarred with phaser marks. "This settlement wasn't just
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abandoned and left to fall apart. It was destroyed."
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Data looked up from his tricorder. "That correlates with my findings, sir."
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"Thank you, Data." Riker glanced over to Troi, who had been standing
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quietly on the edge of the ruins, looking over the edge of the knoll. "Have
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you sensed anything, Deanna?"
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"What I feel hasn't changed," she responded quietly. "Something's here, I
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just don't know where..." Her voice trailed off as she looked around her,
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trying to get a fix on what she sensed. Her brow furrowed in frustration.
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"If I may, sir?"
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Riker returned to the others. "Go ahead, Data."
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"It would appear to be somewhat odd that we have found no other artifacts."
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"Explain."
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"Archaeological ruins are usually accompanied by the many elements of
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daily life: cooking implements, discarded trash, personal belongings... We
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have found no such objects in these ruins."
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"Maybe they took everything with them," suggested Geordi.
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"That is a possibility," admitted Data, "but it is unlikely, since these ruins
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suffered some form of attack."
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"What if they knew the attack was coming?" Riker asked.
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"But why take every single thing?" said Troi from the edge of the ruins.
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"And if there was no one and nothing here, then why attack the settlement?"
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"Maybe there WASN'T anyone here," said Geordi. "I mean, we haven't found
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any bones or remains of any kind."
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"It is possible that the enemy or predatory animals removed the bodies of
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the slain," said Data.
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"And it is possible that the enemy could have taken everything from their
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homes," said Troi. She frowned, thinking that their line of reasoning wasn't
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getting them any further.
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Geordi voiced her thoughts as he sat down upon one of the larger rocks.
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"Doesn't look like we're finding any answers. Only more questions."
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Data walked over to the far edge of the ruins and busied himself with his
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tricorder. "Commander," he said, "I am still detecting unusual readings from
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this hill. There is definitely an unfamiliar element here, buried beneath the
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surface."
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Riker surveyed the steep hillside that rose from the edge of the ruins. "You
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say there are caves in there?"
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Data paused for a moment as he examined the readings on his tricorder.
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"Affirmative, sir."
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"Is there any way of accessing the caves?"
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"Yes, sir," said the android as he strode away from the ruins. The rest of the
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away team followed him.
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Moments later, they were walking along the sandy and rock-strewn floor of
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a dark passageway beneath the surface of the hill. The only light was that
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emitted from their hand-held lamps, but the beams were reflected off of the
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surfaces of the rock around them and more than amply illuminated their
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way. The walls were uneven, with large pieces of crystal jutting from the
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rock and jagged, angular surfaces reflecting and bouncing their lights with
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prismatic effects. The ceiling arced two to three feet above their heads,
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echoing the sounds of their movements.
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Riker's communicator chirped. "Report, Number One," spoke Captain Picard's
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voice.
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The Commander tapped his badge in a brisk motion. "We've just entered a
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series of caves, Captain. We found some old ruins outside, but were unable
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to gather much information from them. We're hoping that the caves will
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provide us with some answers."
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"Captain," spoke Data from where he stood next to one wall, "the passageway
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seems to be carved through a crystalline substance unfamiliar to me. The
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molecular structure is very dense."
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"The Enterprise's scanners have detected this substance," said the Captain's
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voice. "What can you tell me about it?"
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"I've never seen anything like it," said Geordi. "It has a very complex cell
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structure, very rigid. The crystal in the walls is almost flawless... This stuff
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must be harder by a factor of ten than the hardest substance known to
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Federation science!"
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"Actually," corrected Data, "my initial findings would indicate that it is
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harder by a factor of-"
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"Save it, Data," interrupted the Commander.
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"Very well," spoke the Captain's voice. "Keep me apprised."
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"Understood, sir; Riker out." Riker turned to Data. "You said that this
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passageway was carved?"
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"It is highly improbable that it was formed by chance, sir. I see no evidence
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of the crystal being cut, however. The surfaces are very smooth, and no
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rudimentary tools have been used to alter them."
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"It also seems highly improbable," mused Geordi, "that the same people who
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built those structures out there are responsible for what's in here. Whoever
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carved their way through this stuff has to be in possession of considerable
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technology. They wouldn't be living in rocks."
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"Let's continue," spoke up Troi. Her companions agreed and they proceeded
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along the corridor.
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Their progress was abruptly halted a moment later when the passageway
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was terminated unexpectedly by a pile of boulders and rock fragments that
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reached the ceiling of the tunnel. Troi's face betrayed her disappointment.
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She genuinely believed that they had been approaching something - the
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same something that she had sensed before.
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Riker climbed onto one of the rocks for a better vantage point to where the
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pile met the ceiling. "Data, is there anything beyond this?"
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"Unknown, Commander. The properties of the rock seem to be interfering
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with the tricorder's sensors. The problem has been slowly growing worse as
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we go further beneath the surface."
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"I think I may have found a way through," called Geordi. He had climbed up
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the pile, and was working his way towards the left wall. "It will be a tight
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squeeze," he warned.
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"What's beyond the barrier?" asked the Commander.
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"I don't know. Looks like it opens up into a chamber of some sort. Hold on,
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let me get through..." For a few seconds, the Chief Engineer scrambled across
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sliding rocks, working his way through
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the hole. He disappeared from sight. "It is a chamber," he shouted from the
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other side. There was a moment of silence, and then he added, "Commander,
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I think you should see this."
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Riker worked his way over to where Geordi had been, and began to clamber
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through the hole. Troi followed, and Data came through last.
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The chamber beyond was not very large. The ceiling and walls only
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expanded slightly from the dimensions they had held along the corridor.
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Another passageway led off from the chamber, banking out of sight. What
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had caught the Chief Engineer's attention, however, was located right in the
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center of the chamber: a giant crystal was laid lengthwise into a stone
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mount. There was someone inside.
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"She was young," commented Geordi as he shone his light into the crystal.
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"Do you think that they - whoever they are - built these passageways just to
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bury her?" Riker asked.
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Data cocked his head to the left. "I assume, Commander, that you are
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thinking of a parallel to the ancient stone pyramids of Earth's historic
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Egyptians? If I may, sir, I would like to hazard a conjecture that would
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negate your statement. Tricorder readings indicate some energy emissions
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which do not match the pattern of the other foreign substances in the cave.
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They could be indications that this girl is not dead."
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"You're right, Data," said Troi. "I think she is what I sensed. She was calling
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to me..."
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Geordi leaned down to examine the rock. "If she's not dead, then what is
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she? She's encased in solid crystal."
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"Some form of suspended animation?" suggested Riker.
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"That is possible," responded Data. "However, sir, it would not explain why
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the tricorder can detect the living tissue inside the crystal, even with its
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sensor abilities hampered. It would also not explain why she was
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'summoning' Counselor Troi."
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"I think I may have your answer," interrupted Geordi. He was standing
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down by where the feet of the encased woman were; his light shone upon a
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rock that had landed upon the crystal. "This stuff is hard, but not as hard as
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the substance in the walls here. There's a minute crack in the crystal down
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along her right leg."
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"If the integrity of the crystal has been damaged, then the state of
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suspension could have been broken," suggested Data.
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Geordi frowned. "But she's still encased in crystal. If she came back like
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this, she couldn't possibly survive."
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Troi's hand wasn't fast enough in covering her mouth to conceal her gasp.
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She both recognized the logic in Geordi's words and sensed their truth.
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"She's dying!"
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Riker briskly tapped his badge. "Riker to Enterprise." There was silence.
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"The foreign substance must be interfering with communication,
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Commander," said Data.
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"Go back towards the entrance and see if you can reach the Enterprise,
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Geordi. Tell Dr. Crusher we have a possible medical emergency. Data, see if
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you can widen the opening a little so the medical team can get through." He
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regarded the cold crystal in front of him for a while. Barely visible in the
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darkness, a pale face could be seen within. "We may have to carry her out."
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As Geordi and Data left the chamber, Troi circled around the crystal form.
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Her hand reached out cautiously to touch the smooth surface. It was cold to
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her fingertips.
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Riker regarded her silently for a moment. "Is she in pain?" he asked gently.
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Troi's dark eyes, shadowed by the poor light in the cavern, grew darker still.
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She shook her head, letting her midnight black curls fall in front of her
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shoulders. "I don't know," she said in a voice that was more breath than
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sound.
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Just then the quiet was disturbed by the loud clamor of Data's efforts on the
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rockpile. He returned shortly, followed by Lieutenant LaForge. "The opening
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is now sufficiently larger," reported the android.
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"Dr. Crusher will be here soon," added Geordi. He looked across at the
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crystal. It was drawing their regards, absorbing them in its dark depths. "I
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told her to bring some anti-grav units, in case we have to move this out by
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hand."
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Riker nodded in response. The team regarded the crystal in silence for a few
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moments.
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The falling of loose rock announced the arrival of the medical team. While
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two junior medical officers stood by, Dr. Crusher ran her instruments over
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the crystal to no avail. "I can read something, life signs perhaps, but nothing
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I can make sense of," she stated in frustration.
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"The substance this cave is made of is interfering with a lot of our
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equipment," explained Riker. "Can you get her out?"
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The CMO shoved her useless instrument into her pocket and frowned at the
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Commander. She shook her head. "I don't even know how she got in there,
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or what's keeping her alive, if she is indeed still alive."
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"She is," Troi said quietly.
