3233 lines
129 KiB
Plaintext
3233 lines
129 KiB
Plaintext
Newsgroups: alt.startrek.creative
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Path: newserv.ksu.ksu.edu!moe.ksu.ksu.edu!ux1.cso.uiuc.edu!howland.reston.ans.net!agate!ames!decwrl!decwrl!uunet!psgrain!ee.und.ac.za!hippo!cc196.ru.ac.za!g92n3258
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From: g92n3258@giraffe.ru.ac.za (MR RL NICOL)
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Subject: REPOST: I, LOCUTUS: Parts 1,2,3 of Eight All other posts irrelevant
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Message-ID: <g92n3258.51.732903919@giraffe.ru.ac.za>
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Lines: 1149
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Sender: news@hippo.ru.ac.za (Usenet News Admin)
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Organization: Rhodes University, Grahamstown, South Africa
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Date: Tue, 23 Mar 1993 16:25:19 GMT
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For some reason, a lot of people aren't receiving the various parts. So,
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here they are again. Sorry to all those who have had them already. As for
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Part four, that has also been sent, but also has not been received by some,
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so that will be sent in a seperate post.
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Enjoy
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Ryan.
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Before this starts, may I just say that this is difficult to
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write, when considering the possibility of there being a Borg
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cliffhanger at the end of the current season. With my not
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knowing how they will continue the Borg saga, this story may
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not fit in with the Star Trek universe in a couple of months
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when that episode is aired. So basically, I'm writing for the
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enjoyment - whether it fits in or not with the ST universe now
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or ever is not an issue for me at the moment.
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Enjoy; comments, criticisms, suggestions and anything else is
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welcome,
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Ryan.
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I, LOCUTUS:
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"Yes, it was ugly enough; but if you were man enough
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you would admit to yourself that there was in you
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just the faintest trace of a response to the terrible
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frankness of that noise, a dim suspicion of there being
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a meaning in it which you could comprehend."
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(Joseph Conrad; Heart of Darkness)
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PART ONE:
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"Captain's log: Stardate 7352.61 - The Enterprise is racing
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towards Beta Ariquae V in an attempt to avert a catastrophe.
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Two days ago, a cube-shaped space ship was detected entering
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Federation space, its heading - on a direct course for this
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colony. Once we arrive, we estimate there will be two hours
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to vacate the colony before the Borg obliterate it from the
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face of the planet."
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The chime from his Ready Room door snapped him out of his
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reverie, and back to the cold, harsh reality he knew he would
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have to face.
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"Come."
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The doors on the other side of his desk slid open, and Will
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Riker entered, pausing for a moment before moving towards him.
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Behind his first officer, the doors closed, shutting them off
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from the main bridge.
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"What can I do for you, Number One?" Picard asked, adjusting
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his personal monitor so Riker could not see what he had been
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studying on its screen.
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His first officer moved forward without saying a word,
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watching his captain intently. After a few seconds, he spoke.
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"You've seemed unusually pensive in the last few days,
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Captain. If it is not out of line, may I ask why?" Riker
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knew he didn't have to; the answer was all too clear. It was
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merely a matter of how to approach his captain, a man not
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accustomed to sharing his feelings with others.
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Picard was silent for a moment, then turned his personal
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monitor off. He looked up at Riker and gave a nod. "It's
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Hugh. I just wonder what has happened to him, if they've
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changed because of him. I guess this is the test."
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This most certainly was the test; the Federation, indeed the
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known galaxy, had not heard from the Borg since the Enterprise
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had encountered the remains of a crashed Borg ship on a
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planetoid, and recovered one survivor - Hugh.
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Riker nodded. He understood what the captain had gone
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through, what he was still going through. Of course, he could
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never really know. But he had some feeling of what it must
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have been like; a rape of the mind, transformed into a cold-
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blooded killer. He wondered if Picard really felt he was
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somehow responsible for what happened at Wolf 359; if it was
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something that haunted him still....
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"Getting those colonists out shouldn't take long." Riker
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finally said. "We should have plenty of time to evacuate the
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planet, then watch the Borg at work, learn about their
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methods..."
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"....And confront them." Picard finished for him.
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"Hold them off until Shelby arrives." Riker corrected. "We
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only have to engage them if they threaten any other planets
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with larger populations than we can evacuate."
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Shelby. Picard thought back to the overbearing, pushy
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commander, who eventually played a large part in their success
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against the Borg ship around Earth. Now she was in command of
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a Star Fleet proto-type - a starship that was built with
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enough power to maintain a lengthy combat against a Borg
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vessel. Nothing amazing, but the best the Federation could
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make, what with her Fleet still suffering the effects from
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their previous entanglement with the Borg. Unfortunately that
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ship, the USS Garrett, was too far away to be of any immediate
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assistance to them. But he had been assured that they were on
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their way, and knowing the ever-eager Shelby, he did not doubt
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that.
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"Captain Picard to the bridge." Data's voice filtered through
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the intercom system.
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"On my way." Picard said into the air, then got up and looked
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at Riker, "So it begins."
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The two marched out of the Ready Room and onto the main bridge
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of the Enterprise. On the viewscreen, the image of a tranquil
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planet floated into view.
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All that was going to change, Riker thought as he sat down
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next to his captain.
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"Number One, I don't believe there is much time for
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pleasantries. You and Commander Data had better beam down and
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organise the evacuation from below; I'll begin to speak to
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whoever is in charge in the mean time."
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Riker nodded and got up, as did Data from his station. The
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two entered the turbo-lift together. Picard watched as the
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doors slid them out of his view, then motioned for Worf to
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hail the planet.
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When the face of the leader appeared on the screen, Picard was
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momentarily stunned.
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"Enterprise, I was under the impression that you agreed we
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would not be troubled again." The image of Goshevon spoke.
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Why the hell wasn't I told this was the planet they had been
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given to colonize, Picard thought, as he stared at the face of
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the leader Data had publicly embarrassed in order to let his
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people leave their colony when the Sheliak had demanded the
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world they were on belonged to their race.
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"You and your android chased us off our world once, Picard,
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when the "mighty" Sheliak stole our world from us. This time,
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I hope this is nothing more than a courtesy call." Goshevon
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continued.
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"Mr Goshevon, I do not have the time to discuss the situation
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with you." Picard said, as diplomatically as possible. "But
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believe me when I say an evacuation is necessary. Commander
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Data and my first officer..."
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"You want us to pack up shop again, Picard! Have the Sheliak
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claimed this quadrant as well?"
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"No." Picard said, quietly. "But the Borg have."
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* * * * * * * *
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Riker and Data appeared in what seemed like the town's centre,
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the buildings that surrounded them suiting the warm, tropical
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environment. Though different in design, Data noticed that
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the city was laid out in a similiar fashion to the one on the
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planet the Sheliak took from them.
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"Data!" A woman's voice called out from behind them, and
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before the android could do anything, the owner of that voice
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ran up and hugged him as he turned in her direction.
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"Ard'rian!" Data said in surprise, not quite sure how to
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return the affectionate gesture. As he disentangled himself
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from the woman, he turned to Riker, who was standing next to
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him with a rather amused expression on his face. "Ard'rian,
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this is Commander Riker."
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Ard'rian Mackenzie turned to shake hands with Riker, but still
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held onto Data's arm, a fact that didn't make Data feel any
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more comfortable than when he was when hugged.
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"Data, what are you doing here?"
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"That involves a rather lengthy discussion on a wide range of
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subjects and, unfortunately, time is of the essence." Data
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informed her. "If you could show me to your leader, I will be
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able to fill you in as well."
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"Does this involve evacuation?" Ard'rian's face showed deep
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concern. "Because if it is, there is no way in hell you're
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going to get Goshevon to back down again."
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"Unfortunately, there is no choice in the matter." Riker spoke
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up. "There is no way this colony is going to be left standing,
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whether you leave or not."
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Data looked at his friend, who looked slightly taken aback at
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Riker's directness. "Ard'rian, we must speak to Goshevon
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now."
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* * * * * * * *
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"Captain, the Borg seem to have other ideas regarding their
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time of arrival." Worf spoke from behind his station.
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"In what way?" Picard asked, looking up at his Chief of
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Security.
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"Current sensor readings indicate that they are only two hours
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away at Warp nine."
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There was no way the Enterprise was going to evacuate the more
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than thousand colonists on the planet in that limitted time,
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Picard knew. True they had the space on board - all non-
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essential personnel had been left on Star base Six, where the
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Enterprise had got the emergency call - but in order to beam
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all of those people on board, they'd need three hours at
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least. And that was with everything running perfectly....
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"Mr Worf, inform Commander Riker that we will be seperating
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from the saucer section. You will remain in command and
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oversee the evacuation from here." Picard snapped, then turned
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to the two officers at the stations before him. "Ro and
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Soris, you're with me." After the brief flurry of orders,
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Picard moved towards the turbo-lift that would carry him to
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the Battle Bridge.
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* * * * * * * *
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The large cube slid through space at an unimaginable speed.
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They were in no hurry; time was irrelevant. But their goal
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was soon at hand. The Borg-whole knew it was only a matter of
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hours away.
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They scanned the small object that now approached them. They
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found there to be one kindred to their own kind on board.
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Indirect assimilation had begun. It was a matter of time, and
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they were in no hurry.
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They hailed the tiny vessel to speak to their brethren.
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* * * * * * * *
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Picard noted his hands were sweating, as he stared at the
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viewscreen, where the large cube-shaped structure hung in
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space before them, as silent as death.
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He was surprised that it had stopped when it picked the star-
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drive section of the Enterprise up on its sensors; he had
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assumed it would have continued on, ignoring them, unless
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provoked.
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Unless they want something with me, he thought, then
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immediately squashed that idea. Had Hugh had an effect on
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them, perhaps?
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"Sir, we're being hailed." The woman behind him spoke,
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sounding slightly uncertain.
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"What does the message say?" Picard asked, not taking his eyes
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away from the view screen.
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"It's just repeating the same word, over and over. Locutus."
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A chill shot up Picard's back at the mention of that name; it
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froze his heart until he had to fight for breath. Slowly, he
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realised he was gripping the armrest of his chair, and forced
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his hands to relax.
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"Open a channel, Lieutenant." He ordered, then stood up and
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moved a step towards Ensigns Ro and Soris who sat at their
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stations before him.
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"Channel open, sir."
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"This is Captain Jean-Luc Picard of the starship...."
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"Captain Picard of the Enterprise." The Borg voices rang in
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unison, interrupting him. "We speak to Locutus of Borg."
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Picard was silent for a moment. When he spoke, his voice was
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icey cold, and for a moment the anger at the rape he had
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undergone shone within him, threatening to burst. "That being
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no longer exists."
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"Existence is irrelevant. Locutus is alive. We speak to
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Locutus of Borg." The Borg voice continued.
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"Do not approach Beta Ariquae V. This is your final warning."
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Picard spoke, sternly. Turning to the Lieutenant behind him,
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he gestured for the channel to be closed, then reseated
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himself in his command chair, wondering at his latest dialogue
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with the Borg.
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"The Borg ship is moving forward, captain, picking up speed on
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a heading towards Beta Ariquae V." Ro Larens reported from her
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station.
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"How long before they reach the planet?"
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"Roughly two and a quarter hours, sir." Ensign Ro replied.
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Not good enough, Picard thought. "Prepare to open fire on the
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Borg ship, but maintain our distance from them."
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The Enterprise moved forward to follow the shrinking Borg
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ship, which had picked up its speed to Warp Four. Soon the
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cube-shaped ship had resumed its immense size on the view-
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screen.
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"Fire." Picard ordered, surprised at how much satisfaction it
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gave him to say that one word.
