266 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
266 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
Path: newserv.ksu.ksu.edu!moe.ksu.ksu.edu!vixen.cso.uiuc.edu!sdd.hp.com!usc!howland.reston.ans.net!agate!msuinfo!harbinger.cc.monash.edu.au!news.uwa.edu.au!DIALix!melbourne.dialix.oz.au!not-for-mail
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From: arifel@melbourne.dialix.oz.au (Nikolai Kingsley)
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Newsgroups: alt.startrek.creative
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Subject: Hellraiser / Trek Crossover (again)
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Date: 8 Aug 1994 04:05:43 +1000
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Organization: DIALix Services, Melbourne, Australia.
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Lines: 250
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Sender: arifel@melbourne.dialix.oz.au
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Message-ID: <3237pn$64u$1@melbourne.dialix.oz.au>
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NNTP-Posting-Host: melbourne.dialix.oz.au
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Summary: in case it DIDN't get through before...
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Keywords: STTNG Hellraiser
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X-Newsreader: NN version 6.5.0 #59 (NOV)
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my apologies to those who have seen this before...
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Transporters always made her nervous; each time she was forced to
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use one, she was convinced that something would go wrong, that she'd
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materialise half-way through a bulkhead, or in open space, or worse -
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somewhere -else-.
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As the environs of Starbase 72 faded there was that peculiar
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blankness, the all-over tingling feeling and the jerk of
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displacement; then she was -
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Where was she?
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The transporter room was empty. Worse, it was gloomy, dark, as if
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half the lights weren't working. She stepped off the transporter pad
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and her foot scuffed up a small cloud of dust. She suppressed a
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feeling of panic, tapped her communicator.
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`Bridge? This is Lieutenant Commander Amber... respond, please.'
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Nothing. `Computer?' Again, nothing. Frowning, she made her way
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out of Transporter Room Two, only to receive another shock.
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The corridor which normally led to the turbolift was completely
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different. It was narrower - about half as wide as it had been - and
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dark; instead of the familiar computer-access points, doors, and
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overhead light panels, the walls were finished in what looked like
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roughly worked stone bricks. The floor was covered in grey sand...
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it looked more like a tomb than a starship!
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Amber turned to look back into the transporter room. It was still
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there, as gloomy as before. She glanced up at where a stone column
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rose from somewhere beneath the sand, up along the wall to an ornate
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cornice at the ceiling, blending into an arch almost low enough for
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her to reach up and brush with her fingers. Structurally, this was
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ridiculous; from an energy standpoint, no-one could afford to run a
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starship made of stone. Too much mass. A faint breeze blew from
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down the corridor, and her attention was drawn to a strand of...
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cobweb? Spiders, on board a starship? Her nostrils quivering at the
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cold dampness carried on the breeze, she wondered if she was still
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onboard the Enterprise.
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She slowly walked down the corridor to where the turbolift would
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have been, only to meet an unfamiliar T-intersection, with corridors
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leading off to both sides. The left-hand one led to a second
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T-intersection, about twenty metres away, the right-hand path ran
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off, seemingly to infinity, the progression marked by regular placing
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of columns.
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Amber stood there, frowning. She felt as if she were trapped in
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one of Acting Science Officer Arifel's ridiculous holodeck setups,
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and for a moment she wondered if this was the case. She tapped her
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communicator once more.
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`Computer?' Still no response. She tried a few different
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channels, got nothing until the last one - she thought she heard a
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faint tinkling sound, like that of a far-away music box, but it faded
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after a few repetitions of the simple tune, and no amount of fiddling
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could bring it back. a fragment of the tune stayed with her as she
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started off down the left-hand turn.
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What she knew of maze theory (she was in a maze, after all) told
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her that unless there were islands not attached to the main body of
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the maze, she could keep taking left-hand turns and eventually
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traverse the whole maze. She gave up trying to match her position to
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what she remembered of the ship as she walked briskly down one
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corridor to the next intersection - a cross-road of five corridors -
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down the left-hand one, on to the next intersection and left again.