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"Could we cut her out, and bring the crystal back for examination on board
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the Enterprise?" asked Riker.
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Dr. Crusher signaled 'no' with her head. "There's no way of telling how
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interfering with the crystal structure will affect her stasis. Our best bet is to
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try and remove her here, carry her body out to the entrance, and then
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transport her to sick bay. But if she is still alive, I'm not sure she'd survive
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any one of those steps."
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"We have to try," said Troi.
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Dr. Crusher regarded the Counselor for a moment, and then signaled her
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medical team to approach the crystal. "I'll do my best," she said.
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"That's the most she could ask for," observed Geordi.
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"Aeia"
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PART TWO
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Lieutenant Commander Data approached the medical team. "Doctor, if I may
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make a suggestion."
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"Yes, Data?"
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"If we could exploit the piezoelectric effect, we could cause the crystal to
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oscillate to the point of disintegration."
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"That's right!" said Geordi enthusiastically. Noting the blank looks of the
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CMO, Counselor Troi, and his commanding officer, he explained: "Each crystal
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has a resonant frequency. If you impose a voltage across the crystal which
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is varying at its resonant frequency, the internal structure of the crystal will
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start to vibrate. If the amplitude of the vibrations is sufficient, the structure
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will disintegrate."
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"Can we do this without harming the girl?" asked Dr. Crusher.
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"I cannot say," responded the android.
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"If it will work, it is worth a try," said Counselor Troi. "It may be her only
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chance."
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Dr. Crusher nodded grimly. She could see no other viable alternative.
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Riker turned to the other members of his away team. "Data, Geordi, can you
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do it with the equipment we have here?"
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"Affirmative, Commander," said Data.
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"Then do it."
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"If the equipment still works," added Geordi as he bent over the form. He
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and Data worked quickly, placing the instruments on the crystal. Data
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calculated the proper frequency and turned the voltage on. There was a
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brief hum, and suddenly the crystal collapsed.
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All moved forward at once to clear the shards from the girl. "Pick her up,
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Data," commanded Dr. Crusher. The android reached forward and lifted the
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slender form from the shattered remains of the crystal and held her while
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Dr. Crusher scanned her body with a lightning pass of her instruments.
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"Damn this crystal," she muttered under her breath. Shoving the
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instruments back into her pocket, she pressed her fingers against the neck;
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only a couple of seconds were required before a weak yet familiar pressure
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passed beneath her fingertips. "She's got a pulse," she announced, "but she
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won't have it for long. Let's get her out of here."
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"Data," ordered Riker, "carry her to the entrance. We'll follow."
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The android walked in brisk steps towards the entrance with Dr. Crusher and
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her two assistants on his heels. "Enterprise," shouted Dr. Crusher's voice once
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she'd disappeared. "Enterprise!" Finally there must have been a response,
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for her voice continued: "Five to beam to Sick Bay; Medical Emergency." And
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with the familiar sound of the transporter beam, she was gone.
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Troi lingered for a moment over the stone mount where the crystal had
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been. "Look at this, Will."
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Riker and Geordi approached the mount from the other side. Troi kneeled
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down by the end where the girl's feet had been. Loose rock and stone were
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piled up against the side of the stone mount; behind them, the rock was
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cracked. Troi pushed against the cracked area, causing the thin stone panel
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to fall in.
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"I thought I saw something through the crack," she explained. She pulled out
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a long crystal shard, about one foot long and three inches in diameter. She
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handed it to Geordi, who turned it over and over in his hands as he
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examined it.
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"Strange," observed Riker. He shone his light through the shard. Unlike the
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other crystals, which were mostly transparent, this one had a milky color
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and was opaque.
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"More than strange," answered the Chief Engineer. "This doesn't look like it
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follows a cell structure at all. The molecular patterns are all over the place."
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"Bring it back to the Enterprise," directed Riker. He turned and walked out
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of the cavern, followed by Troi. Geordi cradled the crystal in his palm and
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strode after them.
|
|
|
|
-----------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Dr. Crusher leaned across the conference table. "She's alive, but in some sort
|
|
of coma," she said with a tired voice that revealed how hard she'd been
|
|
fighting for the girl's life. "She's suffering from massive cell damage in
|
|
almost all areas of her body, most severely along the right leg. I'm not sure
|
|
I'm going to be able to save it."
|
|
|
|
"That was where the crack in the crystal was," observed Geordi. Dr. Crusher
|
|
nodded in return.
|
|
|
|
"Can you tell us anything about her?" asked Picard.
|
|
|
|
Dr. Crusher sighed. "Physically, she appears to be human, about eighteen or
|
|
nineteen years of age."
|
|
|
|
"Physically?" prompted Commander Riker.
|
|
|
|
The CMO nodded. "Everything about her seems perfectly normal, except for
|
|
her neural activity. Even though she's unconscious, her brain functions keep
|
|
bouncing off the normal human scale. Further examination of her brain
|
|
showed significant differences in the organization and function of her neural
|
|
pathways." She drew in a long breath, leaning back in her chair. "That's all
|
|
the information I have right now."
|
|
|
|
"Understood," said Picard. "Keep us informed of any change in her
|
|
condition." He turned to his Chief Engineer. "Mr. LaForge, have you anything
|
|
to report on the crystal you brought back from the chamber?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, sir." Geordi leaned forward and touched the panel in front of him,
|
|
bringing up a visual on the display at the end of the conference table. A
|
|
diagram of the crystal rotated on the screen. "When I first looked at the
|
|
shard, I was confused by the apparent disorder of its molecular structure.
|
|
On a hunch, though, I compared it to the data I managed to collect on the
|
|
crystal in the caves, and I made an interesting discovery." The view on the
|
|
crystal zoomed in to show the individual molecular patterns. "Using the
|
|
ship's computer, I was able to examine the structure of the shard and
|
|
compare it to the 'raw' crystal of the cavern. What I found was that the
|
|
lattice structure of this crystal has been modified into certain repeating
|
|
patterns."
|
|
|
|
"You mean someone changed it on purpose?" asked Troi.
|
|
|
|
"That would be my guess."
|
|
|
|
"Implications?" asked the Captain.
|
|
|
|
"I think it's a form of writing," answered LaForge. "The cell structure of this
|
|
crystal is uniquely suited to this purpose. The cell structure is so complex
|
|
yet so regular that it lends itself very well to this kind of three-dimensional
|
|
binary code."
|
|
|
|
"Is there any way we can read it?" asked Commander Riker.
|
|
|
|
Geordi shook his head. "Without a key to get us started, no."
|
|
|
|
"What we need," said Picard, "is the Rosetta Stone, or rather an appropriate
|
|
parallel."
|
|
|
|
"Yeah," admitted the Chief Engineer. "Hopefully our friend can help us out
|
|
when she wakes up."
|
|
|
|
The Captain stood up. "In the meantime, continue our observations of the
|
|
planet, and let's hope that our guest revives from her coma soon. Dismissed."
|
|
|
|
---------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
"Doctor," summoned the young ensign.
|
|
|
|
Dr. Crusher moved over to the bed where the girl lay. The ensign explained:
|
|
"She's coming around - I think." Crusher smiled at the youth, knowing his
|
|
uncertainly was merited in the case of this particular patient, since her
|
|
neural readouts were so unfamiliar. The CMO got a brief smile in response
|
|
before the ensign moved out of her way.
|
|
|
|
The girl on the bed let out a barely discernable moan. "Well," said Dr.
|
|
Crusher, "looks like Sleeping Beauty is finally going to join us." She leaned
|
|
down over her patient and pressed a hypo into her neck, waiting with a
|
|
smile for her to wake. She was delighted to see her patient passing from the
|
|
dangerous stage in her recovery, and though she harbored an inner concern
|
|
that that there might be lasting brain damage, she pushed that thought into
|
|
the back of her mind and tried, like she did with all of her patients, to hope
|
|
for the best.
|
|
|
|
Dr. Crusher was caught completely off guard when this previously motionless
|
|
and quiet form let out an ear-splitting shriek of grief and pain upon her first
|
|
moment of consciousness.
|
|
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
"Deanna," called Riker as he bent over the crumpled form of the Ship's
|
|
Counselor.
|
|
|
|
"Will," she responded feebly. "The grief... The emptiness..." She allowed the
|
|
Commander to prop her into a sitting position, where she sat rubbing her
|
|
temple with one hand while she covered her eyes with the other. "I don't
|
|
think I've ever felt anything like that," she said in a voice made sharp by the
|
|
threat of tears.
|
|
|
|
"It'll be all right," said Riker as he helped Troi to her feet. Leaning against
|
|
him, she managed to smile at the concerned faces around her, who relaxed
|
|
and returned to their duties.
|
|
|
|
The bridge communicator chirped. "Crusher to the bridge."
|
|
|
|
"Riker here."
|
|
|
|
"Our guest is awake. You can talk to her now."
|
|
|
|
Riker looked at Troi, who nodded in confirmation of his unspoken question.
|
|
It was the girl's cry she'd felt. "We'll be right there. I'll inform the Captain.
|
|
Riker out." He and Troi headed for the turbolift.
|
|
|
|
When Troi walked into Sick Bay, her eyes immediately found the young girl.
|
|
She looked very different from the girl they had lifted from the crystal; a
|
|
small amount of color had returned to the pale face, and an indescribable
|
|
aura surrounded her that seemed to affirm the hold she had regained on life.