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Two beams of pure energy lanced out from the star-drive
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section, hitting the Borg ship dead-on. From their position
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relative to the Borg ship, no damage was evident.
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"The Borg have put up a shield, captain. I doubt our phasers
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can penetrate it."
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"Move in front of them and dump an anti-matter spread." He
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ordered. The Borg ship zoomed closer as the Enterprise took
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over it. "Release anti-matter... now!"
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Soris obliged, and the Enterprise increased speed to escape
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the coming explosion.
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"Minor damage to Borg shields, captain. Otherwise, no change.
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No change in their speed either, sir." Ro Larens reported.
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Picard was just about to give an order for a barrage of photon
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torpedoes, when the star-drive section rocked wildly. He
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grabbed onto the armrest to keep from tumbling from the
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command chair. Out of the corner of his eye, he saw on the
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view screen the brilliant beam of energy that had lanced from
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the Borg ship to envelope the Enterprise.
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"Shields down by 40 percent!" He heard the Lieutenant behind
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him cry out. "Massive damage to the warp engines!"
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Impossible, he thought, but said: "Give us some distance from
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the Borg." He turned to the lieutenant behind him. "What the
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hell was that?"
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"Some powerful beam of energy, sir. With the kind of power
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I've never seen before."
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"Warp drive down by 70 percent!" Ro Larens cried out. "I can
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only get us Warp Three."
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What the hell was that thing they had used? Picard wondered.
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Whatever it was, he had failed in his attempt to buy Riker
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time. The Borg would arrive at Beta Ariquae V in just over
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two hours, and the colonists and the saucer-section would all
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be sitting ducks.
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END OF PART ONE;
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Part Two can be will be posted on Friday/Saturday.
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Well, here is Part Two of "I, Locutus" (sooner than I
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thought). Enjoy....
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Ryan.
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I, LOCUTUS:
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PART TWO
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Thank God we're almost done, Riker thought as he stared at the
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horizon, where the pale green of the land met the grey-blue of
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the sky, I don't want to be around here when this all gets
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swallowed up.
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The images of Jure 4 and the countless number of planets the
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Enterprise had discovered when Q had first orchestrated their
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meeting with the Borg washed through his mind. As he stared
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at the distant mountain and trees, felt the warm breeze that
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blew against his face, and the heat of the sun, he couldn't
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bring himself to accept that this was all to be gone in a few
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hours. They hadn't done a good job of convincing the
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colonists either, but Data had reminded them of his honesty
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and good faith at their last meeting, and finally persuaded
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them to agree to the evacuation, at least temporarily. Worf
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had also reported that phasers with variable settings had been
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distributed around the ship, in the unlikely chance of a Borg
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incursion.
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By the time they arrive we should be long gone, he thought.
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"If the Borg are robots, surely they can be reasoned with."
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Ard'rian Mackenzie's voice caught him by surprise, and he
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turned around to find her and Data approaching him from a
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nearby building.
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"Unfortunately not." Data was telling her. "They seem to have
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a built-in purpose, and one that is very hard to dissuade them
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from continuing."
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"What about gaining access into their memory banks, or
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reprogramming them?" Ard'rian asked; Riker remembered that
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Data had told him she had a deep fascination for artificial
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life.
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"Both have been tried already, and though there was a certain
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degree of success, neither can be considered as a viable
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option in the long term." Data replied.
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"How is the evacuation proceeding?" Riker asked, as the pair
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reached him.
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"The majority of the colonists are on board, commander." Data
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replied. "There are still seventy five individuals, including
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ourselves, of course, that are still on the planet surface."
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"All right..." Riker was interrupted by Worf's voice, coming
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from his communicator.
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"Commander Riker. Sensors are picking up the Borg vessel,
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closing on the planet; ETA in five minutes at their current
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speed. No sign of the star-drive section."
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Once again, the images of Jure 4 flashed through his mind....
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* * * * * * * *
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Sickbay was overcrowded by colonists, and Beverly Crusher had
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to fight her way through to get to the intercom.
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"Lieutenant Worf, how many more colonists are you expecting,
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and can't you arrange for them to be shown to other decks?
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The corridors and sickbay are jammed here."
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Whoever was arranging accomodations, was doing one hell of a
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bad job, she thought to herself.
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"Understood, Doctor. I will speak to Mr O'Kleary." Worf's
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voice growled over the intercom, then disappeared as the link
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was cut. Whoever O'Kleary was, Crusher didn't doubt she was
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happy she wasn't him.
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"What's that?" Came a voice from the other side of a room,
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and Crusher immediately knew those two words almost always
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signalled disaster, as over-inquisitive kids tried to inspect
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a hypospray or phaser....
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She turned towards the voice and froze. On the far side of
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the room she could make out the ashen-white face of a Borg.
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With a look of single-deterimination, and with little care for
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the multitudes that surrounded it, the thing began to move
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forward at a slow, purposeful pace. Sickbay lapsed into
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silence except for the clicking of its mechanical arm.
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Then all hell broke loose.
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* * * * * * * *
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The red alert siren flared as the sensors detected intruders
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on the saucer-section. Worf immediately leaped to his feet
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and called for a scan of the entire ship.
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"Sensors are detecting five Borg, sir, distributed in
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different areas of the ship." The ensign manning the security
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console informed him.
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"Inform security of their locations; tell them to use maximum
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force to deterr the invaders." Worf told him. He wished he
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could lead the teams himself; telling others to do the job he
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should be doing only added to his anger. "Shields up, and get
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me Commander Riker."
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* * * * * * * *
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Damn, Riker thought as he saw the first wave of Borg descend
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on the settlement. The open area in which he and Data had
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first materialized were now swarming with the creatures. He
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turned to Data and Mackenzie, who were both studying the
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newcomers with intense curiosity.
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"Mr Data, how many colonists still have to be beamed aboard?"
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"Sixty four, Commander. I estimate that will take us ten more
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minutes." Data replied, not taking his eyes of the Borg who
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were beginning to move into the various buildings, inspecting
|
|
the equipment that they uncovered. Two Borg seemed to be
|
|
making their way towards the building in which they and the
|
|
remaining colonists were housed.
|
|
|
|
"Get ready to fire on my command." Riker whispered, removing
|
|
his variable-setting phaser from his belt. Just then his
|
|
communicator sounded, and Worf's controlled, yet strained,
|
|
voice filtered through his badge.
|
|
|
|
"Commander! The Borg have invaded the Enterprise. We have
|
|
raised our shields in order to fend off any attack, and will
|
|
not be able to beam you aboard."
|
|
|
|
Riker digested this for a moment, but couldn't argue with the
|
|
klingon when it came to his actions; he had acted properly,
|
|
after all. But he didn't like the idea of being stranded on
|
|
this planet that was being overrun by Borg.
|
|
|
|
"Apology accepted, Lieutenant Worf," Riker said into his badge
|
|
while keeping a close eye on the approaching pair of Borg,
|
|
"Take the Enterprise a safe distance out and try meet up with
|
|
the star-drive section."
|
|
|
|
"I cannot leave you alone on the planet, Commander." Worf's
|
|
voice shook with ferocity at both the Borg and the idea of
|
|
abandoning sixty four lives. "We will attempt to distract the
|
|
Borg ship...."
|
|
|
|
"You will do nothing of the sort, Mr Worf." Riker hissed; the
|
|
Borg pair were close now, and he dared not give him and the
|
|
others away, though they probably had sensor devices anyway.
|
|
"You have a thousand lives on the saucer-section to worry
|
|
about, so get the hell out of here; that's an order."
|
|
|
|
Data and Ard'rian were watching him closely now, aware that
|
|
Riker was signing their death warrants with those words, but
|
|
knowing it couldn't be helped. Riker cut the link as the two
|
|
Borg walked through the doorway of the room next to theirs.
|
|
Phasers in hand, he and Data waited for the two to move into
|
|
their field of vision, and then....
|
|
|
|
The tingling sensation of a transporter beam surrounded them,
|
|
blurring the rest of the world from their view.
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
Beverly Crusher aimed her phaser at the approaching Borg.
|
|
Somewhere in there, she knew, there was an intellect, some
|
|
individual crying out for the inhumanity that had been forced
|
|
upon it. She wondered if it too had been forced from its home
|
|
like Jean-Luc Picard had, to end up in this alien form, its
|
|
individuality squashed, no longer considered "relevant". Its
|
|
eyes burned through her as it approached, moving towards the
|
|
sickbay computer that stood behind her. She took one last
|
|
look into those eyes, and fired.
|
|
|
|
She heard a child scream somewhere. Seeing a creature being
|
|
slain like that, no wonder; she thought, then looked up and
|
|
saw the basis for the child's cries. Two more Borg had
|
|
replaced the one she had just shot. A singularity of purpose
|
|
was written on their faces as they approached the sickbay
|
|
computer.
|
|
|
|
Crusher didn't see one of the male colonists moving towards
|
|
the further of the two Borg until it was too late. Before she
|
|
could call out to him, the man leaped in the air in an effort
|
|
to tackle the massive bulk. Sensing the actions of the
|
|
colonist, the Borg swung its massive arm, connecting it with
|
|
the man's mid-rif. The blow was sufficient to drop the
|
|
colonist on the spot, clutching his stomach in pain. Crusher
|
|
aimed her phaser once again and fired at the nearest creature.
|
|
As with the previous one, it dropped; but the third remained
|
|
standing, approaching her with a shield that made itself
|
|
apparent whenever fired at.
|
|
|
|
Quickly she changed the setting of the phaser and once more
|
|
aimed to fire. But the creature was too close. In one swift
|
|
movement, the Borg grabbed her wrist in a vice-like grip.
|
|
Then, in a single, quick movement, it snapped her wrist as if
|
|
it were a brittle stick.
|
|
|
|
With a cry of unbelievable agony, Crusher dropped the phaser
|
|
to the floor and collapsed beside it, cradling her broken arm
|
|
with her left hand. The world spun rapidly before her, but
|
|
the constant presence of the Borg standing over her, accessing
|
|
the sickbay computer remained with her, until darkness
|
|
replaced all impressions.
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
"Lieutenant, I've lost all signs of life on the planet's
|
|
surface!"
|
|
|
|
Worf spun around to face the ensign manning the security
|
|
console, and cursed. "They must have been beamed to the Borg
|
|
ship. Any change in their vessel's activity?"
|
|
|
|
"Negative, sir.... Wait! I'm detected an unusually high
|
|
amount of energy ready to be released from their ship!"
|
|
|
|
"Helm, fall back to a safe distance!" Worf ordered, chastising
|
|
himself for having gotten into a position where he would be
|
|
forced to utter those coward-like words.
|
|
|
|
As he spoke, a large amount of energy poured out from the side
|
|
of the Borg ship, striking a spot on the surface of Beta
|
|
Auriquae V.
|
|
|
|
"A portion of the planet's surface is being pulled towards the
|
|
Borg ship!" The ensign spoke behind Worf, unable to mask her
|
|
surprise.
|
|
|
|
By now the Borg ship had fallen away so it took up half of the
|
|
bridge's main view screen; not too far away, but safe enough
|
|
for the moment.
|
|
|
|
Worf uttered an oath of vengeance as he thought of Riker and
|
|
Data, then turned towards the Lieutenant at the front of the
|
|
bridge. "Plot a heading for the last known position of the
|
|
star-drive section." The least he could do to honour the
|
|
death of his superior was to respect his last command.
|
|
William Riker may not be dead now, he knew, but he was as good
|
|
as dead, anyhow.