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As she rounded the corner, it occurred to her that she should be
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back at Transporter Room Two. She wasn't. She ran down the corridor
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and around two more left-hand turns before she realised that she was
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hopelessly lost. She tried retracing her steps, and her photographic
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memory and excellent sense of position told her that the corridors
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were changing after she'd moved through them. Once more, she thought
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that she'd somehow stumbled into the Holodeck. However, her
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communicator was still unresponsive.
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A hissing sound behind her made her turn. The doors of a turbolift
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had appeared in the wall behind her, trails of spider-web stretched
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across the opening. She cautiously stepped inside; it bore a closer
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relationship to a standard starship turbolift than the corridors
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outside did to their original forms, but it still had that tomb-like,
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gothic air, and was poorly lit.
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She instructed it to take her to the bridge, and after a pause
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which was almost long enough to make her wonder if it was working,
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the doors slid shut and the lift surged into motion. The journey
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was short.
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The doors opened on the bridge - she recognised the basic shape of
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the room - but the shock of its altered appearance almost made her
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step back into the relatively safe turbolift.
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The bridge was dark, illuminated only by faint lights at the
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consoles and a ghastly blue radiance which streamed up from slots
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along the lower edges of the walls, giving everyone present a wierd,
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morbid aspect. Most unusual were the dozens of chains suspended from
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the ceiling, each with a hook attached to the end. The gentle motion
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of the ship changing course set them to swaying, and occasionally
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clanking against each other. The crew were all present, but they
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weren't wearing regulation Starfleet uniforms. She recognised
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Commander Riker, from the set of his shoulders, but - like the others
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- he was dressed in some sort of black leather ceremonial robe, pale
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skin showing through vertical slashes in the material. The crew's
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attention was focused on the viewscreen, oblivious of her entrance.
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She carefully pushed aside a few of the chains and made her way
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down to her station, shuddering when she had to touch a chain with a
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large chunk of dead, rotted flesh spitted on the hook. She sat at
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her station and heard Captain Picard speak:
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`Ahh... Lieutenant Commander Amber, back from shore leave. I trust
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you enjoyed yourself?' She almost froze when she heard the voice;
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cold, raspy, with a quaver behind it that she could only associate
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with barely-suppressed ecstacy, or agony. What did freeze her in her
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seat was when she turned to face him, and saw:
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His head was scored by a series of incisions which divided his face
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up into a grid, with squares about three centimetres across. At the
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intersection of each incision, a large nail had been hammered into
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his skull. The skin was dead white, with a blue tinge that hinted at
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necrosis, and he wore the same black-leather gown as the rest of the
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crew, with slashes edged in the dark brown of dried blood.
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She would have thought the crew taken over by the Borg, considering
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the wierd variety of... additions that had been made to them. They
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weren't, however, the high-tech biomechanical prosthetics that the
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Borg favoured; these were old-fashioned torture implements. Sitting
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only a metre away, Acting Ensign Strepsil was working the
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navigational console with a set of thumbscrews compressing his
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wrists. He had skewers run through his cheeks, poking out from the
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sides of his head, and she barely fought down the impulse to shrink
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back in her seat when he turned to her and gave her a horrible grin.
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Captain Picard stepped down to her station and placed a hand on her
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shoulder, the white fingers resembling frozen earthworms.
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`You haven't answered my question, Lieutenant Commander.' Was that
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anger she detected in his voice, anger only just held in check? What
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had happened here?
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She swallowed, and replied in a trembling whisper,
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`Yes, Captain, it was quite restful... I look forward to resuming
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my duties.' Picard gave a grunt of approval, all the more horrible
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for its familiarity and her association with his old character; this
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feeling was swept away by the deathly cold laugh he followed it up
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with.
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`We are on an important mission... we're on our way to greet some
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old friends of yours.'