|
|
Looking down on the face, Troi noted the delicate features framed by tousled
|
|
brown curls. Tears had escaped from the closed eyes, leaving wet paths
|
|
across her temples and onto the pillow. Then the lids lifted, and pure blue
|
|
pools fixed on Troi. The wet depths asked a silent apology for the pain her
|
|
mental cry had caused. She smiled reassuringly back, instantly forgiving
|
|
her.
|
|
|
|
The young girl broke eye contact the moment Captain Picard entered. She
|
|
fixed her eyes on the authoritative figure as he approached her bed gave the
|
|
front of his uniform a brisk tug into place in preparation to speak. "Hello. I
|
|
am Jean-Luc Picard of the Federation Starship Enterprise, and these are
|
|
some of my senior officers. They found you on the planet's surface and
|
|
brought you on board this ship for medical care."
|
|
|
|
She was very slow in responding, first drawing in a long, careful breath, and
|
|
then speaking slowly and softly, conserving her energy: "I am Aeia. I thank
|
|
you... for saving my life." Her eyes moved to find Dr. Crusher, who nodded
|
|
in acknowledgement of the gratitude.
|
|
|
|
"Do you know anything about where you were, or what happened to the
|
|
inhabitants of the planet?" asked Riker.
|
|
|
|
Aeia's reply was again deliberate and soft: "My people are... gone." She
|
|
paused for a minute, for her grief had put an edge on her voice. Again in
|
|
control, she added, "They encased me in crystal to save me because they
|
|
knew something must remain."
|
|
|
|
"What happened?" asked Troi softly.
|
|
|
|
Aeia looked straight at Picard before answering. "The BORG," she replied.
|
|
She waited for a moment and watched the responses of those assembled
|
|
around her with keen observation. "You are familiar with them."
|
|
|
|
"Yes," replied Picard grimly.
|
|
|
|
"Then... no further explanation... is needed." Aeia was beginning to show
|
|
signs of the strain this conversation was putting on her. She closed her eyes
|
|
for several seconds, and then finally said, this time with more breath than
|
|
voice: "But I... will give you one. First... I will need to go down to the planet."
|
|
|
|
"Nonsense," said Dr. Crusher. "You're not strong enough to sit up."
|
|
|
|
Aeia closed her eyes again. "Yes. Then I will need to send an emissary. I
|
|
need to find the final records of my people."
|
|
|
|
Suddenly, Troi spoke up. "I found a crystal shard in the stone mount you
|
|
were lying on. About this long." She gestured with her hands.
|
|
|
|
Aeia nodded. "That... would be very useful."
|
|
|
|
Riker tapped his badge. "Riker to Engineering."
|
|
|
|
"LaForge here."
|
|
|
|
"Geordi, can you bring the crystal shard to Sick Bay?"
|
|
|
|
"On my way."
|
|
|
|
Geordi appeared moments later with the shard cradled in his arm. As he
|
|
approached the group, Aeia's arm lifted from her bed. The movement was
|
|
very deliberate and controlled, but her entire body shook with the strain of
|
|
the effort. Geordi placed the crystal gently in her hand, and helped her
|
|
lower her arm slowly back onto the bed.
|
|
|
|
She closed her eyes. Her breaths were deep and slow, preparing to speak
|
|
again. "Yes," she said, "this is... a record... of the... last..." Her voice failed her.
|
|
|
|
Picard put his hand on her shoulder. "Don't speak any more. We will meet
|
|
again when you are stronger." He turned and left Sick Bay, followed by the
|
|
others. Troi lingered for a moment, but Dr. Crusher shooed her away.
|
|
|
|
The doctor was very surprised to find Aeia still awake when she returned to
|
|
her bedside. "Sleep," she urged the young girl.
|
|
|
|
Aeia's grip on the shard tightened. *First, I must read.*
|
|
|
|
Dr. Crusher frowned. She hadn't seen Aeia's lips move.
|
|
|
|
*I am telepathic,* explained Aeia. *My body is weak, but my mind is
|
|
stronger. I will explain more later. First I must read.*
|
|
|
|
The mental voice fell silent. Dr. Crusher glanced at the neural readouts,
|
|
which had settled into low patterns, which she judged to be some sort of
|
|
meditation. She leaned back against the bed behind her, watching Aeia's
|
|
chest rise and fall more and more slowly. The girl had left them with more
|
|
questions than answers, but no mysteries were going to be solved today.
|
|
She moved away to check up on other patients.
|
|
|
|
Behind her, silent tears filled the closed eyes and moistened the brown hair
|
|
against her temples, but this time her grief was silent and went unnoticed.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
"Aeia"
|
|
|
|
PART THREE
|
|
|
|
"Observations, Counselor," requested Captain Picard as the group entered the
|
|
turbolift.
|
|
|
|
Troi turned towards him slowly, pausing to gather her thoughts before she
|
|
spoke. "She has a very strong presence," she said. "I sense that she is very
|
|
intelligent, and very open. She has no intention to deceive us. She is,
|
|
however, suffering from an intense emotional shock. She was not prepared
|
|
to wake up alone."
|
|
|
|
"She feels that her people are all dead?" asked Riker.
|
|
|
|
"She knows it. When she woke up, she reached out to feel the presence of
|
|
others of her kind - and found nothing. Everyone she knew and loved died
|
|
years ago. Adjusting to this fact is going to be very hard for her."
|
|
|
|
"I know," responded Picard quietly. They fell to silence.
|
|
|
|
----------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Dr. Crusher watched Aeia pilot the automated chair down the corridor
|
|
towards the turbolift. "You handle that chair well," she observed.
|
|
|
|
"Yes," responded her patient as she maneuvered the chair into the turbolift.
|
|
"I will, however, be glad to be free of it."
|
|
|
|
The doctor bit her lip as she entered behind Aeia and gave the command for
|
|
their destination. She let a few moments of quiet pass as she listened to the
|
|
sound of the lift.
|
|
|
|
"You have little faith," spoke Aeia. She turned to regard the doctor, whose
|
|
face was trying to deny her thoughts. "You will not have to replace my leg
|
|
with a prosthetic, Doctor."
|
|
|
|
"Aeia, the cell damage to your leg is extensive-"
|
|
|
|
"And the condition is improving-"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, but not fast enough!" The doctor turned to face the wall, uncomfortable
|
|
before the direct, candid eyes of her patient. In the twenty-four hours that
|
|
had passed since Aeia had revived, her healing process had skyrocketed.
|
|
Her physical strength was still very low, but her cells were repairing their
|
|
damage at an amazing rate. Her right leg remained in very poor condition,
|
|
however, and could seriously endanger the rest of her body if not removed
|
|
soon. There was simply nothing more the doctor could do.
|
|
|
|
"Doctor, I am more aware of the condition of my leg than you know. Like
|
|
you, I am a Healer. I have been monitoring the process of my recovery and
|
|
I intend to correct the damage in my leg when I am strong enough."
|
|
|
|
Beverly Crusher shook her head, confused. "I don't understand."
|
|
|
|
Aeia's smile lifted the weight of her confusion. "You will," she said as the
|
|
doors opened.
|
|
|
|
The girl glided into the conference room and stopped where Captain Picard
|
|
motioned for her to be. She turned herself so that she faced across the table
|
|
and regarded each face in turn, waiting for Dr. Crusher to be seated.
|
|
|
|
"It is good to see you out of bed so soon," said the Captain.
|
|
|
|
"Thank you, she responded. "I have had very good care." She looked across
|
|
the table again, measuring the expectation on the faces around her. "You
|
|
have all come to hear me explain many things. It is very difficult to know
|
|
where to begin, but I will do my best." She slowly took in a measured
|
|
breath, holding it for an instant as she closed her eyes. Then she began.
|
|
|
|
"My people," she said, "are a very old race. We are not humanoid, but shape-
|
|
shifters. Lacking such characteristics in our natural form as opposable
|
|
thumbs and agile hands, we did not develop our intelligence in the same way
|
|
as the human race, starting with the physical manipulation of simple tools.
|
|
Ours was a toolless society, so where the human race developed the
|
|
technology of objects, my race developed the technology of the mind. What
|
|
we could not do without hands, we did with our minds.
|
|
|
|
"Any race's natural ability to read body language and pick up on subtle
|
|
nonverbal communication was developed in my race into telepathy. We also
|
|
developed a three-dimensional awareness of our environment that can be
|
|
best described as a combination of sight and tactile sensation. Instead of
|
|
extrapolating a third dimension based on a two-dimensional image on our
|
|
retinas, we can perceive the third dimension and 'feel' with our minds. This
|
|
sense provided the basis for telekinesis and other such skills.
|
|
|
|
"Shape-shifting was the final result of telekinesis, developed to the point
|
|
that, given explicit DNA information on another species, we could translate
|
|
our physical matter into that form. Telekinesis at the molecular level is
|
|
infinitely complicated, and our brains are specially structured to carry
|
|
through the process at a sub-conscious level.
|
|
|
|
"With this ability came an incredible opportunity for the acquisition of new
|
|
knowledge; by assuming the form of an alien race, we could join this race
|
|
and learn from it. Our scholars did this for thousands of years, documenting
|
|
the peoples we found around us. We amassed a library of knowledge
|
|
greater than most other intelligent races could dream to possess. And then
|
|
the BORG arrived."