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
Locutus.
|
|
|
|
The word still haunted him. What was it that so repulsed him
|
|
about that name? Was it that a part of him was still linked
|
|
to that thing, and all that it represented?
|
|
|
|
Picard brushed those thoughts aside as he looked over the
|
|
present assemblage of what remained of his officers. Geordi,
|
|
Worf, Troi, and Beverly Crusher. The two empty seats amongst
|
|
them were powerful reminders of anguish and pain.
|
|
|
|
He prayed they were dead.
|
|
|
|
"....and their last heading indicates they are on a course for
|
|
Earth, Captain." Worf concluded his his report.
|
|
|
|
"Thank you, Lieutenant Worf. Doctor Crusher?"
|
|
|
|
Beverly Crusher looked up from the spot on the table she had
|
|
been staring at, thinking. Her right wrist had been covered
|
|
in a thick, hard gell that assured the break would be repaired
|
|
in a few days. "All the surviving colonists are fine; I've
|
|
treated a few for minor injuries after attempting to stop
|
|
individual Borg members...."
|
|
|
|
"That's irrelevant, Doctor." Picard interrupted. "What did the
|
|
Borg get out of the Sickbay computer? What were they looking
|
|
for?"
|
|
|
|
Crusher was silent for a moment, as was the rest of the staff.
|
|
When she continued, her voice was a little more tight. "They
|
|
were going through our medical records, human physiology and
|
|
anatomy...."
|
|
|
|
"Whose medical records?"
|
|
|
|
She looked at Picard. "Yours, sir. All check-ups subsequent
|
|
to your kidnapping by them."
|
|
|
|
Picard was silent for a moment. They wanted him, he was sure.
|
|
But why did they stubbornly address him as Locutus, and what
|
|
were they looking for in his medical records?
|
|
|
|
"Thank you, Doctor Crusher. Mr LaForge?"
|
|
|
|
"We're badly damaged, sir." Geordi began. "Whatever they shot
|
|
at us when we confronted them was enough to blow almost every
|
|
circuit in the warp drive reactor, and then some."
|
|
|
|
"How long before we can be fully repaired?"
|
|
|
|
Geordi took a deep breath. "That's a tough one, sir. I don't
|
|
think we can ever get fully repaired without reporting in to a
|
|
Starbase. But as we are, I can have Warp eight and shields up
|
|
to seventy percent efficiency in seven hours."
|
|
|
|
"Unacceptable, Mr LaForge." Picard shook his head. "You've got
|
|
four hours; in the mean time we'll make our way towards Earth
|
|
at whatever speed we can muster. Any questions?"
|
|
|
|
Geordi sighed at what Picard demanded, but remained quiet.
|
|
|
|
"I suggest contacting the USS Garrett and inform them of what
|
|
has occurred." Worf replied. "And warn Earth."
|
|
|
|
"Good idea, make it so." Picard nodded. "Let's get to work."
|
|
|
|
The officers all filed out, except for Troi, who remained
|
|
seated.
|
|
|
|
"Is there anything I can do for you, Counsellor?" Picard
|
|
asked as he stood at the door to the Briefing Room.
|
|
|
|
"You're hiding from me, Captain." Troi replied, not looking
|
|
up.
|
|
|
|
Picard hesitated for a moment, then moved back to where he had
|
|
been sitting, at the head of the table. "What do you mean?"
|
|
|
|
"I'm not sure, Captain. But I believe it has something to do
|
|
with what happened while you were under their control. If
|
|
you're thinking of Will and Data...."
|
|
|
|
"I hope to God they're dead." It was almost a whisper, a
|
|
coldness brought on by his experience in that metallic hell.
|
|
Oh God, he thought, I'm as bad as them.
|
|
|
|
Troi didn't answer for a long time. But when she did, her
|
|
voice was not filled with the coldness in Picard's, but rather
|
|
with sorrow.
|
|
|
|
"So do I."
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
Ard'rian Mackenzie looked around her in confusion. The
|
|
grating sound of metal filled the metallic confines in which
|
|
she found herself. Nearby, she saw Data standing, alert.
|
|
There were no Borg to be seen, but that did not mean that they
|
|
were not there. She picked herself up and moved to join the
|
|
android.
|
|
|
|
"Where are we?" She asked; a stupid question, she thought, as
|
|
she stared at the seemingly-randomly placed metal and steel
|
|
that surrounded her. Long steel cables seemed to lie in every
|
|
direction and there were many just above head-height.
|
|
|
|
"We are on the Borg ship." Data answered, having opened his
|
|
tricorder and scanning the area. "However, I can find no
|
|
trace of Commander Riker or any of the other colonists."
|
|
|
|
"Perhaps they were left on the planet." Ard'rian suggested,
|
|
then looked up. She took a deep breath as she stared at the
|
|
seemingly endless tower of metal and structures that loomed
|
|
above them to a single, distant point. "This is huge!"
|
|
|
|
"It is much bigger than it actually seems." Data replied,
|
|
helpfully, not looking up from his tricorder. "We are soon to
|
|
have company."
|
|
|
|
It was then that Ard'rian heard the metallic foot-fall of an
|
|
approaching Borg, ringing against the metal that surrounded
|
|
them. The sound increased until it seemed a swarm was moving
|
|
towards them.
|
|
|
|
Data pulled out his phaser. "My tricorder reads twelve Borg
|
|
approaching. I suggest you stand behind me."
|
|
|
|
Ard'rian peered into the mass of metal in front of them, but
|
|
could make out no sign of life, except for the sound,
|
|
increasing in intensity. Then, in the distance, she saw them.
|
|
Twelve Borg moving down the narrow corridor towards them,
|
|
their massive mechanical arms pulled at an angle in front of
|
|
them.
|
|
|
|
Data aimed and fired, felling the Borg one by one. And still
|
|
they moved forward. As each developed a shield, so Data
|
|
changed the frequency, felling more until the others had
|
|
adapted. But there were too many. The third last reached
|
|
him, and grabbing his hand, tore his phaser from it. In
|
|
response, Data threw the Borg against the nearest wall, but
|
|
was immediately taken over by another. The third held
|
|
Ard'rian in its vice-like grip. In horror she stared as the
|
|
massive arm of the one Borg plunged into Data's side, drilling
|
|
through his android body.
|
|
|
|
Assimilation, Data knew was inevitable. But there were some
|
|
knowledge he couldn't allow the Borg to get its hands on. He
|
|
began to erase certain files in his positronic brain.
|
|
|
|
The two Borg who held him halted for an instant, as if
|
|
receiving orders from the Whole, then with the precision of
|
|
robots, smashed Data's already mangled body against the
|
|
bulkhead.
|
|
|
|
Erase... Eras... Er....
|
|
|
|
The two Borg turned him off, then proceeded to disconnect his
|
|
head.
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
He couldn't move, couldn't see, couldn't yell. But he could
|
|
hear the sound of the Borg as they moved around him, and the
|
|
sound of their mechanical arms, whinning as they touched
|
|
metal; grinding when they touched... bone?
|
|
|
|
Suddenley darkness surrounded Riker no longer. Above him he
|
|
could make out metal structures and conduits. There was no
|
|
doubt, he was on the Borg ship. But he still couldn't move,
|
|
not even his neck. Then a Borg came into his field of vision.
|
|
It's ghastly white face could be seen bending over him, its
|
|
dead eyes staring fixedly into his. The mechanical arm loomed
|
|
over his face, then moved downwards between his eyes....
|
|
|
|
END OF PART TWO
|
|
|
|
Part Three can be expected on Saturday/Sunday
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Part Three here and on time. Again, if there are any
|
|
comments, criticisms, suggestions, etc, you're welcome to mail
|
|
me.
|
|
|
|
Enjoy,
|
|
Ryan.
|
|
|
|
I, LOCUTUS:
|
|
|
|
PART THREE:
|
|
"Message received and understood, Captain." Admiral Ranklin
|
|
said, gravely. "And for what it is worth, Jean-Luc, I am
|
|
deeply sorry for the loss of Commanders Riker and Data. The
|
|
Federation has lost two fine officers."
|
|
|
|
Picard nodded, his carefully composed face masking all
|
|
feelings. "How long before the USS Garrett can confront the
|
|
Borg ship?"
|
|
|
|
"We've notified Captain Shelby of the... recent events at Beta
|
|
Ariquae V, and she is on her way. We estimate she will arrive
|
|
at Earth in four days. A bit late, but better late than
|
|
never." Ranklin forced a smile. "We're preparing to
|
|
evacuate."
|
|
|
|
"Four days." Picard repeated, slowly. "The Borg ship will be
|
|
there in less than one."
|
|
|
|
"I know." Ranklin nodded. "But we'll give them a good fight."
|
|
|
|
"We'll be there in two days, Admiral. You'll just have to
|
|
hold them off until then."
|
|
|
|
Ranklin sighed deeply. "We're pulling all our forces back in.
|
|
Away from the Neutral Zone, away from patrol routes. If we're
|
|
going, we're going to go with a fight. But you're the closest
|
|
starship to Earth. You'll be the first to arrive and see what
|
|
havoc's been wreaked. We just hope we're still around to see
|
|
you, Enterprise."
|
|
|
|
The link was cut. Picard sat for a moment, staring at the
|
|
stars that had replaced the Admiral's drawn face.
|
|
|
|
"Engineering to Bridge." Geordi's voice cut through his
|
|
thoughts, bringing him back to the harsh reality around him.
|
|
"We can give you Warp Eight as soon as you're ready, Captain."
|
|
|
|
"Understood, Mr LaForge." Picard replied. "How soon until
|
|
shields are fully operational?"
|
|
|
|
"They're up to eighty percent, captain," Geordie's voice
|
|
responded, "and that's better than I anticipated. Right at
|
|
the moment, it looks like full efficiency is closer to wishful
|
|
thinking than anything else I can imagine."
|
|
|
|
Well, it was better than he could have hoped for, Picard
|
|
thought with a sigh. "Thank you, Geordi. It's all I could
|
|
have asked."
|
|
|
|
He turned to the empty chair to his right, then spoke: "Mr
|
|
Worf, I would like a word with you in my Ready Room."
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
Will Riker's quarters were unusually quiet. In the past it
|
|
had an air of warmth and cheer about it; but now it was bathed
|
|
in a dim glow, as Geordi LaForge was shutting down all non-
|
|
essential sections of the ship to divert the majority of the
|
|
power into the shields and the warp engines.
|
|
|
|
Deanna Troi glanced around the spacious room, and thought of
|
|
its old owner. The only comforting thought was that he was
|
|
dead, but what comfort was that? She hoped that it had been
|
|
quick. After witnessing Jean-Luc Picard's conversion into a
|
|
Borg, seeing the pain he felt after he was brought back from
|
|
that nightmare, she hoped Riker would be spared that. And
|
|
Picard....?
|
|
|
|
He was being more distant, more elusive, as they moved towards
|
|
Earth. The encounter with the Borg at Beta Ariquae V had no
|
|
doubt shaken him up far worse than she thought possible, but
|
|
then again, when it awakened such harsh memories that had been
|
|
forced into the unconscious, what else could be expected? The
|
|
reminder of what he had been, what they made him become, was
|
|
something that had obviously haunted him since his escape from
|
|
the Borg, a crushing of his spirit, of his very being - all
|
|
this was being dredged to the surface once again, as he
|
|
travelled on this course towards Earth once again, this time
|
|
knowing his William Riker and Data were undergoing the same
|
|
conversion - and destruction of their spirit. The only
|
|
comfort was in the notion of their death, for if becoming a
|
|
Borg and losing your very essence was not death, what was?
|
|
|
|
She would have to help him confront those fears, those pains.
|
|
A part of him was no doubt hiding, and the first step was to
|
|
bring that part out into the open; the problem was how.