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`Of mine?' At this point, Acting science officer Arifel
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interrupted:
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`Captain, sensors are picking up an alien vessel, bearing
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two-seven-five, mark six, moving at warp nine point four on an
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intercept course.' Picard made a hissing ahhhhhh sound that caused
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hairs to stand up all along Amber's back.
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`Acting Ensign Strepsil, move to intercept.'
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`Intercept course plotted and laid in, Captain.' Young Strepsil
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seemed to be having some trouble speaking with the skewers through
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his face.
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As Picard went back to his seat, Amber stood, went over to the
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science station to face Acting Science Officer Arifel and whispered,
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`What the hell is going on here?' She tried to ignore the spikes
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which, inserted underneath his chin, crossed over inside his mouth
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and emerged from his temples, but she could not put aside the
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glittering lights which played about in the depths of his eyes. He
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slowly blinked, giving the impression that he was experiencing a
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great deal of pain but was hiding it (and here, Amber wished she'd
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retained some of the Betazed powers hidden somewhere in her ancestry;
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now, more than ever, she wanted to know what he was feeling); moving
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his lips with difficulty, he murmured,
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`You will see. Resume your station and all will be made clear
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very soon.' She noticed that his regulation Starfleet
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communicator badge had been replaced by a golden diamond design with
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faint lines etched on it. This triggered something in her memory;
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but it didn't surface until Arifel's console beeped and he announced
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`Within visual range, Captain.'
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`On screen.'
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Somehow, she knew what she was going to see. On the main viewer, a
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huge cubical starship, like the ones favoured by the Borg but with
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regular, ornate patterns in gold on each side. It turned slowly as
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they approached, bringing the face towards them that she knew so
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well, the circular field in the centre opening along four lines,
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revealing a huge, empty chasm within.
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Incredibly, four monstrous chains, remeniscent of the ones that
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festooned the bridge, each one made of links metres in diameter,
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snaked out from the darkness within the cube, drifting towards the
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enterprise. A huge hook was at the end of each chain; one of them
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seemed to be heading directly for the viewer. Amber cringed as it
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grew larger and larger, finally hitting the ship with a crash that
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rocked the deck. An alternate viewer showed the hooks sunk into the
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hull of the Enterprise, and they began to reel the ship in, tugging
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it unevenly into the recesses of the cube.
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Amber simply stood there in shock as the ship bumped towards the
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gap. Qhy wasn't Picard ordering any evasive action? Why were the
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bridge crew smiling like that? She turned to face Acting Science
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Officer Arifel, who laughed harshly and grabbed her hands. The blood
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drained from her face and she slumped into his arms, feeling the
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pricking of the spikes in his costume pressing into her skin...
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* * *
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She awoke, resting on a divan sitting in the blank holodeck setting,
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Arifel sitting cross-legged before her on the floor, his Klingon
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features wrinkled into an unfamiliar smile. With a rush, she
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understood what had happened.
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`You -bastard!-' she exclaimed. `You had me beamed directly into
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the Holodeck, and then - how did you cut off my communicator?' He
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closed his eyes and his grin broadened.
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`I'm the acting science officer. I can do things like that. I also
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convinced the holodeck computer that it would be in your best
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interests not to respond to any commands from you until you fainted.
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I had to engineer that, too. Minute amounts of barbiturate-related
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compounds, beamed directly into your blood-stream, to lower your
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blood pressure and cause you to faint. You're a tough old bird,
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Amber.' Her eyes narrowed when she realised the depth of his
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duplicity. `You didn't enjoy it?'
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`Oh, it was an experience I'll treasure... as you will treasure
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this!' She stood, and the divan vanished. `Computer, load program
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AMBER-CASTLE-AARGH!' Arifel's smile vanished.
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`Oh, please... not - not castle Aargh!' She smiled sweetly, and
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murmured,
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`We have eternity to know your flesh...'
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(s)orta(c)opyright 1994, AnarchArtists
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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fake .sig file nikolai kingsley arifel@melbourne.dialix.oz.au
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voodn, voodn! anarchartist, pseudo-wiccan, subgenius, discordian
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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