|
|
|
|
Aeia's face grew dark as she broke off her narration. She stared out the
|
|
window beside her and studied the deep space beyond. "The options
|
|
presented by the BORG were assimilation or destruction. We could not allow
|
|
them access to the knowledge we had accumulated; thousands of races would
|
|
be put in mortal danger. Yet neither could we resist their threat; we couldn't
|
|
reach them, couldn't reason with them..." Her delicate hand drew into a fist
|
|
on the conference table as she fought for control of her emotions. "Their
|
|
minds were inaccessible, too controlled by their unified mind and their
|
|
processors to think, or feel, or know..."
|
|
|
|
"We understand," spoke Troi softly.
|
|
|
|
"Yes," said Aeia sharply. She leveled her eyes on the counselor, who could
|
|
sense the tremendous storm of feeling that was being held back behind the
|
|
blue walls. Then Aeia broke contact to stare at the table. "My people, one of
|
|
the oldest races in this galaxy, perished without a fight. But the BORG never
|
|
found our libraries, and they left my planet empty-handed." She paused to
|
|
pick up the crystal shard from where it had lain in her lap. Placing it on the
|
|
table, she continued, "Shortly after the slaughter of my people began, we
|
|
knew our cause was futile. I was chosen to remain because I was young and
|
|
I was strong. I had also achieved our highest distinction as a scholar and a
|
|
Healer. I would carry my people beyond their deaths..."
|
|
|
|
"Did you agree to this?" asked Picard.
|
|
|
|
"It was not my place to agree or disagree," Aeia responded sadly. "This
|
|
crystal is their last message to me. There were only five left then. The
|
|
writer... was my sister. She was joking... she said she wished I was there...
|
|
she was wounded... I would have healed her..." Aeia's tears flowed across
|
|
her face and dripped onto the crystal in her hands.
|
|
|
|
Captain Picard hesitated for an awkward moment. Troi reached over to her
|
|
and placed her hand over Aeia's. "My apologies for causing you distress," the
|
|
Captain finally said. "Perhaps we should meet again later."
|
|
|
|
She shook her head and drew in a quivering breath. When she spoke, her
|
|
voice was controlled: "I knew when I lay upon the stone in the crystal cave
|
|
what I would find when I awoke. I should have been prepared."
|
|
|
|
"No one can be prepared for something like this," said Troi. "You need time."
|
|
|
|
Aeia shook her head. "Time will not change the fact that my people are gone
|
|
and I live still." She turned towards Troi and directed one of her painfully
|
|
open and direct gazes into the dark eyes. They did not leave hers. "When I
|
|
felt you, Counselor, I was half dead, and somehow, I knew I was dying. I
|
|
had been trapped for too long in that state of near-sleep, imperfectly
|
|
suspended, completely deprived of all sensation, and yet, not at rest. I think
|
|
I was ready to surrender myself. I reached out in one last grasp for
|
|
something, and I felt a presence. I thought maybe you were one of my kind.
|
|
I held on for a little longer."
|
|
|
|
"Just long enough," said Troi. She drew a faint smile from her personal
|
|
reserves. Aeia's eyes softened in response.
|
|
|
|
"Well, what now?" prompted Geordi.
|
|
|
|
Aeia glanced at the Captain. "With your permission, sir, I will stay aboard."
|
|
|
|
"What are your plans?" asked Picard.
|
|
|
|
"I will do what I have been chosen to do," she replied. "I must recover the
|
|
records of my people."
|
|
|
|
Dr. Crusher frowned. "I thought you said your people were successful in
|
|
protecting the libraries from the BORG."
|
|
|
|
"There are indeed vast libraries beneath the surface of my planet, but
|
|
certain key elements are missing. A lot of vital information and some of the
|
|
crystals needed to decode certain sections of the library were hidden on
|
|
other planets. Also, there were thousands of my kind doing field research at
|
|
the time of the BORG attack; they left their records behind to return here to
|
|
protect the libraries. I must find them, and make sure that my race does not
|
|
die forgotten."
|
|
|
|
"And how will you do that?" Riker asked.
|
|
|
|
"I will choose a race to be heir of our knowledge."
|
|
|
|
"Do you have anyone in mind?" said Geordi jokingly.
|
|
|
|
She leveled a serious look at him that extinguished his smile instantly. She
|
|
quickly softened, however, and let a smile creep to her lips. "It is not a thing
|
|
to discuss lightly, Mr. LaForge." Then she turned back to Picard. "Sir, I will
|
|
need certain items from the surface. Then, if your observations here are
|
|
finished, I will not stand in the way of you continuing your mission. When it
|
|
is convenient for you, you can leave me at a... Starbase."
|
|
|
|
"Certainly," responded the Captain crisply. "Describe and locate the items for
|
|
Mr. Data-"
|
|
|
|
"Sir, I would like to retrieve them in person." She paused for a moment and
|
|
noted the awkward look on Picard's face. "If Mr. Data would agree to
|
|
carrying me."
|
|
|
|
"That would not cause me any difficulty," said the android.
|
|
|
|
Picard raised both eyebrows at the idea, but consented. "Agreed. Let us
|
|
plan to leave orbit as soon as your things are collected. Dismissed."
|
|
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
They materialized next to the ruins again, Data holding Aeia in his arms.
|
|
Troi stood beside them; she had requested to come and help Aeia say
|
|
goodbye to her homeworld.
|
|
|
|
The girl gazed out across the hillside in silence for several seconds. "When I
|
|
saw it last," she said, "the grass had been burnt away."
|
|
|
|
"It is amazing how Nature heals its wounds," replied the Counselor. They
|
|
shared the unspoken meaning of the sentence in silence for a moment.
|
|
|
|
"This used to be a school," explained Aeia, gesturing with one arm towards
|
|
the ruins. "We don't usually build artificial structures, but those who wished
|
|
to study were very exposed to wind and rain here on the top of the hill.
|
|
Dwellings for those completing their studies were here, so they wouldn't
|
|
have to travel back and forth from the valley."
|
|
|
|
"Why have the school here, then?" asked the Counselor.
|
|
|
|
"Because of the caves. Here, let me show you." She directed Data to take her
|
|
to the cave entrance.
|
|
|
|
They walked in silence for a long time, proceeding deeper and deeper within,
|
|
until, finally, they had returned to the chamber where she had lain. "Please
|
|
stop, Data," Aeia instructed. She reached outwards towards the shattered
|
|
crystal for a moment, extending her fingers as though to touch the pieces
|
|
still several feet from her reach. Then she closed her hand and let it drop.
|
|
"Four years," she said quietly.
|
|
|
|
"Inquiry," spoke Data.
|
|
|
|
Surprised, Aeia jumped a little in his arms. He had not said a word since
|
|
they had beamed down. "Yes, Mr. Data?"
|
|
|
|
"If your people possessed the technology to put one person in a stasis
|
|
crystal, why not more?"
|
|
|
|
"One person had less risk of detection," she replied. "Hidden in these caves,
|
|
the BORG's sensors would not find me. But a significant disappearance of
|
|
people would have drawn suspicion."
|
|
|
|
"But weren't you open to the possibility of even accidental discovery in this
|
|
cave?" asked Troi. "Aside from the rockslide, there was nothing blocking the
|
|
opening."
|
|
|
|
"There was something concealing the entrance," Aeia replied, "but I suspect
|
|
the same seismic disturbances that caused the rockpile behind us moved the
|
|
block." She paused for a moment. "Please continue down this tunnel, Data."
|
|
|
|
What followed were a series of maze-like turns as they went deeper and
|
|
deeper within. Finally, Aeia signalled a stop. Data put her down in front of a
|
|
little alcove. Using her arms to pull herself in, she half-disappeared in its
|
|
darkness.
|
|
|
|
She emerged with a sack of some sort and an armful of crystals like the one
|
|
Troi discovered in the stone mount. "Right where I left them," she said
|
|
quietly. She gazed down at the crystals, cradling them with care and
|
|
tenderness. In the shadows caused by Data's hand-held lamp striking the
|
|
side of her face, Troi almost thought she saw a smile work its way across the
|
|
young face.
|
|
|
|
"What are they?" she asked.
|
|
|
|
Aeia looked up at her companions. She WAS smiling. "They are, Counselor,
|
|
the rough equivalents, I think, of a doctor's bag and an encyclopedia." And
|
|
she laughed.
|
|
|
|
------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
"Come in."
|
|
|
|
Deanna Troi strode into Captain Picard's Ready Room just in time to see him
|
|
sit down into his chair, the last piece of his emotional armor sliding into
|
|
place a fraction of a second before his eyes met hers.
|
|
|
|
"Yes, Counselor?"
|
|
|
|
Troi sat into a chair facing her Captain with a smooth movement, wishing she
|
|
could have been in the room seconds earlier, before the summon of the door
|
|
had put Picard back on his guard. "I thought you might want to talk," she
|
|
said. It was one of her more direct approaches, but subtlety rarely worked
|
|
when trying to get through to the Captain.
|
|
|
|
Still, Picard shrugged it off. "About what?" he inquired innocently.
|
|
|
|
"Aeia's story is bringing back certain... memories. I thought you might like
|
|
to discuss them."
|
|
|
|
The Captain did not even react to her statement. He stared out the window,
|
|
regarding the field of stars beyond.
|
|
|
|
"You might be interested in knowing that it was Aeia who told me this."
|
|
Picard's double-take told her that she had struck some interest. "She is very
|
|
sensitive, and keenly observant."
|
|
|
|
"She's young," he finally said.