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
Earth defensive capabilities? Irrelevant; they knew them.
|
|
The knowledge gained from those assimilated; the information
|
|
retrieved from the Enterprise memory banks; data acquired from
|
|
their refined sensors - all fed into the Borg consciousness.
|
|
They knew. Assimilation was only a matter of time.
|
|
|
|
The high-grade phaser cannons, the electrical discharge, and
|
|
anti-matter ejector were all powerless against the newly
|
|
developed shields of the Borg. Through the darkness of space,
|
|
the cube-shaped ship sped towards its destination, an
|
|
unstoppable force about to be unleashed on a defenseless
|
|
planet.
|
|
|
|
The Borg had calculated well; the spokesman was on its way.
|
|
All would be prepared for it. The new form of assimilation
|
|
was at work, and soon it would be ready. The Borg vessel
|
|
passed by the lonely giant planet, Uranus, and sped on towards
|
|
its goal.
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
The arms, legs, and most of the torso had been discarded.
|
|
They were inferior, and hence irrelevant. But the head, and
|
|
the multitude of circuits and electronic chips that it
|
|
possessed, and the information contained within them were of
|
|
importance, and it was 1075's job to assimilate that
|
|
information into the Borg whole. It had been assimilated
|
|
recently, but already it had total control over its large
|
|
robotic appendages, electronic scanner, and other
|
|
modifications that it had underwent when it had gone by the
|
|
name of Ard'rian Mackenzie. That name meant nothing now.
|
|
That being no longer existed. That being was now Borg.
|
|
|
|
It stared down at the android head, carefully sliced open by
|
|
one of the Borg's advanced machinery so that none of the
|
|
delicate circuits were damaged or destroyed. The operation
|
|
was precise, and done with the coldness associated with a
|
|
machine in a factory.
|
|
|
|
But there was no such coldness as 1075 stared downward at the
|
|
object in its hand. There was something familiar about the
|
|
head; a strange feeling that was associated with it, something
|
|
totally alien to this creature that now stared at it. The
|
|
metal plate that melded with its biological head had resulted
|
|
in the long hair that the previous owner of this body once had
|
|
being removed. Hair was unnecessary. In the dim light of the
|
|
Borg vessel, it continued to stare downward at the head, its
|
|
own white scalp standing out in the gloom.
|
|
|
|
And then it did something totally alien to its character.
|
|
1075 turned to the accessing terminal where it had been
|
|
stationed, and downloaded all the files in the android head
|
|
under one directory in the Borg whole. Once the process was
|
|
completed, 1075 hesitated another moment as it stared at the
|
|
blank face of the android again, then moved down the narrow,
|
|
metal gang-way to dump the head with the rest of the android's
|
|
body parts.
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
"Captain Picard, report to the bridge." Worf's voice boomed
|
|
through the intercom system.
|
|
|
|
In the darkness of his quarters, Picard did not move.
|
|
Instead, he continued to sit on the edge of his bed, oblivious
|
|
to everything.
|
|
|
|
What were they fighting for? Why even try to fight?
|
|
Resistance was useless. Resistance.... irrelevant, he thought
|
|
and stood up. He left his quarters in its darkness and moved
|
|
out towards the bridge.
|
|
|
|
Troi had ordered a complete mental and physical medical check-
|
|
up, and he had acceded to her request reluctantly. As he
|
|
entered the turbo-lift he reminded himself to stop by sickbay
|
|
to check on the results.
|
|
|
|
"Report, Mr Worf." He said into his badge as the turbo-lift
|
|
started upwards.
|
|
|
|
"We have arrived at the edge of the solar system, Captain."
|
|
His new First Officer's voice said. "And a message has just
|
|
come in from the Quadrant Delta-Agneu."
|
|
|
|
"What does the message say?"
|
|
|
|
There was a pause before Worf responded. "Two more Borg ships
|
|
have been spotted entering Federation space, sir. Both are on
|
|
a direct course for Earth."
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
"I repeat, Captain: The Enterprise has been co-opted by the
|
|
Borg. You are to use all available force to neutralise both
|
|
the Borg ship and the Federation star ship."
|
|
|
|
Shelby hesitated for a moment, unsure of how to question an
|
|
Admiral who had barely escaped from Earth with his life. "In
|
|
what way has the Enterprise been commandeered by the Borg?"
|
|
|
|
Admiral Ranklin looked at her, his eyes glazed over by the
|
|
destruction he had seen. "This may be hard to believe,
|
|
Captain Shelby, but Locutus is alive."
|
|
|
|
"What? Locutus was destroyed when we retrieved Captain
|
|
Picard. I don't see how..."
|
|
|
|
"He is alive, Captain." Ranklin interrupted her, wearily. "In
|
|
fact, he never died. This is something we suspected, but
|
|
never were able to confirm, and the reason why Commander Riker
|
|
was not offerred another captaincy since Picard's abduction.
|
|
But that's not important. What is is that you must stop them
|
|
both. We've lost Earth, and thank God we managed to get out
|
|
of there before things got messy, but you know about the two
|
|
other Borg ships. If we're going to turn this around into a
|
|
victory for our side, the Enterprise must be destroyed. We're
|
|
counting on you, Captain. Good luck."
|
|
|
|
The screen dimmed, and Ranklin's face was replaced by the
|
|
stars of the galaxy. How many of their planets are going to
|
|
meet Earth's fate before this is all over? Shelby wondered.
|
|
And what did Ranklin mean by Locutus being alive? If this was
|
|
true, how did he know? The bastard managed to get out of the
|
|
area alright, claiming he was non-expendable, that he was
|
|
needed to organize the counter-strike against the Borg.
|
|
Meanwhile, many civilians on Earth were being butchered, or
|
|
even worse, being assimilated.
|
|
|
|
Shelby turned to the ensign before her. "What is our ETA at
|
|
Earth, Ensign?"
|
|
|
|
"Twelve hours, sir." He responded.
|
|
|
|
Shelby turned back to the stars, and mused.
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
"Two minutes from Earth orbit, sir." Ensign Ro reported from
|
|
her station.
|
|
|
|
"Thank you, Ensign. We'll hold our position here." Picard
|
|
said, then turned to Worf at the security console. "What do
|
|
the sensors read, Lieutenant?"
|
|
|
|
Worf was silent for a moment. When he spoke, his voice was
|
|
both deep and somber: "Sensors indicate a mutlitude of
|
|
individual Borg members on the planet, sir. They seem to be
|
|
in the process of assimilation."
|
|
|
|
Picard turned back and faced the screen. There, before him,
|
|
the large cube-shaped ship hung in orbit around his home-
|
|
world. He imagined the thousands of Borg crawling across its
|
|
surface, taking what they wanted and destroying the rest....
|
|
|
|
"Captain, I need to speak to you; this is urgent."
|
|
|
|
Picard turned to see Beverly Crusher, having just emerged from
|
|
the aft turbo-lift, walking down the side of the bridge
|
|
towards him.
|
|
|
|
"It can wait till later, Doctor. Until we...."
|
|
|
|
"I need to speak to you now." The look on Crusher's face told
|
|
him it was important, but....
|
|
|
|
An alarm beeped on Worf's board, and the Klingon looked up to
|
|
say: "We're being scanned, sir."
|
|
|
|
"Are the Borg making any sign of moving or intercepting us?"
|
|
|
|
"No, sir." Worf answered. "There's no indication of....
|
|
Incoming message, Captain, from the Borg!"
|
|
|
|
Picard hesitated, and glanced to his left, at Deanna Troi.
|
|
She met his gaze. Not for the first time, Picard was happy
|
|
the ship was designed for a Counsellor, and not any
|
|
Counsellor, to be seated beside him.
|
|
|
|
"Put the message on the screen."
|
|
|
|
For a few seconds the image of the Borg ship circling the
|
|
Earth remained on the view screen, and then it was gone,
|
|
replaced by the face of a man he knew well, a man he had hoped
|
|
was dead. Next to him, he heard Troi take a deep breath.
|
|
|
|
"My God!"
|
|
|
|
"Will...." Picard stood up and moved forward, not taking his
|
|
eyes from the screen, where the half-human, half-machine
|
|
creature stood before him, the familiarity of its face
|
|
distorted by the mechanical implants that scared it. A large
|
|
patch of metal encased the left half of its face, and in place
|
|
of the left eye, there was a ball of firey-redness that seemed
|
|
to burn into the screen.
|
|
|
|
"Locutus of Borg, your arrival has been anticipated by the
|
|
Whole." The voice was almost metallic, and cold. "We welcome
|
|
you and your prize to your new home world, and the moment when
|
|
it will be assimilated into our culture. Assimilation is
|
|
under way, in you as it is in others. Prepare to receive
|
|
members of the Whole, as your ship will also require a
|
|
breakdown into its component parts as we assimilate it and
|
|
those on board it who are untouched."
|
|
|
|
"Captain!"
|
|
|
|
"Later, Doctor!" Picard barked as he motioned for Worf to
|
|
close the channel. "Mr Worf, is it possible to beam an Away
|
|
Team to their ship, get him back?"
|
|
|
|
Worf shook his head. "Even if we lowered our own shields,
|
|
their defenses have improved drastically since we last
|
|
encountered them. There is no way we can find a whole in
|
|
their shields."
|
|
|
|
"Jean-Luc...!" Crusher yelled.
|
|
|
|
"All right, Doctor." Picard bristled. "I'll give you a minute,
|
|
in my Ready Room."
|
|
|
|
Crusher followed him as he stalked into the privacy of the
|
|
room adjacent to the bridge.
|
|
|
|
"Let's have it, Doctor. I don't have time for..."
|
|
|
|
Crusher looked at him sternly, yet hating to tell him what she
|
|
had found out. Finally, she said: "Captain, Locutus is
|
|
alive."
|
|
|
|
Picard stared at her for a moment, then turned to face the
|
|
window. Finally, he looked back at her, a mixture of
|
|
apprehension and a dawning horror on his face. "How is that
|
|
possible?"
|
|
|
|
"I don't know what to call it; a bug, maybe. But whatever it
|
|
was, it was small enough to pass through all of my medical
|
|
scans unnoticed until now." Crusher's voice had softened, but
|
|
there was still that hint of urgency. "Whatever it is, I
|
|
assume it was planted in you at the time of your abduction, in
|
|
the event of you being re-taken by us. At any rate, this
|
|
"bug" is wiping out each of your brain cells systematically,
|
|
and supplementing them with new ones - those that match
|
|
Locutus'. It's like a computer virus, but on the biological
|
|
level."
|
|
|
|
Picard grabbed a hold on the arm of his chair, and lowered
|
|
himself into the seat behind his desk. He sat silently for a
|
|
moment, the apprehension turning to a look of absolute dread.
|
|
|
|
"I'm going to become him again. I'm becoming Locutus." He
|
|
whispered.
|
|
|
|
END PART THREE
|
|
|
|
Part Four can be expected on Sunday/Monday....
|
|
|
|
Newsgroups: alt.startrek.creative
|
|
Path: newserv.ksu.ksu.edu!moe.ksu.ksu.edu!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!cs.utexas.edu!uunet!psgrain!ee.und.ac.za!hippo!cc196.ru.ac.za!g92n3258
|
|
From: g92n3258@giraffe.ru.ac.za (MR RL NICOL)
|
|
Subject: REPOST: I, LOCUTUS: Fourth of Eight; Resistance to read is futile
|
|
Message-ID: <g92n3258.52.732903998@giraffe.ru.ac.za>
|
|
Lines: 347
|
|
Sender: news@hippo.ru.ac.za (Usenet News Admin)
|
|
Organization: Rhodes University, Grahamstown, South Africa
|
|
Date: Tue, 23 Mar 1993 16:26:38 GMT
|
|
|
|
Here it is again, and sorry to those who've seen it already.
|
|
|
|
All the best,
|
|
Ryan
|
|
|
|
|
|
To clear up a small matter that may have been worrying some
|
|
people, Ard'rian Mackenzie is the character that was featured
|
|
in the Third Season episode: "Ensigns of Command", in which
|
|
Data had to evacuate a colony before an alien race, the
|
|
Sheliak, claimed the planet they were on. Ard'rian was one of
|
|
the colonists, interested in robotics, etc, and hence Data,
|
|
and helped him to win the colonists' confidence and turn them
|
|
away from their leader, Goshevon, who wished to stay and
|
|
fight. This is just by-the-by, in case some of you haven't
|
|
seen the episode or have forgotten her name and couldn't
|
|
associate it with that episode....
|
|
|
|
And now Part Four; enjoy,
|
|
Ryan.
|
|
|
|
I, LOCUTUS:
|
|
|
|
PART FOUR:
|
|
The human known as Riker had performed its duties well. It
|
|
had aided the Borg in the inevitable assimilation of its home-
|
|
world, Earth. It had provided the Borg with necessary
|
|
knowledge for them to fulfill their purpose. But now it was
|
|
irrelevant. Assimilation of the Earth was nearing completion;
|
|
what was left was the dismantling, and then destruction, of
|
|
all Earth structures. The culture had become one; the people
|
|
had become one - with the Borg. And then there was the re-
|
|
birth as Locutus arose from the ashes of its own destruction
|
|
so the Borg's spokesman was returning. One spokesman was all
|
|
that was necessary. With the full backing of the Borg, it
|
|
would carry the message far; it would aid in the assimilation;
|
|
it would show the futility of any attempts at resistance.
|
|
|
|
The Borg whole had decided, and so its decision was sent to
|
|
that which had been called Riker. Without argument, the Borg
|
|
known as Riker left its central post and headed towards the
|
|
area where it would be re-assimilated, this time as one of the
|
|
many; as part of the whole - to serve as a unit in the
|
|
combined effort of the Borg.
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
Where am I?
|
|
|
|
Where ever he was, there was an accompanying presence to be
|
|
sure. The presence of the Borg; not individual members of the
|
|
whole. But of all Borg. Every where.
|
|
|
|
How is this possible?
|
|
|
|
There was nothing to look at; nothing to feel, taste, or
|
|
smell. There was only that presence of the Borg. And
|
|
knowledge. He had access to it all; access to all areas of
|
|
Borg consciousness. He stopped himself short of acting.
|
|
Actions would raise alarms. And alarms would notify the group
|
|
consciousness of his existence, if they didn't know of it
|
|
already. He would have to be careful.
|
|
|
|
Ard'rian-Borg-Locutus-alive-two-Borg-ships-Earth-assimilation-
|
|
proceeding-approaching-Riker-Borg-assimilation-requiered. All
|
|
flitted through Data's consciousness. All was known. But he
|
|
had to be extremely careful. One false move would alert the
|
|
Borg Whole to his whereabouts, and they would no doubt see him
|
|
as a threat. They would attempt to route him out like a virus
|
|
in a computer system. He would have to choose his path
|
|
carefully, very carefully.....
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
How foolish he had been. How vain and unthinking; to ever
|
|
think he could escape the Borg. Resistance is futile; it was
|
|
something he had forgotten, something that had seemed unreal
|
|
once he had thought he had beaten them at their own game. But
|
|
the laugh had been on him, and it was he who was now paying
|
|
the price for ever thinking he could beat the Borg.
|
|
|
|
Assimilation is inevitable, they had told him; he should have
|
|
believed them.
|
|
|
|
Picard stared out of his Ready Room window, and into the
|
|
darkness of space, a view he always cherished. Now that
|
|
familiar sight was blemished by the large metallic-looking
|
|
Borg ship, as it loomed over him, casting a mental shadow over
|
|
him.
|
|
|
|
Beverly Crusher had shown him the brain scans, the computer-
|
|
image of the biological "computer virus", as she had called
|
|
it, that was steadily wiping out his very brain cells and
|
|
replacing them with those of "Locutus'". This time it was
|
|
different; previously, he had been taken and assimilated
|
|
fairly quickly. But now; now he knew what was in store for
|
|
him, what was slowly happening to him, and how they were
|
|
destroying him, brain cell by brain cell. And that was the
|
|
most horrific part of it all.
|
|
|
|
"Captain."
|
|
|
|
At the sound of Geordi LaForge's voice, he spun around.
|
|
|
|
"What is it, Mr LaForge?"
|
|
|
|
Geordi hesitated for a second, then continued. "I've studied
|
|
this "virus" as much as I can, sir. And I can see no way of
|
|
destroying it. It seems to have bonded with your own DNA
|
|
structure, and is working at the molecular level. Not to
|
|
mention, it is a damn sophisticated thing, too." He was
|
|
silent for a moment, then said. "I'm sorry, sir."
|
|
|
|
Picard nodded, slowly. He hadn't expected otherwise. Foolish
|
|
of LaForge to think he could outwit the Borg...
|
|
|
|
"Captain to the Bridge." Worf's voice boomed through the
|
|
intercom system, bringing Picard out of his chair in an
|
|
instant.
|
|
|
|
He and Geordi marched out of the room and into the Bridge, to
|
|
find the bridge crew standing silently to one side, eyeing the
|
|
half-metallic being that stood before them, its large
|
|
mechanical arm extending as it moved towards the conn.
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
He knew everything. And yet he could do very little. The
|
|
knowledge that the slightest alteration in the Borg's workings
|
|
would bring the Borg Consciousness down upon him stifled his
|
|
ability to act. He had considered entering a command that
|
|
would put the Borg to sleep, as he had done when the
|
|
Enterprise last battled the Borg as a whole, but that option
|
|
had disappeared. The Borg learnt from their mistakes; the
|
|
Borg adapted, because the Borg had to survive. No longer
|
|
would they allow themselves to be placed in jeopardy, thus all
|
|
commands that could pose a threat to the Borg had been placed
|
|
under strict control. Only a unanimous decision by all Borg,
|
|
where all components of the whole agreed to the ruling, would
|
|
allow such measures to take effect. And though Data was in
|
|
the Whole, a part of the consciousness, he could not command
|
|
all members of the whole to agree to go to sleep.
|
|
|
|
Thus few avenues were open to him. And he knew it would take
|
|
one minor disruption to bring the whole group down on him,
|
|
seeking him out and destroying his very essence from their
|
|
consciousness. And one of those options now presented itself.
|
|
Data prepared himself for the total onslaught he would face,
|
|
as he readied himself for what he was about to do.
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
Riker's eyes shot open. The confusion of his current
|
|
predicament sent his mind reeling as he tried to hold on to
|
|
something, some fact he could take as certain.
|
|
|
|
Then he realised that he could move his neck, his toes, and
|
|
his fingers on his left hand. But his fingers on his right
|
|
hand....
|
|
|
|
He lifted his head, and was suddenly hit by a wave of nausea
|
|
that threatened to draw him back into the darkness from whence
|
|
he came. But it was the sensation of dire peril, of mind-
|
|
blowing fear that pulled him up into a sitting position.
|
|
|
|
Then he noticed the metallic arm; that massive artificial
|
|
appendage that represented all that he held as disgusting and
|
|
vile, as anti-life....
|
|
|
|
And the pain and mental anguish of what he remembered came
|
|
pouring over him like an avalanche; the memory of the rape as
|
|
his own individuality was crushed mercilessly was enough to
|
|
draw a gut-wrenching sob from his palid lips. And then he
|
|
looked around him.
|
|
|
|
It seemed as if there were hundreds of them there in those
|
|
gloomy surroundings, all lying on those metal tables like
|
|
bodies in the mortuary, ready for the knife....
|
|
|
|
Riker tried to stand, still clutching the side of the table as
|
|
the dizzy spell once more washed over him. His mechanical arm
|
|
clanged against the neighbouring table, and the sound echoed
|
|
down the large, otherwise silent, room. He stood still for a
|
|
moment; waiting, fearing for an army of Borg to come lumbering
|
|
towards him and force him back to his table, to join those
|
|
multitudes in their collective slumber. But none came.
|
|
|
|
Almost instinctually, Riker reached for the left side of his
|
|
face. And his worst nightmares were realised as he touched
|
|
cold metal.
|
|
|
|
It was then that he realised that his vision was also tainted;
|
|
instead of merely seeing the surroundings as they actually
|
|
were, the room seemed less gloomy than before, and he could
|
|
see distant things in greater detail. He reached for his left
|
|
eye, and stopped short. If it was so, he didn't want to know.
|
|
Slowly, he lowered his hand - his only hand - and started
|
|
forward, trying to find a way out of this nightmarish hell in
|
|
which he had been placed.
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
They were after him. The simple act of interfering with their
|
|
plans for William Riker had resulted in the awareness of his
|
|
presence, and of the potential threat he represented. He had
|
|
attempted to interfere in their plans, and that could not be
|
|
tolerated, not by the Borg.
|
|
|
|
But Data was working quickly, using the Borg's very systems to
|
|
elude them from his presence. As he skirted from one system
|
|
to another, so he hid himself like a crafty computer virus,
|
|
creating false impressions and spurious leads while at the
|
|
same time covering his tracks.
|
|
|
|
But the Borg weren't fools. They learnt quickly. They knew
|
|
what was irrelevant, and thus phoney; it was merely a matter
|
|
of time before the collective consciousness had worked the
|
|
kink out of the system; it was inevitable.
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
"State your purpose for being here."
|
|
|
|
It was a futile demand, and Picard knew it. But it was one he
|
|
made none-the-less. The being continued to ignore them, as if
|
|
they were not there, and looked around the bridge at the
|
|
various stations.
|
|
|
|
Out of the corner of his eye, Picard saw Worf drawing his
|
|
phaser, and grabbed the klingon's wrist.
|
|
|
|
"No!" He paused, and continued more calmly. "You are not to
|
|
fire at them."
|
|
|
|
Worf eyed him wearily, but replaced his phaser to his belt.
|
|
|
|
After a moment's pause, Picard said: "If you shoot it, they'll
|
|
just send another; it's fruitless to try shooting them
|
|
individually."
|
|
|
|
"The view screen!" Someone yelled, and all eyes turned to
|
|
look at it.
|
|
|
|
Before them, they could see a large beam of energy reaching
|
|
out towards the Earth from the Borg ship. Nothing happened
|
|
for a long time, then slowly, a large peice of the surface
|
|
seemed to be pulled from its roots, up into space.
|
|
|
|
All was silent on the bridge. It was soon broken by a high-
|
|
pitched sound as the air shimmered a few feet away from them,
|
|
and two more Borg appeared.
|
|
|
|
Ensign Ro looked up from the security console, near which she
|
|
had been standing. "Sir, reports of Borg-sightings are coming
|
|
in from all decks, but the majority are from Engineering."
|
|
|
|
Picard nodded slowly at this, and caught the eye of an
|
|
apprehensive-looking Troi.
|
|
|
|
"Assimilation is under-way." He said, finally. "I'm in contact
|
|
with them."