|
|
|
|
"Not so young as you might think," said the Counselor. "She has aged a lot in
|
|
a short amount of time. I find she has a profound understanding of other
|
|
beings."
|
|
|
|
"From what she told us, that may simply be in the nature of her kind."
|
|
|
|
"Nevertheless, you ought to talk to her sometime." Counselor Troi watched
|
|
the impassive face, searching for a way through to what the Captain was
|
|
feeling at that moment.
|
|
|
|
"Counselor, if you will excuse me, there are some things to which I must
|
|
attend. Thank you for stopping by."
|
|
|
|
Troi stood up, watching Picard as she did. She moved towards the door.
|
|
|
|
As if he felt that the weight of her regard required further comment from
|
|
him, he said, "Perhaps I will go speak with our guest, as you suggest."
|
|
|
|
Good, she thought. He had never really told her much about the experience
|
|
he kept locked up inside of him, of the family and world he left behind, now
|
|
destroyed, and he, like Aeia, the sole survivor. Perhaps they could share
|
|
some of the pain of their similar experiences, together. "You might have
|
|
something to learn from her," she said.
|
|
|
|
"If what she says about her people is true," replied the Captain, "we all have
|
|
something to learn from her."
|
|
|
|
And the doors shut behind Troi's departing form.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
"Aeia"
|
|
|
|
PART FOUR
|
|
|
|
"You're asking the impossible."
|
|
|
|
Aeia frowned at the doctor who stood in front of her. She pushed herself
|
|
further upright on the bed, leaning forward with determination. Her long
|
|
brown curls, tousled by sleep, hung down limply in front of her shoulders,
|
|
but her eyes sparked with vibrant life. "No, Doctor," she replied. "I am
|
|
asking you to believe me. Now is the time to act. My leg cannot wait; you
|
|
and I both know that."
|
|
|
|
Dr. Crusher shook her head. Aeia was right; her leg's condition had worsened
|
|
overnight since her excursion onto the planet. She should never have let the
|
|
girl get out of bed. But what was now presented to her was simply beyond
|
|
her ability to imagine.
|
|
|
|
Aeia's face darkened at the doctor's silence. "I can't do this alone," she said.
|
|
Dr. Crusher remained silent. "You're a member of Starfleet," she continued.
|
|
"You're supposed to discover new peoples, new civilizations... new
|
|
experiences. New ways of doing things. Discover this one with me."
|
|
|
|
The CMO exploded out of her silence. "You're asking me to believe that you
|
|
can heal your leg with nothing but - but your hands, and a couple of
|
|
radioactive rocks!" She shook her head. "My belief doesn't stretch that far.
|
|
Not when I can do nothing with all I have-"
|
|
|
|
"Stop limiting yourself," Aeia said quietly. "Do you really think that all this
|
|
intricate technology that surrounds you is the only way to heal? Stop being
|
|
a doctor."
|
|
|
|
"I AM a doctor."
|
|
|
|
Aeia looked levelly into the CMO's eyes. "No you aren't. A doctor is someone
|
|
who doctors a wound. You are a healer. You heal them. Listen: I am not
|
|
strong enough yet to do this by myself, or I would go about it quietly and
|
|
not bring you into it. But I sense your strength, and your potential. The
|
|
human race is so close to acquiring many of the abilities my people had; take
|
|
this step with me! Further your evolution as a species. Or do this just as a
|
|
favor for me, but do it; there is no risk, I assure you. If we fail, nothing will
|
|
be lost. Please. I need your help to heal."
|
|
|
|
Dr. Crusher sank back to lean against the neighboring bed, her protests
|
|
exhausted. "What does it entail?"
|
|
|
|
Aeia picked up the two crystals that had been resting on her lap. They were
|
|
dense, and her arms, weakened by her worsened condition, quivered under
|
|
their weight. "These emit a low-level radiation that, focused properly, can
|
|
be a powerful tool for healing. They will be our guides, and our aids. Our
|
|
only aids. Everything else that we need we will find within us."
|
|
|
|
Dr. Crusher fidgeted nervously. "What do I do?"
|
|
|
|
"Come here beside me," directed Aeia. She lay back as the doctor
|
|
approached the bed. "Relax. No, not like that. Straighten your back, let your
|
|
shoulders fall back. Open your frame and find your balance." She paused as
|
|
the CMO concentrated on following her directions. "Now give me your hand,
|
|
and place the other there - yes. Now close your eyes, and join me..." And
|
|
her voice fell silent as their minds met and joined. They began the healing
|
|
process as one.
|
|
|
|
--------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Ensign Park was preoccupied as she strode into Sick Bay to report for duty.
|
|
Her argument with her husband vanished from her thoughts, however, as
|
|
she rounded the corner to see Dr. Crusher standing beside a patient's bed,
|
|
eyes closed and motionless. Park stood at a respectful distance for a few
|
|
moments, but when after a few seconds neither patient nor doctor had
|
|
stirred, she began to approach the still pair.
|
|
|
|
Suddenly, Dr. Crusher's legs buckled and she pitched forward towards the
|
|
bed. Before Park could reach the bed, the young woman on the bed had
|
|
stopped the CMO from falling. One hand had caught Dr. Crusher's forearm
|
|
and held it up off the bed with an iron grip, though the arm shook violently
|
|
from the effort. Ensign Park hooked one arm around her superior's waist,
|
|
lifting her weight and supporting her away from the bed.
|
|
|
|
The red-haired doctor stirred as Park set her down on a chair. "Are you all
|
|
right, Dr. Crusher?" asked the ensign.
|
|
|
|
"Yes," came the faint reply. Dr. Crusher's cheeks slowly began to recover
|
|
their color as she pressed her forehead into one hand. "What is Aeia's
|
|
condition?"
|
|
|
|
Park moved over to the bed and examined the readouts. Picking up an
|
|
instrument from a nearby shelf, she moved it over the still patient. Her
|
|
movements gravitated to the right leg, and, after checking the results, she
|
|
scanned it again. Shaking her head in disbelief, she turned to her superior.
|
|
"She's asleep," she said, "and showing very severe signs of fatigue. Doctor,
|
|
according to these scans, the cell damage in her right leg has been corrected."
|
|
|
|
Dr. Crusher nodded. She had known this, she had been part of it, but she
|
|
wanted to hear the words, to know that it was really true. "I know," she
|
|
said.
|
|
|
|
-----------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
"Captain, a vessel is approaching this system from the Neutral Zone."
|
|
|
|
"Romulan?" queried Picard.
|
|
|
|
Data was silent for a moment as his fingertips tapped his console.
|
|
"Affirmative."
|
|
|
|
Riker frowned. "Why would a Romulan ship leave the Neutral Zone
|
|
uncloaked?"
|
|
|
|
"Time to arrival, Mr. Data?"
|
|
|
|
"Two minutes, forty-two seconds, Captain."
|
|
|
|
"We will know soon, Number One," Picard said in response to Riker's
|
|
question. "Standby for Yellow Alert," he commanded.
|
|
|
|
---------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Dr. Crusher stood over Aeia's sleeping form, brushing a strand of the girl's
|
|
long hair from her face. Her sleep was so deep, and her form so still and
|
|
colorless, she bore a semblance to death, and yet Beverly Crusher had never
|
|
been so keenly aware of the life within a patient. The young woman before
|
|
her, almost exactly her son's age, had a fierce grip on life and bristled with
|
|
an incredible strength. The doctor was in awe.
|
|
|
|
She moved away from the bed after a time, heading out of Sick Bay and
|
|
towards the turbolift. Captain Picard had requested an update on any
|
|
change in Aeia's condition, and she decided she would deliver this one in
|
|
person. She wondered as the turbolift doors closed if she would be able to
|
|
describe what she had just experienced to someone even as close to her as
|
|
Jean-Luc.
|
|
|
|
---------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
"We are in hailing range, sir," reported Data.
|
|
|
|
"Open a channel," Picard commanded.
|
|
|
|
"Channel open," reported the deep voice of Worf.
|
|
|
|
"Romulan Vessel, this is Captain Picard of the Federation Starship Enterprise.
|
|
I demand an explanation for your presence in Federation space."
|
|
|
|
"They are responding," said Worf.
|
|
|
|
"On screen."
|
|
|
|
A Romulan commander appeared on the viewscreen, gazing with perfect,
|
|
impenetrable composure at the bridge crew of the Enterprise. "I beg to
|
|
differ with you, Picard. This is not Federation space."
|
|
|
|
Picard's sarcasm belied the fact he did not take the Romulan commander's
|
|
statement seriously. "And from what data do you draw this conclusion,
|
|
Commander?"
|
|
|
|
"On the truth," the Romulan replied.
|
|
|
|
Picard's patience with the joke ended abruptly. "The treaty between our
|
|
peoples clearly-"
|
|
|
|
"Did not involve the Katyans," the Romulan finished for him. He signalled to
|
|
his left, and a young man moved into view on the screen. His thick reddish-
|
|
brown skin and barrel-like form was in distinct contrast to the Romulans
|
|
around him. "Dhyle here has informed me that his kind have populated this
|
|
region for over four hundred years, long before the Federation claimed it as
|
|
its own."
|
|
|
|
Picard looked skeptical. "Starfleet found no evidence of previous settlement
|
|
in any of these systems."
|
|
|
|
"We did not wish to be found," spat the man now identified as Dhyle. Thick
|
|
hairs across his lower neck bristled with a hint of nervousness. "Besides,
|
|
Starfleet has not bothered to fully explore any of these systems until now."
|
|
|
|
"Dhyle has decided to join his people with the Empire," said the Romulan
|
|
coolly. "Therefore, Picard, it would appear that it is you, and not I, that is
|
|
trespassing." He waited for a moment for the implication of his words to
|
|
register with the Enterprise's captain and crew, and then continued, "I am
|
|
here to claim what rightly belongs to the Empire, Picard. Leave this system
|
|
now or be destroyed."
|
|
|
|
"Wait," interjected the Captain. "We have discovered a life form who claims
|
|
her people inhabited this planet about which we orbit. I do not believe she
|
|
is of your people, Dhyle."
|
|
|
|
The Katyan flinched momentarily. "Impossible," he said firmly. "The
|
|
Petryans are dead; I have seen their ruins myself. They have all gone from
|
|
this life."
|
|
|
|
"Show us this... Petryan," said the Romulan commander.
|
|
|
|
Dr. Crusher's voice spoke quietly at Picard's side. "Jean-Luc, she's nearly
|
|
unconscious with exhaustion."
|
|
|
|
He nodded to the CMO and turned to speak to the viewscreen. "That is
|
|
unfortunately impossible," he began.
|
|
|
|
The Romulan commander cut him off with a wave of his arm. "Unfortunate
|
|
indeed, human. You have two minutes to leave what is now Romulan space."
|
|
The transmission ended abruptly, replacing the Romulan's image with that of
|
|
his vessel.
|
|
|
|
"Captain," spoke Worf from his station, "the Romulan vessel is not a match
|
|
for the Enterprise's weaponry or her mobility. They do not pose us a threat."
|
|
|
|
"Counselor?" queried the Captain.
|
|
|
|
"I sense deceit," answered Troi, "but I am not sure of what kind. I know that
|
|
he is quite confident that he will succeed in his mission. I also don't think he
|
|
intends to allow us to leave alive."
|
|
|
|
"How does he expect to stop us if he's outgunned and outmatched?" asked
|
|
Riker. Troi had nothing to offer in response.
|
|
|
|
"What about the Katyan?" Picard asked of Troi.
|
|
|
|
"I sense mostly nervousness from him," she responded. "He's young and
|
|
unsure of himself. But he is not deceiving us."
|
|
|
|
The bridge fell to silence for a few seconds while Picard contemplated the
|
|
weight of their situation.
|
|
|
|
"Open a channel to the Romulan vessel," spoke an unexpected voice out of
|
|
this silence. All turned around to see Aeia standing near the turbolift,
|
|
leaning heavily on the railing. "Do it," she commanded, her voice deep and
|
|
authoritative. She glared across the upper level of the bridge at Worf, who
|
|
stood motionless at his station, meeting her eyes with his own in a fierce
|
|
white stare from within his dark face. She turned her gaze on Picard, whose
|
|
face blazed in indignation.
|
|
|
|
"What is the meaning of this?? You are not part of this crew, and you have
|
|
no authority to be on my bridge!"
|
|
|
|
"Your crew is in grave danger," she responded firmly. "If you do not allow
|
|
me to act, your lives will end in minutes. My planet has already seen
|
|
enough deaths. I will not allow these to occur, not when I can save them."
|
|
|
|
"That ship," said Picard, pointing to the image on the viewscreen, "does not
|
|
mean we are in grave danger."
|
|
|
|
"The five unseen warships surrounding it, however, mean EXACTLY that,"
|
|
countered Aeia.
|
|
|
|
"There are no indications of cloaked warships in the area," said Data from his
|
|
console.
|
|
|
|
"Nevertheless, they are there," said Aeia. "Their technology cannot hide their
|
|
presences from me. Katyans have very loud minds." A half-smile crossed
|
|
her face for an instant, giving the impression that her statement, however
|
|
serious, possessed recognizable humor.
|
|
|
|
Picard was not amused. He looked straight and full into the dark blue
|
|
depths and searched them. They offered no resistance to his probing, but
|
|
met him with every ounce of his strength and more. He saw within an
|
|
admirable force and an inner will that could not be denied. "Make it so," he
|
|
commanded Worf.
|
|
|
|
"Channel open," boomed the voice of the Klingon.
|
|
|
|
"Romulan vessel," spoke Aeia in a loud, full voice. She stood up slowly from
|
|
the railing, shifting her weight with caution onto both legs. "This is Aeia, an
|
|
inhabitant of the planet below. You are in our space."
|
|
|
|
The viewscreen switched to show Dhyle sitting before it, the Romulan
|
|
commander beside him, frowning. "Your claim is false," asserted the Katyan.
|
|
|
|
"Let me prove my case in person," she responded. "Allow me to beam over
|
|
to your ship."
|
|
|
|
The Romulan commander started in surprise, but the Katyan held back his
|
|
response by a quickly raised hand. "Agreed. Beam over in one minute." The
|
|
transmission ended.
|
|
|
|
The bridge of the Enterprise stood in dumbfounded silence.
|
|
|
|
Picard was the first to recover from his shock. His preparatory breath drew
|
|
all attention on the bridge to him, and all expected some sort of reprimand.
|
|
Surprising them all, he merely said quietly, "I hope you know what you're
|
|
doing."
|
|
|
|
Aeia leaned once more upon the railing, a pained look crossing her face. "So
|
|
do I," she replied.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
"Aeia"
|
|
|
|
PART FIVE
|
|
|
|
Troi supported Aeia's weight with her arm around the slender waist. They
|
|
stood in silence as the turbolift descended.
|
|
|
|
"What are you going to do?" she asked finally.
|
|
|
|
Aeia took a deep breath and regarded the panels in front of her. "Dhyle is a
|
|
young man," she answered at last. "He is a good leader, but an inexperienced
|
|
one. The Romulans must have bought his loyalty, perhaps with this improve
|
|
cloaking technology. But his alliance to their Empire is superficial. An
|
|
alliance that is formed weakly can be broken easily." The door opened and
|
|
they moved out together, striding towards the transporter room. Aeia added
|
|
quietly: "I hope."
|
|
|
|
Standing at his console, O'Brien shook his head in disbelief as Aeia took her
|
|
place on the pad. "I can't believe they're going to drop their shields to allow
|
|
you to get over."
|
|
|
|
"They will," Aeia responded firmly. "Dhyle's curiosity will ensure my safety
|
|
and your safety until I am aboard their ship and can prove to him that I am
|
|
who I say I am."
|
|
|
|
"And then what?" asked Troi from where she stood beside O'Brien.
|
|
|
|
"Then the Romulans will try to kill me," Aeia responded, her voice dark and
|
|
serious. "What happens then will depend on Dhyle," she added as she began
|
|
to fade in the transporter beam.
|
|
|
|
Troi started to protest, but knew it was too late. She sent all of her hopes
|
|
away with the disappearing figure.
|
|
|
|
------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
When Aeia materialized, five Romulan phasers were levelled at her. It was
|
|
as she had expected.
|
|
|
|
Dhyle stood before her. Despite the thick build of his kind, he was tall. His
|
|
brown mane of coarse hair would be considered handsome by one of his
|
|
kind, and his amber eyes could be very romantic in the right situation. This
|
|
was not one of them.
|
|
|
|
"Hello, Dhyle," she said.
|
|
|
|
"Impostor," he hissed. "The Petryans never looked like you, so pale and thin!
|
|
So ugly!"
|
|
|
|
Her voice was low and steady. "You know as I know that my kind are not
|
|
limited by form, Dhyle. I am living amongst humans; I have assumed their
|
|
appearance. I could also be a Katryan, like my people were at Kjala."
|
|
|
|
"What do YOU know of Kjala?" he stormed.
|
|
|
|
Aeia took silent notice of the quickness of his answer. "I was there," she
|
|
said. Were you? she wondered silently.
|
|
|
|
Dhyle considered this for a long time. He turned to the armed Romulans and
|
|
motioned for them to leave. When they hesitated, he hissed, "She is a lone
|
|
woman, and unarmed. I do not need five of you to help me control her."
|
|
They left reluctantly, a door hissing to a close behind their departing forms.
|
|
|
|
"Prove it," he commanded.
|
|
|
|
She thought quickly. Kjala was an experience they both shared, and his
|
|
emotions on the subject ran deep. She chose that avenue, if not to lead to
|
|
her proof, then at least to establish some common ground. "What village was
|
|
yours?"
|
|
|
|
He hesitated for a moment, and then said, "Yedras."
|
|
|
|
Aeia nodded, the only outward sign she showed of the sudden surge of hope
|
|
she felt. She had been at Yedras. "Two hundred thirty-five dead," she said
|
|
quietly. She watched his reddish face as minute movements showed the
|
|
emotions moving beneath the surface. She opened her mind to his thoughts
|
|
and saw the images flashing past, glimpses of pain, moments of suffering, a
|
|
mental photo album of the ravages of the tragedy. She had to strain to
|
|
suppress her own memories; she had been young, and the deaths had carved
|
|
themselves into her. For every life that she had saved, there were ten she
|
|
had lost.
|
|
|
|
Suddenly, one image drew her attention: a woman's face. She remembered
|
|
that face. "There was a woman," she began tremulously, "that gave birth too
|
|
early. Her infant lived only a few moments; there was nothing I could do-"
|
|
Aeia's voice choked. She forced herself to go on. "She never got to see his
|
|
face, however; she was gone before he. Her name... was Khali."