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
Riker stumbled down the path, faceless humans on either side
|
|
of him - faceless for the fact that they were now Borg. He
|
|
hadn't looked down at his mechanical arm since he had first
|
|
noticed it, nor lifted his only hand to touch his "face" since
|
|
he had first done so. It was too much to think about, and
|
|
there was far more he had to do than worry about his own
|
|
mental and physical rape. Yet still he could not hold back on
|
|
the vile, impure feeling he perceived within him, of the
|
|
violation he had undergone.
|
|
|
|
A familiar face caught his eye, and Riker did a double-take.
|
|
It was a face he knew, alright, yet this time it was without
|
|
expression, without the animosity that he normally associated
|
|
with it. Yet this was something more fearful than animosity
|
|
that he felt when he stared into those glassy eyes of
|
|
Goshevon.
|
|
|
|
And you wanted to stay with your colony, Riker thought as he
|
|
stared at the once-leader, I wonder what your answer would be
|
|
now if you had to make that choice again....
|
|
|
|
But there was nothing he could do for Goshevon, so he turned
|
|
from the lifeless body, a body without a soul, and moved on
|
|
down the aisle, the metal floor ringing with every step he
|
|
took.
|
|
|
|
And then he noticed something out of the corner of his eye,
|
|
against the far wall. Slowly, he made his way towards it,
|
|
moving between the tables, quickening his pace as he neared
|
|
it. He passed the final bed to find what he hoped he wouldn't
|
|
see - the mutilated remains of Lieutenant Commander Data.
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Riker paused for a moment, taking in the sight. Arms, legs,
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torso, and head, all abandoned there in their various parts,
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stacked in the corner of this Hell. With his one free hand,
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he picked up Data's head, and looked down at it, a feeling of
|
|
intense grief washing over him. What the hell had happened,
|
|
to him, the Enterprise, Ard'rian? Assimilated was the answer,
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|
the only answer. Under what circumstances he had been
|
|
seperated from the whole, he did not know, but when he was
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seperated, he had taken with him all the knowledge he had
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gained while under that inhuman guise. Ard'rian had been
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assimilated, Data had been assimilated, and Jean-Luc Picard
|
|
and the Enterprise crew were in the process of being
|
|
assimilated into the Whole. But Data.....?
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The chips from the android's head were missing, and the memory
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of Data being placed into the Whole was strong. And the last
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|
memory, what was that last memory? Of danger? Not to him,
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|
but to the Whole..... He left Data's head with the rest of
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|
the disassembled body and made his way down the long room of
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tables. He knew where Data was, and he knew time was running
|
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out.
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* * * * * * * *
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Jean-Luc Picard had been seperated from his people. Worf had
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|
tried to stop it, but his attempts had been ineffectual.
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Picard looked around the bare room in which he had been
|
|
placed, so as to keep him from supplying his fellow-officers
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with knowledge he gained from being joined to the whole while
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at the same time being Captain Jean-Luc Picard. He stared at
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the Borg who stood before him, whose eyes stared right through
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|
him, glazed over and unseeing. That face, so much like his
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own.
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They were monitoring his decline, that was sure; watching him
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to make sure nothing went wrong. Nothing would go wrong. It
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|
was inevitable, and Picard knew it.
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Resistance was futile.
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END OF PART FOUR
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This is the half way mark. But also, this is where there is a
|
|
break, I'm afraid. I've got a hectic schedule and,
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|
unfortunately, will not be able to post more parts until this
|
|
coming Thursday/Friday. But, I promise you, by Thurs/Fri PART
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|
FIVE will be here, and from there, it should be back to the
|
|
regular once every two days or so. Again, I apologize, but my
|
|
time-table dictates otherwise. Until then, all the best;
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|
Ryan.
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Newsgroups: alt.startrek.creative
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Path: newserv.ksu.ksu.edu!moe.ksu.ksu.edu!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!wupost!uunet!psgrain!ee.und.ac.za!hippo!cc194.ru.ac.za!g92n3258
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From: g92n3258@giraffe.ru.ac.za (MR RL NICOL)
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|
Subject: I, Locutus: Part Five of Eight - Prepare for assimilation
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|
Message-ID: <g92n3258.59.733171845@giraffe.ru.ac.za>
|
|
Lines: 585
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Sender: news@hippo.ru.ac.za (Usenet News Admin)
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Organization: Rhodes University, Grahamstown, South Africa
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Date: Fri, 26 Mar 1993 18:50:45 GMT
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Part Five here, after that long delay. I'm sorry about that,
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|
but at least now I'll have a new part posted every two days;
|
|
maybe even every day, on occassion.
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At any rate, enjoy:
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|
Ryan.
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I, LOCUTUS:
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PART FIVE:
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The Borg were everywhere. And more were still on their way,
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dissecting the Federations most prized vessel, taking it apart
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and adapting it to their own specifications.
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The Borg had a plan, no doubt, but whatever it was, it eluded
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the very upset Klingon Security Chief as he stared down at the
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engineering section, below him, swarming with Borg soldiers.
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He and the five security officers he had taken with him, armed
|
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to the teeth with phasers, had assigned themselves the task of
|
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re-taking engineering, getting to the warp reactor, and
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destroying the ship, hopefully taking a large part of the Borg
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ship with them. Worf knew that whether it was through his
|
|
doing or through the Borg's, the Enterprise was doomed. And
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|
he preferred if it was through his doing.
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The Klingon security officer considered his next actions, then
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|
after a pause, stood up and began to move forward, towards the
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elevator that would take him to engineering. No spoken words
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|
were needed, and his security team followed right behind him.
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As the elevator doors closed behind them, Worf turned to the
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officers before him.
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"No one is to fire until I order it." He said quietly, but
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almost menacingly. "We will make our way towards the warp
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core reactors, and from there start the self-destruct
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|
program."
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"And if they've removed that from the memory banks?" One of
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the officers spoke up.
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That would be almost impossible to do, but when it came to the
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|
Borg, Worf knew all impossibilities had to be considered.
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"With or without the self-destruct, we will find a way to
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destroy the ship."
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|
As the elevator came to a halt, Worf quickly ordered the doors
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|
not to be opened. As if appreciating the Klingon's
|
|
superiority, the computer acceded to his wishes, and they
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|
remained secure within the confines of the turbo-lift.
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"Ready..." He began, setting his phaser at the highest
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setting.
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"...and..." His hand hovered over the small handle that would
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allow the doors to be open when pressed.
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The ship rocked violently, throwing all the officers to the
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floor of the elevator, on top of each other. Worf managed to
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hold onto the side of the lift, but after another buffeting,
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he too joined his team in the assortment of arms and legs on
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the floor.
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Worf reached up for the handle once more, and as the
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Enterprise shook again, managed to open the doors and crawl
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out, phaser in hand, wondering about who would be attacking
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his ship.
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|
* * * * * * * *
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"The Borg are powering up their weapons, Captain." The
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|
lieutenant spoke from his station.
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|
|
Shelby continued to stare at the viewscreen, at the cube-
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|
shaped ship and the galaxy-class starship that hung together
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in space, orbitting the Earth.
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As if in response to the Lieutenant's warning, a powerful beam
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|
of energy lashed out from the side of the Borg ship.
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"Shields down by 90 percent... 80..."
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"Fire phasers and take out that beam." Shelby ordered, not
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|
taking her eyes from the image before her.
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"Firing phasers."
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Twin beams of energy lanced out from the USS Garrett, striking
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the Borg ship at the origin of its weapon.
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"We got through their shields, captain, but they are
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undamaged."
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"Prepare to fire anti-matter spread in..."
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"Captain! the Borg ship is increasing its power to its
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|
shields, covering the Enterprise with it, to protect it." The
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|
lieutenant called out.
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|
|
|
So it had been co-opted, Shelby thought. She wondered about
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|
Will Riker....
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|
* * * * * * * *
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Worf turned to the tall security officer that stood beside
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|
him, at the engineering console near the warp reactor coils.
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"Mr DeMont, you will remain here. If you do not hear from me
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|
within half an hours time, you must drop the seal." Worf
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|
stared at him, calmly, searching the others face to see that
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|
he understood.
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"Aye, sir." DeMont responded. He knew that would be the
|
|
death-knell for the Enterprise - dropping the seal that housed
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|
the anti-matter was like dropping a lit match in a vat of TNT;
|
|
even more impressive.
|
|
|
|
"And the Borg?"
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Worf glanced over DeMont's shoulder to see if they had been
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|
seen. So far, so lucky. "From all our previous encounters,
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|
the Borg have only reacted to our presence when we posed a
|
|
visible threat." He replied. "So long as you don't do
|
|
anything, they shouldn't be a problem. But, just in case, do
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|
your best not to be seen."
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DeMont nodded, then turned to seat himself behind the
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|
engineering console. Worf turned to join the rest of the
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|
security team at the turbo-lift. So the Borg had covered the
|
|
Enterprise within its shields, he thought. That gave him a
|
|
little latitude, and the chance to get the Enterprise to do
|
|
more than a little damage to the Borg ship when it destructed.
|
|
All he had to do was get to the Borg ship - now possible that
|
|
they were in their shields - and disrupt the Borg
|
|
consciousness, weaken them. After that, there was plenty of
|
|
time in which to die.
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * *
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|
Riker froze. There had been a noise, he was sure. As he
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|
stood in the gloom of one of the long, winding tunnels in the
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|
labrynth that was the Borg ship, he listened out for the
|
|
remotest sound. And then he heard it; the sound of distant
|
|
footsteps clanging on the steel gangway on which he was
|
|
standing. The vibrations from those unseen beings' movements
|
|
shot up Riker's leg. And he was sure they were coming for
|
|
him.
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|
|
|
He was still linked to the Borg; he was sure of it. There was
|
|
a part of him that was in touch with the Whole. They knew
|
|
where he was and what he was doing, but he also knew their
|
|
directives, sensed their group effort and that which they were
|
|
trying to achieve. Part of it was Data; he had sensed that
|
|
when he stood over Data's remains; he had known what had to be
|
|
done. But a part of their objectives were also to stop him -
|
|
he was a threat, something which could undermine the Borg.
|
|
And that, he knew, could not be tolerated.
|
|
|
|
The nightmare of what he had just escaped, and the nightmare
|
|
of which he was now living sent his mind reeling in panic.
|
|
The memory of all those faces lying on those tables, soulless,
|
|
refused to leave his mind's eye. He remembered the face of
|
|
Goshevon. It was the husk he had seen, that outer layer of
|
|
meat, with nothing on the inside except circuitry and an
|
|
artificialness that chilled him.
|
|
|
|
He looked down at that mechanical arm that he held out before
|
|
him, then turned quickly to escape.
|
|
|
|
The vibrations had increased greatly now, as those that caused
|
|
them neared. Riker broke into a run. It wasn't much of one,
|
|
however, as he was still incredibly weak. But the thought of
|
|
returning to that table drove him on and kept him moving as
|
|
fast as his strength would allow. Unfortunately, it wasn't
|
|
fast enough.
|
|
|
|
Riker stopped dead in his tracks as he spotted the Borg
|
|
soldier standing before him, a feeling of dread, and a strange
|
|
notion of distant kinship - as vile as it seemed - crept into
|
|
his mind. One and the same. A part of him was still... that.
|
|
|
|
He turned to retrace his steps, but halted. Five Borg
|
|
soldiers were nearing him from the other side, trapping him.
|
|
Frantically, he looked at the two options which faced him -
|
|
charge the one or be taken; for him, the latter was not even
|
|
an option. Riker ran head-long towards the one Borg.
|
|
|
|
The sound of a phaser screamed past him, accompanied by a beam
|
|
of pure energy, and the Borg before him crumpled. Its place
|
|
was replaced by a team of security men, led by Worf.
|
|
|
|
"Commander....!" Worf yelled, as he hesitated, his weapon
|
|
trained on the charging Borg. Then quickly, he ordered: "Hold
|
|
your fire!"
|
|
|
|
Riker reached the group, and turned to face the oncoming Borg.
|
|
|
|
Seeing more Borg soldiers lumbering towards them, the security
|
|
detail needed no stimulation to fire. Within seconds, and
|
|
after changing the frequencies of their phasers twice, all
|
|
five Borg were lying in a heap metres away from them.
|
|
|
|
Worf looked at Will Riker.
|
|
|
|
"It's good to see you, Mr Worf." Riker said, grimly. At
|
|
Worf's look, he added: "I'm fine."
|
|
|
|
"No, you're not, Commander." Worf replied.
|
|
|
|
Riker nodded. The Borg had made him part of the whole. They
|
|
had taken his soul, but had supplied him with knowledge.
|
|
|
|
It's about damn time to use that knowledge against them, he
|
|
thought.