|
|
|
|
A shadow grew across Dhyle's face. "My sister."
|
|
|
|
"Yes."
|
|
|
|
Without warning, the Katryan exploded from his sorrow and grabbed Aeia
|
|
by both arms. "You're lying!" he cried. "You're using this information to get
|
|
through to me; it won't work. I was on the surface of this planet; I saw the
|
|
abandoned homes. This planet is empty."
|
|
|
|
"It is empty," she agreed, "except for me. I am the one survivor of my
|
|
people." She searched her memory for a moment, and then continued, "She
|
|
was survived by a son, a young boy. He watched her die... We kept him
|
|
with us for a time before leaving the village and giving him to someone who
|
|
promised to care for him." She remembered the small, dirty hands that had
|
|
clenched in the folds of her robe. She saw the tear stains across the silent
|
|
face, saw them dry and crust in the dirt, closing the boy in silence. He could
|
|
have been her own little brother.
|
|
|
|
Dhyle relaxed his grip a little. "I should have been there," he said
|
|
sorrowfully. "I could have helped her, protected her. She didn't have to
|
|
die."
|
|
|
|
"But her child lived. He should be" - she some quick figuring in her head -
|
|
"twelve years old now."
|
|
|
|
"No!" he cried, resuming his grip so tightly that it hurt her. His face was a
|
|
livid display of hatred, and a moment of fear grabbed her; she pulled away
|
|
with all of her strength, and in the struggle the sleeve of her shirt ripped in
|
|
his grip. "He's dead now, the F'korins, they killed him. Don't you see, that's
|
|
why we need the new cloaking devices. We have to defeat them before
|
|
more Katryans die...." He pulled away from her, but his clenched fists had
|
|
not released her sleeves yet, and he pulled the tear open to expose her left
|
|
arm. Suddenly, he stopped.
|
|
|
|
She glanced down at her arm. Entwining blue and green bands, the symbol
|
|
of her rank and achievements, decorated the skin of her forearm. A jagged
|
|
pink mark cut across the bands, visible to close scrutiny. The bands and the
|
|
scar showed clearly in the light of the room.
|
|
|
|
"Those marks," Dhyle said. "What do they mean?"
|
|
|
|
"The bands are the marks of my people, showing my rank and what I have
|
|
achieved."
|
|
|
|
"And the scar?"
|
|
|
|
"A souvenir from Kjala." She regarded the shiny pink flesh of the scar and a
|
|
memory flashed before her eyes. She saw herself ripping the bottom of her
|
|
robe and tying the cloth about her arm in a vain attempt to keep blood in
|
|
and dirt out. She hadn't had time to tend to her own wounds. The scar was
|
|
testimony to the fact that she had neglected herself until it was too late to
|
|
heal her arm cleanly.
|
|
|
|
Different emotions wrestled for control of Dhyle's face. Finally, he
|
|
surrendered to that of defeat, sinking to his knees before Aeia. "You have
|
|
not deceived me. Little Fedy never spoke again after Kjala, after his
|
|
mother's death." He drew in a shuddering breath, not looking at Aeia. His
|
|
eyes focused on some point beyond her in the room, but what he saw was a
|
|
memory and not what was before him. "He drew pictures instead of talking.
|
|
Some of them were lovely, some... hideous. His own perceptions of his life,
|
|
and Kjala in the middle of it. But always there was a person, a person he
|
|
never named, who figured in the pictures. A person with blue and green
|
|
bands on her arm, crossed by a line of red." His eyes, penitent, raised to
|
|
meet hers. "You."
|
|
|
|
Aeia was silent. What happened next rested in the Katryan's hands.
|
|
|
|
"I am at your command, Petryan," he said humbly.
|
|
|
|
-----------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
"Captain, there are five warships uncloaking in this area," said Data.
|
|
|
|
"Raise shields, and go to Red Alert."
|
|
|
|
"Sir," interjected Worf with surprise, "the warships are training their
|
|
weapons on the Romulan vessel."
|
|
|
|
"Transporter Room to Bridge."
|
|
|
|
"Yes, O'Brien?" asked the Captain.
|
|
|
|
"I have Aeia back on board, Captain," the engineer responded. After a brief
|
|
pause, he added, "I think she needs medical assistance."
|
|
|
|
Picard did not have the chance to order Dr. Crusher to the Transporter Room
|
|
before the CMO disappeared into the turbolift.
|
|
|
|
"Romulan vessel retreating from Federation space," reported Worf.
|
|
|
|
A wave of relief swept over the bridge. The tension relaxed as people sighed
|
|
and murmured in relief and surprise.
|
|
|
|
Worf spoke again: "One of the Katryan vessels is hailing us sir."
|
|
|
|
"Open a channel," commanded Picard.
|
|
|
|
"Channel open, sir."
|
|
|
|
"On screen." Picard stood and tugged at the front of his uniform as the
|
|
sturdy form of Dhyle once more commanded the bridge's viewscreen. This
|
|
time, however, he was surrounded by males and females of his own kind.
|
|
|
|
"The Petryan is safely aboard your vessel?" he asked curtly.
|
|
|
|
"Yes," answered Picard. "I-"
|
|
|
|
The Katryan stopped the Federation captain with a wave of his hand.
|
|
"Another time, human." His image disappeared and black space once more
|
|
filled the screen. The five warships turned about and moved away,
|
|
disappearing into the blackness.
|
|
|
|
There was an awkward moment of silence on the bridge. Picard snapped
|
|
about suddenly , barking a few orders to the helmsman. This broke the
|
|
spell, and everyone turned back to their posts in a bustle of nervous activity.
|
|
Then he strode towards the turbolift, muttering about checking on Aeia's
|
|
condition, and the bridge settled into routine operation.
|
|
|
|
On a fast-moving ship that was rapidly putting space between itself and the
|
|
Enterprise, the young Katryan leader stood motionless on his bridge, weeping
|
|
silently for the wound he had not yet given himself time to heal. On the
|
|
Enterprise, his tears were echoed across the face of a young woman who
|
|
shared his pain, knowing that some wounds hurt deeper than the one that
|
|
marked her arm.
|
|
|
|
--------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Deanna Troi entered the holodeck slowly, taking in the elaborate program
|
|
that it was running. The air was thick with a woodsy smell; the ground
|
|
beneath her alternated between soft, sweet-smelling earth and dampened
|
|
leaves. A sun that was nearly set filtered goldness at a low angle through
|
|
the wide green leaves that rustled gently in the warm breeze. A small brook
|
|
wound its way between earthen banks and bumped up against some rocks,
|
|
forming a small pool before spilling over in a miniature waterfall. A feature
|
|
by the pool caught her by surprise; a honey-brown creature bent its head to
|
|
the clear water and drank. It was a unicorn, or, at least, Troi supposed it to
|
|
be one. Its features were equine, though by far no Earth equine had ever
|
|
achieved the slender grace that stood here by the pool. The horn that rose
|
|
from its forehead was not curved but straight, faceted, and crystalline. It
|
|
filtered the slanted light of the setting sun, sending prisms onto the leaves
|
|
on the ground near the bank.
|
|
|
|
Troi wondered about the unicorn; she had thought Aeia had been working on
|
|
a program to accurately simulate her homeworld. What place did an ancient
|
|
Earth mythical creature have here? "Aeia?" she called into the air, curious.
|
|
She peered into the darkness beyond the stream, trying to see beyond the
|
|
trees and locate Aeia. There was no response. The unicorn stopped drinking
|
|
and raised its head slowly. Dark eyes focused themselves in Troi's direction.
|
|
|
|
"Computer," commanded the Counselor. "Please give Aeia's location with
|
|
respect to my own."
|
|
|
|
"Aeia is not in the holodeck," responded the computer.
|
|
|
|
Troi frowned. Geordi, who had been working most of the day on a panel just
|
|
outside the door to this holodeck, had seen Aeia go in. Besides, why would
|
|
she have left the program running? "Locate Aeia."
|
|
|
|
"Aeia is not on the Enterprise."
|
|
|
|
Troi was not prepared for that. She gasped.
|
|
|
|
The unicorn left the side of the pool and began walking towards her with an
|
|
easy gait. Smooth muscles rippled with her movement under the silken
|
|
hide. "Computer," commanded Troi, "freeze program."
|
|
|
|
The scene instantly took on the unnatural freeze of a three-dimensional
|
|
photograph. The brook silenced, halted in its flow over the rocks. The
|
|
leaves were motionless, suddenly looking as brittle and hard as glass. The
|
|
breeze held itself in perfect stillness.
|
|
|
|
And the unicorn continued to advance.
|
|
|
|
*The ship's computer is not programmed to follow a lifeform whose body
|
|
signature changes,* explained Aeia as she came to a stop before the
|
|
Counselor. The dark eyes, visibly blue in the slanted late-late-afternoon
|
|
light that shone into them from the holodeck-generated sun, studied Troi's
|
|
face with an intensity that was at once alarming and familiarly Aeia. She
|
|
blew a puff of air through her nose in a gesture distinctly similar to a laugh,
|
|
and added, *My people have always been a little misunderstood, Deanna.
|
|
The Katryans see us as saviors, and call us Petryans. Other races have called
|
|
us other things. Some have labelled us as gods. The human race labelled us
|
|
'unicorns,' and made us magical. Each kind has its own way of dealing with
|
|
something it doesn't entirely understand.* Her image blurred as was
|
|
replaced by her human form, crouching naked in the wet leaves.
|
|
"Computer," she spoke aloud as she rose to her two human feet, "resume
|
|
program."
|
|
|
|
The brook stirred again into its gentle water-sounds. Leaves halted in gentle
|
|
movements completed them, and "reality" seemed restored to the scene.
|
|
|
|
Aeia smiled warmly at the Counselor. Her long hair afforded her some, but
|
|
not much, modesty across her otherwise bare front. She seemed blissfully
|
|
unaware of her nudity, turning to stride with confidence but no hurry
|
|
towards where she had left her clothes. She lifted up her oversized tunic,
|
|
shrugging it over her slim form.
|
|
|
|
Troi summoned up some small talk to fill in the time Aeia would need to
|
|
dress. "I'm glad to see you're feeling well," she began.
|
|
|
|
Aeia's laughter trickled out through the sleeves of her garment before her
|
|
head emerged from the top. "You're trying too hard to be casual about my
|
|
shape-changing," she said, pulling from her face the strands of hair that had
|
|
been mussed by pulling her clothes down over her head. "But I forgive you.
|
|
Yes, I am feeling much stronger, thank you."
|
|
|
|
Troi settled herself on a large rock, staring off into the sunset which was now
|
|
beginning. "What are your plans now?" she queried.
|
|
|
|
Aeia settled into a patch of earth by Troi's feet, fixing her eyes on the same
|
|
spectacle that now displayed itself in the 'distance.' "We reach Starbase in
|
|
one week," she answered. "I have been requested to participate in the talks
|
|
between the Federation and the Katryans in a month. I will be assisting a
|
|
Federation arbitrator to settle the differences between the Katryans and the
|
|
F'korins."
|
|
|
|
"Do you think the Katryans will agree to join with the Federation?"
|
|
|
|
"They have no choice," Aeia replied matter-of-factly. "They have made
|
|
dangerous and powerful enemies of the Romulan Empire on their border."
|
|
|
|
"And then what?" prompted the Counselor.
|
|
|
|
Aeia was silent for some time. "Starfleet," she said quietly. Troi's response
|
|
was a quick look of surprise, to which she replied, "I was the youngest
|
|
Healer ever to achieve the distinctions I reached. I am confident of my
|
|
abilities; I can become a student again, and enter your Academy, and prove
|
|
myself again."
|
|
|
|
"But why Starfleet?"
|
|
|
|
"I need to find those crystals. Only the range and variable territory of a
|
|
Starfleet vessel would be sufficient to aid me in my search." Her face fell,
|
|
obscuring her expression in the growing shadows. "Besides, my people are
|
|
gone, my world is gone. My place is now in yours." Her words were
|
|
strained, harsh, but strong.
|
|
|
|
"You feel a need to belong to your new world," observed the Betazoid.
|
|
|
|
Aeia's face turned one of her piercing stares up at Troi. "Wouldn't you,
|
|
Counselor?"
|
|
|
|
Troi instantly regretted her instinctive counseling of the girl. Aeia was not
|
|
someone who needed to be told what she felt. "Please. I told you to call me
|
|
Deanna."
|
|
|
|
Aeia's face softened. She appreciated the feeling of equality expressed in the
|
|
statement. "We were many," she said gently. There was grief in that simple
|
|
sentence; she mourned for the lost presences that she had once never been
|
|
without. "Now I am one." She silently remembered telling Dhyle: I am the
|
|
one survivor of my people.
|
|
|
|
"No," said the Betazoid in the growing dusk. Her hand found Aeia's and
|
|
closed it in a firm grip. "We are two."
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
"Aeia"
|
|
|
|
EPILOGUE
|
|
|
|
The day was sunny, but cool. The sky was bright enough to be almost
|
|
blinding, reflecting in sharp colors from the bare rock formations that rose
|
|
from the valley in the distance. Shielding his eyes with one hand, Captain
|
|
Jean-Luc Picard led his horse away from the stables. He had picked a well-
|
|
muscled bay that moved in quick, uneven steps beside him. Slender, dark
|
|
ears swiveled around to intercept any sound or movement; this one was
|
|
alert and ready to go. The men who ran the stable had recommended him
|
|
for expert riders only.
|
|
|
|
Following closely behind her captain, Deanna Troi led a stately dappled-gray
|
|
gelding. He was tall and commanded a considerable amount of mass, but he
|
|
exhibited none of nervous excitement of the Captain's mount. He moved his
|
|
body forward with a smooth, gentle stride and exhibited an air of calm
|
|
disinterest.
|
|
|
|
Will Riker and Geordi LaForge accompanied her with their mounts. Geordi
|
|
had been given a petite white Arab mare with a finely chiseled face, and
|
|
Riker led a startlingly red chestnut. The mare was following along quietly,
|
|
but the chestnut gelding was reluctant, flicking his ears about and frequently
|
|
pinning them back.
|
|
|
|
Captain Picard swung up into his saddle with practiced ease, and the others
|
|
took this as a cue to follow suit. Riker, however, was unsuccessful. His
|
|
gelding pinned his ears flat back and threatened to bite him every time he
|
|
stepped closer.
|
|
|
|
"He doesn't like you," said a voice from the side. All eyes turned to see Aeia
|
|
standing slightly away from the group.
|
|
|
|
"I can see that," muttered Riker and he abandoned his efforts to get into the
|
|
saddle.
|
|
|
|
Aeia walked to the chestnut's head. She leaned over the red muzzle and
|
|
blew a breath of air over it. The gelding's nostrils stretched wide to collect
|
|
the scent. She stroked the velvet nose affectionately.
|
|
|
|
"I don't see how you can do that," muttered the commander. "He won't let
|
|
me get anywhere near him."
|
|
|
|
"He doesn't like men," she explained. "He prefers the way women smell."
|
|
|
|
"Perhaps we could trade," offered Deanna. She swung down off the gray and
|
|
offered the reins to Riker. Shrugging, the commander finally accepted them
|
|
and mounted the gray, who exhibited no objection, nor even interest, in the
|
|
change of riders.
|
|
|
|
Troi approached the chestnut, who flared his nostrils again as she grew near.
|
|
Taking the cue from Aeia, she blew a puff of warm breath across his nose,
|
|
and then took the reins. The gelding seemed to instantly relax, and allowed
|
|
her to get on without problem. Observing from the back of the gray, Riker
|
|
shrugged in exasperation.
|
|
|
|
"Perhaps you would like to join us," Troi offered to Aeia.
|
|
|
|
The younger woman concentrated her gaze on the large equine head in her
|
|
hands. She twisted the bright forelock absent-mindedly, frowning. "No, I
|
|
don't think so."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, I insist," said the captain. "It's a marvelous day for it."
|
|
|
|
Aeia regarded the hills for a instant in silence. "Yes," she murmured. "Okay,"
|
|
she said, turning towards the group. "I'll come along, but I won't ride."
|
|
|
|
"I don't think that would be wise," cautioned Geordi. "These horses are
|
|
pretty fast. You wouldn't be able to keep up."
|
|
|
|
"Oh no?" A devilish glint crept into Aeia's eyes. "Would you like to test
|
|
that?"
|
|
|
|
"What are you suggesting?" asked Riker.
|
|
|
|
"A race," she responded.
|
|
|
|
Picard laughed. "Certainly you are not serious!"
|
|
|
|
Aeia lifted the strap of her satchel over her head and offered it to Troi.
|
|
"Could you carry this for me?"
|
|
|
|
Accepting the satchel, the Betazoid caught Aeia's eyes for a moment and
|
|
suddenly realized what she intended to do. She shared a mischievous smile
|
|
with her younger friend before telling her captain, "She is very serious,
|
|
Captain."
|
|
|
|
"In fact, I'll give you a head start." Aeia dropped into a crouch, readying
|
|
herself to start running. "We'll race to that tree over there before the ledge.
|
|
Ready, GO!"
|
|
|
|
Picard's horse recognized the command before he did, and the captain nearly
|
|
lost his balance from being left behind. He regained it swiftly, though, and
|
|
leaned over the bay's neck to enjoy the thrill of the speed. He could hear the
|
|
others right behind him, thundering hooves right at their heels. He centered
|
|
his weight and brought his face close to the muscled neck, speaking
|
|
encouragement that he knew only his mount would hear.
|
|
|
|
Suddenly, he was passed. A brown blur stretched out in front of him,
|
|
passing him, putting space between them with ease. He was at first shocked
|
|
to see that the horse was riderless, and then gasped at a bigger surprise:
|
|
when the creature turned its head to glance at those behind it, he could see
|
|
centered in its forehead a straight crystalline horn.
|
|
|
|
Then he heard Aeia's mental laugh in his head.
|
|
|
|
The tree by the ledge was attained, and everyone drew up their horses.
|
|
Everyone except Aeia, who went thundering past. She leapt straight off the
|
|
edge and disappeared from sight.
|
|
|
|
Four hearts missed a beat. Suddenly, a great brown bird appeared from
|
|
within the ravine, soaring up on an updraft of air. It circled above their
|
|
heads, and from where they were, they could see the blue and green
|
|
feathers intermingling with the brown of her left wing.
|
|
|
|
*I am one,* spoke Aeia's mental voice; *I am many. And I am not alone.*
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
thank you.
|
|
|
|
--lisa
|
|
|