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
They were getting closer. It was only a matter of time before
|
|
they had him, and Data knew it. He could only delude the
|
|
consciousness for a brief period; throw only so many false
|
|
leads in their trail that they would fall for. He didn't even
|
|
have seconds before they had him, before they rooted him from
|
|
their lair, like pulling a thorn embedded in flesh.
|
|
|
|
And yet Will Riker was linked into the Borg consciousness.
|
|
That gave him an edge....
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
Worf moved alongside Riker, slowing down his pace so as to
|
|
allow the Enterprise's First Officer to take the lead, guiding
|
|
them down the maze of passage-ways and steel corridors. He
|
|
still held his phaser in his hand, ready to shoot. Klingons
|
|
were always on gaurd, and when Worf was to be led down the
|
|
enemy's ship by a friend who may have been compromised - even
|
|
when that friend was a superior - he was not willing to leave
|
|
things to chance. That was not the mark of a good Security
|
|
Chief.
|
|
|
|
"How much further?" Worf asked. He still was unsure of how
|
|
much of Riker's story to believe - that Data was working
|
|
inside the Borg consciousness, supplying him with the
|
|
necessary information that was needed to render the Borg
|
|
helpless, if that was indeed possible.
|
|
|
|
"We're almost there." Riker answered, then pointed to a level
|
|
above them, where a gang-plank extended out of the vast wall
|
|
towering above them. "Data was fed into the Borg whole
|
|
somewhere along here."
|
|
|
|
"Commander!" Worf yelled, lifting his phaser to shoot the two
|
|
oncoming Borg, who had appeared out of nowhere. "Phasers at
|
|
maximum!"
|
|
|
|
"No!" Riker countermanded, eliciting a sharp look from the
|
|
Security Chief. "Fire to stun."
|
|
|
|
The security team hesitated for a second, unsure of whose
|
|
order to follow, then aimed and fired. The two Borg soldiers
|
|
dropped.
|
|
|
|
"Commander?" Worf looked at Riker, as if expecting an
|
|
explanation.
|
|
|
|
Riker didn't answer. Instead, he moved forward towards the
|
|
two Borg. Worf followed, then looked down.
|
|
|
|
The face of Ard'rian Mackenzie stared up at them; her eyes
|
|
vacant, her head shaven, with an assortment of circuitry
|
|
covering the left-half of her head.
|
|
|
|
"Data alerted me to her presence." He said, then moved on.
|
|
Worf turned to two of the security gaurds and nodded. The two
|
|
picked up the Borg's body and carried it, not without a little
|
|
difficulty, as they hurried after Riker and Worf.
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
"Jean-Luc?" Beverly Crusher walked into the small room, a
|
|
Borg soldier at her side. She had no idea why she had been
|
|
taken to see Picard, but she was happy nevertheless. No one
|
|
had seen the captain for quite some time. The Borg made sure
|
|
no one neared him. But now that all had changed, and she had
|
|
no idea why. The Borg soldier turned and left, leaving her
|
|
alone with the alien, yet so familiar, figure before her.
|
|
|
|
"That being no longer exists."
|
|
|
|
Bev Crusher felt a chill run up her spine, as Jean-Luc Picard
|
|
moved out of the shadows, towards her. It was him alright,
|
|
but the way he looked at her, with that cold intensity as if
|
|
he were studying a gnat....
|
|
|
|
"You are the Doctor."
|
|
|
|
"Who are you?" She didn't want to know, but somehow it seemed
|
|
insanely appropriate to ask.
|
|
|
|
"I am Locutus of Borg." It responded. "We have reached the
|
|
culmination of our plans. Earth has been assimilated; we now
|
|
require my presence to speak for the rest of the colonies and
|
|
worlds of the Federation. The process that resulted in my
|
|
rebirth have proven successful. That is why you are here."
|
|
|
|
Crusher hesitated, not sure what this creature wanted with
|
|
her, but hoping for a sign of some glimmer of Picard, a side
|
|
she could appeal to. But there was none.
|
|
|
|
"You will aid the Borg in the assimilation of those on this
|
|
vessel. You will help the Borg transmit the virus into those
|
|
who will join us."
|
|
|
|
"I refuse." She said, realising the futility of the statement.
|
|
|
|
"Your refusal is irrelevant. You will comply with all the
|
|
demands of the Borg." Locutus replied. "Once you have been
|
|
assimilated into the Borg, you will aid us in all avenues open
|
|
to you."
|
|
|
|
With that, he lifted a device that he held in his hand. It
|
|
looked like a syringe, not quite like a hypospray.
|
|
|
|
"You will be one with the Borg." It said, moving with slow
|
|
determination towards her.
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
"Can we not order them to self-destruct?" Worf asked,
|
|
curiously, as he and Riker stood before the vast array of
|
|
terminals.
|
|
|
|
Riker shook his head, and replied: "According to Data, the
|
|
Borg have altered their command structure, so any command that
|
|
could compromise them in the slightest has to be unequivocally
|
|
agreed to by all the Borg. We can't supply them with the idea
|
|
to go to sleep again, either."
|
|
|
|
"What is there left to tell them besides this?" Worf asked in
|
|
frustration, holding his phaser.
|
|
|
|
"Not much." Agreed Riker, then turned back to the terminal in
|
|
front of which he was standing. "But the Borg are spread over
|
|
the entire ship, and in order to run their operation smoothly
|
|
with as little damage to the Whole if one section is
|
|
destroyed, the have to have certain distribution points, which
|
|
they can cut off when one or a few of the Borg members have
|
|
been compromised."
|
|
|
|
"Such as when the self-destruct?" Worf asked, remembering the
|
|
Borg soldier he had shot in the engineering section when Q had
|
|
flung them into battle with the Borg.
|
|
|
|
Riker nodded. "According to Data, that can also be done on a
|
|
group level, where whole sections can be destroyed if they are
|
|
compromised."
|
|
|
|
"Such decisions could not be made by unanimously." Worf caught
|
|
on. "They could not rely on the compromised section to agree
|
|
to their own destruction."
|
|
|
|
"Naturally." Riker concurred. "A section that was compromised
|
|
could allow those who compromised them access to stop them
|
|
from being destroyed."
|
|
|
|
"Commander!" It was one of the security officers. "My
|
|
tricorder reads over forty Borg soldiers moving in this
|
|
direction. Others are also on their way!"
|
|
|
|
So they had cottoned on to their plan, Riker thought grimly.
|
|
That didn't leave him much time, but with Data's help,
|
|
supplying him with the necessary information to operate these
|
|
terminals....
|
|
|
|
A phaser whined behind him, and Worf turned, his own phaser in
|
|
his hand and ready to fire.
|
|
|
|
"Give me some time!" Riker yelled to Worf, above the noise of
|
|
the phaser beams.
|
|
|
|
To Worf it seemed as if the entire Borg ship had come alive.
|
|
They were coming in from all directions, swarming in on them,
|
|
without mercy. He fired, felling several Borg, but never
|
|
enough. The Borg kept coming, walking over their fallen
|
|
comrades with little if any care, with one purpose in mind.
|
|
From the corner of his eye, he saw a Borg reach one of his
|
|
security team members, smashing the officers body against a
|
|
large terminal. He fired again, but this time the Borg had
|
|
adapted....
|
|
|
|
"More time!" Riker yelled from the terminal at which he was
|
|
working.
|
|
|
|
The Borg were within metres of them, as the rest of his team
|
|
fell back, closing themselves around their security chief and
|
|
first officer. They continued to dispense their phasers'
|
|
energy supplies, tossing the powerless ones aside and reaching
|
|
to their belts for others. And still the Borg came.
|
|
|
|
"A few more minutes!" Riker shouted above the raucus.
|
|
|
|
"Minutes!" Worf shot a horrified glance at his First Officer.
|
|
"Commander, we don't have seconds!"
|
|
|
|
The white faces surrounded them, straight from the crypts of
|
|
their individual slots in the Borg walls. Their large
|
|
mechanical arms reached out before them, their targets in
|
|
their sights....
|
|
|
|
"Commander!"
|
|
|
|
"Just a few...!" The Borg soldiers, all of them, fell. In
|
|
their pile of metal and flesh, they lay there unmoving,
|
|
staring off into space ahead of them, eyes unseeing.
|
|
|
|
"Commander?" Worf looked at the Borg soldiers surrounding
|
|
them, as lifeless as the bodies on the table.
|
|
|
|
"Their distribution points have been cut off." Riker
|
|
explained, after a slight sigh. "Each section can no longer
|
|
communicate with each other."
|
|
|
|
"Not a moment too soon." Worf muttered, looking at the
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comatose Borg soldiers stretching all around them as far as
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the eye could see.
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* * * * * * * *
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"Captain, the Borg ship has powered down totally! Shields,
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weapons, everything!" The Lieutenant next to Shelby said,
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totally aghast.
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Shelby moved over beside him, staring at the instruments and
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their readings.
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"And the Enterprise?" She asked.
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|
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The Lieutenant checked his sensors, then said, not without a
|
|
little surprise in his voice: "Sir, the Enterprise shields are
|
|
up, but she is reading a far larger amount of power than she
|
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should have any rights to have!"
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Shelby stared at her viewscreen for a moment. There the
|
|
Enterprise and the large cube-shaped ship hung in space,
|
|
orbitting the almost-destroyed Earth. Decisions.
|
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"Mr Felmers, you'll take an Away Team over there; see what the
|
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hell is going on."
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The Lieutenant looked up, a look of worry crossing his face.
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"Over... there?"
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"That's right, Lieutenant. So move it."
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As Felmers exited the Bridge, Shelby wondered what rabbit
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Picard had managed to pull out of the hat this time.
|
|
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|
* * * * * * * *
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Locutus stared out at the stars from the window before him.
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They were on their way, he knew. After all, he was in contact
|
|
with them. Their recent loss was merely a slight setback in
|
|
the master-plan. They were on their way, this time in force,
|
|
and they wouldn't be stopped. And this Galaxy-class ship, the
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pride of the Federation, was to lead it to its grave.
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|
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|
* * * * * * * *
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Beverly Crusher watched the Borg standing over her, making
|
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sure she did not leave Sickbay; not that she was going to.
|
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Locutus had injected her with the virus, and she was well on
|
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her way to becoming a Borg. Already the process had been set
|
|
into motion; she realised this after she performed a quick
|
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brain scan on herself. Sure enough, her individual brain
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cells were being overridden; supplemented with those suitable
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for a Borg; a soulless creature.
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Nor did the Borg have to be connected to the whole through
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|
mechanical means anymore. This "bug", as Locutus had
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explained it to her, formed their own links to the Borg whole
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without the necessary machinery and distribution nodules.
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That was why the Borg on the Enterprise, all of whom had been
|
|
injected with the virus before being beamed to the starship,
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still functioned with their mothership shut down. Naturally,
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Locutus had said, they would still be assimilated into the
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whole, connected to machines and certain body parts being
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supplanted with mechanical features - that improved
|
|
functioning; the thought of "mechanical features" being
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attached to her pushed her on.
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There's no way in Hell I'm becoming one of you bastards, she
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thought, studying the inner workings of the virus. A weak
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link, somewhere. Somewhere....
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|
* * * * * * * *
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Riker felt the familiar, reassuring feeling of a transporter
|
|
beam envelop him. The last time he had felt that was on Beta
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Auriquae V, in a Borg transporter beam - it seemed so long
|
|
ago....
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"Will!"
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He looked up to see himself staring into the eyes of Captain
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Elizabeth Shelby. Obviously, she hadn't been expecting her
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Away Team to be bringing back... this.
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"Captain." He said, forcing a smile. "Even the position of
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first officer isn't enough, huh?"
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Only then he noticed Worf's arm holding onto his, propping him
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up.
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"Get him to Sickbay." Shelby said, turning to the medics who
|
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had just entered with a mobile diagnostic bed.
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Gently, he was placed on the bed, and rushed out of the
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transporter room.
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"Captain!" A voice over the intercom boomed.
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"This ship is more busy than the Enterprise." She muttered to
|
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Worf, then called out: "What is it, Mr Granger?"
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|
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"Sensors are picking up two ships, heading this way... at Warp
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nine. Readings indicate they are Borg."
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|
* * * * * * * *
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Riker stared across the Sickbay area to the diagnostic bed
|
|
where doctors were working. Every now and then, he caught a
|
|
glimpse of Ard'rian Mackenzie's pale face, staring upwards
|
|
into nowhere. He could have been like that, if it hadn't been
|
|
for Data. Data... He had been left alone on the Borg ship,
|
|
his body peices having been brought with them to the USS
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Garrett. But his consciousness....
|
|
|
|
"How are you feeling, Commander?" Shelby looked over from him,
|
|
catching him off-gaurd.
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|
|
|
He looked away from where Ard'rian Mackenzie lay, and up at
|
|
the red-headed captain. "What Captain Picard felt when he
|
|
went through it. What he's feeling now..."
|
|
|
|
"You know?" Shelby looked slightly flustered.
|
|
|
|
"Worf told me while we were on the Borg ship." Riker
|
|
whispered, then asked: "And you?"
|
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|
|
"I heard from Admiral Ranklin, in other words Starfleet
|
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command."
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|
|
Riker frowned. "How is that possible? We only found out..."
|
|
|
|
Shelby nodded, slowly. "They knew, Will. That's why they
|
|
stopped offering commands to you after that incident at Wolf
|
|
359, even when we needed good captains to make up for the ones
|
|
we'd lost."
|
|
|
|
She sighed, but from the look on Riker's face, continued:
|
|
"They knew about it from Captain Picard's medical files, but
|
|
kept it quiet. I think those who knew thought they could use
|
|
it to get at the Borg again, once the Borg had set the virus
|
|
off and he became Locutus. It seems to have backfired
|
|
completely, though."
|
|
|
|
"They knew?" Riker repeated, not quite comprehending what he
|
|
had just heard. All that time since Wolf 359, he had never
|
|
been offerred another post. To keep him on the Enterprise, to
|
|
be at hand in case something happened to Picard, no doubt, to
|
|
be able to use the situation as he had previously. But that
|
|
hadn't worked. The Borg got him first.
|
|
|
|
"We're all pawns, Will." Shelby muttered. "And when it comes
|
|
to survival, and the Borg, Starfleet also plays dirty."
|
|
|
|
Worlds apart, yes. But Riker wondered how much lowering of
|
|
ones own standards it would take to defeat the Borg.
|
|
Starfleet had lowered itself below any moral decency, and it
|
|
had backfired all the way back to Earth.
|
|
|
|
END OF PART FIVE:
|
|
Part six can be expected on Sunday/Monday.
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|
|
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Newsgroups: alt.startrek.creative
|
|
Path: newserv.ksu.ksu.edu!moe.ksu.ksu.edu!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!swrinde!sdd.hp.com!cs.utexas.edu!uunet!psgrain!ee.und.ac.za!shrike.und.ac.za!hippo!cc194.ru.ac.za!g92n3258
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From: g92n3258@giraffe.ru.ac.za (MR RL NICOL)
|
|
Subject: I, LOCUTUS: Six of Eight - Assimilation nearing completion
|
|
Message-ID: <g92n3258.67.733597339@giraffe.ru.ac.za>
|
|
Lines: 297
|
|
Sender: news@hippo.ru.ac.za (Usenet News Admin)
|
|
Organization: Rhodes University, Grahamstown, South Africa
|
|
Date: Wed, 31 Mar 1993 17:02:19 GMT
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|
|
|
|
Here is part six, after a slight delay. As for Parts seven
|
|
and eight, they WILL be finished and posted by Tuesday evening
|
|
at the latest, as I will be leaving for a week or two (Yes,
|
|
vacation!), and I am determined to finish this story by then.
|
|
So, no matter what happens, "I, Locutus" will have been posted
|
|
in full by that time. But enough talk and more....
|
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|
|
I, LOCUTUS:
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|
|
|
PART SIX:
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|
|
"The Enterprise is heading out of the solar system, Captain."
|
|
The officer who sat before her said, not taking his eyes from
|
|
the view-screen.
|
|
|
|
"Plot a course in the same direction, Lieutenant. But give us
|
|
enough distance from her so she can't pick us up on her
|
|
sensors." Shelby ordered, then swung around in her chair to
|
|
face her communications officer. "Is Commander Riker and his
|
|
team aboard the Borg ship?"
|
|
|
|
The communications officer turned from her station and nodded.
|
|
"He says he's not sure how much power he can get Data to coax
|
|
from whatever engines the Borg ship has, but they will follow
|
|
at whatever spead they can muster."
|
|
|
|
Shelby nodded, then said: "Proceed, Mr Hanson."
|
|
|
|
The image of the desicrated Earth and lone Borg ship, now
|
|
looking not so ominous, sped away from them on the viewscreen,
|
|
soon becoming a point among the stars, then disappearing as
|
|
the USS Garrett left the solar system, after the Enterprise.
|
|
|
|
Shelby thought of William Riker, who had stubbornly refused to
|
|
remain in Sickbay, where it was obvious where he belonged.
|
|
But it had been useless arguing with him; after all, he had
|
|
given her countless good reasons for him to return to the Borg
|
|
ship, the main one being that he was the only person they had
|
|
who could communicate with Data, now stuck within the
|
|
circuitry of the Borg ship. Reluctantly, she agreed that he
|
|
was the right person for the job of leading the Away Team, but
|
|
sent Worf along with him to keep an eye on him, and take over
|
|
if he deemed it necessary. With the two of him, she sent her
|
|
best engineers to help repair the Borg ship, enough so it
|
|
could be of some use to them in a fight. The Borg collective
|
|
might be able to repair the ship automatically, but Data sure
|
|
as hell could not. The most he could do was pinpoint the
|
|
areas needing repairs most urgently, and the tell them the
|
|
best way to go about it.
|
|
|
|
Meanwhile, the USS Garrett's Sickbay was overflowing, with as
|
|
many of the colonists of Beta Ariquae V, and humans of Earth,
|
|
that the Borg had taken. The ship's doctors had their hands
|
|
full, using the sophisticated equipment which the counter-Borg
|
|
ship they were on carried. The Federation had amassed much
|
|
knowledge of the Borg since the Wolf 359 massacre - ways not
|
|
only how to defend themselves from the Borg but also ways of
|
|
how to bring those victims who had fallen into the Borg's
|
|
control back out without causing them to self-destruct.
|
|
Naturally, they had to use complex machinery to get access
|
|
into the individual's circuitry and cut the link.
|
|
|
|
As for the other individuals who they had not space to fit on
|
|
the USS Garrett, they had been beamed back to Earth, with the
|
|
hope that some form of medical help would arrive for them.
|
|
After all, whether they remained on Earth, on the Borg ship,
|
|
or even on the USS Garrett, the chances of them all returning
|
|
to Borg control was the same - very high.
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
Ard'rian continued to stare up at the pale-grey ceiling above
|
|
her. She hadn't moved a muscle since she had been placed
|
|
there; she hadn't been aware of her surroundings until a few
|
|
minutes ago. Now she saw everything, knew everything - and
|
|
remembered everything. And it chilled her.
|
|
|
|
She had always been fascinated by androids, electronics; they
|
|
were far superior, not full of the flaws that humans had - she
|
|
had said these very things to Data when she had first met him.
|
|
It were these qualities that drew her to him, resulted in her
|
|
falling in love with him, and now making her shudder at the
|
|
coldness and robotic callousness that she herself had become
|
|
when she had been transformed into the very thing she had
|
|
looked up to.
|
|
|
|
Though hardly perceptible, her eyes shifted to the right, and
|
|
she caught sight of a large arm with an odd-looking structure
|
|
attached to its end. For an instant, it reminded her of that
|
|
large mechanical construct that she had carried with her as an
|
|
added appendage when she had been a Borg. The panic lasted
|
|
only a few seconds, as she recalled it was that very thing
|
|
that had brought her out of that disgusting state that she
|
|
remembered so clearly.
|
|
|
|
"We're getting a response from this one!" She heard a voice
|
|
call out, a male voice.
|
|
|
|
Two people came into her field of view, looking over her,
|
|
examining her clearly.
|
|
|
|
The male said to the female: "I'm sure I saw her eyes move,
|
|
shift to the right."
|
|
|
|
The woman was quite for a moment, still staring down at her,
|
|
watching her intently. After a moment she shook her head.
|
|
"No, I don't see any reaction. She still seems completely out
|
|
of it."
|
|
|
|
The two faces disappeared, to be replaced once more by the
|
|
bland greyness of the ceiling.
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
All was clear. There were no Borg in the vicinity. Though he
|
|
couldn't see this to be true, his visor took in all this
|
|
information for him, translating it into a kaliedoscope of
|
|
colours which he managed to decode.
|
|
|
|
Slowly, he made his way out from the vast machinery behind
|
|
which he hid in and moved out into the Engineering section.
|
|
It had been the first place where the Borg had arrived when
|
|
the began descending on the Enterprise, taking it apart,
|
|
analysing those things they found worthy of their interest,
|
|
modifying those things they felt they could improve, and
|
|
destroying that which they found inferior. Now modified,
|
|
Geordi realized that the Enterprise's engines were capable of
|
|
greater power than they should have any rights to give out,
|
|
especially considering the fact that they had been severly
|
|
damaged while confronting the Borg at Beta Ariquae V. Even
|
|
with the engines working perfectly, such power levels were
|
|
unheard of. Where the Borg were getting the extra power,
|
|
Geordi had no idea. What he did know, was that they had to be
|
|
stopped.
|
|
|
|
As he made his way towards the reactor, he noticed a body
|
|
slumped over a nearby console. He looked around once more,
|
|
making sure no Borg had entered the immediate area, then moved
|
|
towards the dead crewman.
|
|
|
|
As he reached the body, he realised it was that of Lieutenant
|
|
Demont, a security gaurd. Gingerly, he pulled the body back,
|
|
so that it slumped back in the chair in which it was sitting.
|
|
A careful study of the console indicated that the security
|
|
officer had tried to gain entry to the controls over the anti-
|
|
matter seal via the ship's computer. Evidently, the Borg
|
|
hadn't allowed him to get that far.
|
|
|
|
Nor could he get at the reactor. Though normal eyes wouldn't
|
|
have been able to register it, his visor could pick up the
|
|
slight traces of a force-field that surrounded the nucleus of
|
|
the ship's engines.
|
|
|
|
No way to destroy the ship, he thought grimly. Well, then,
|
|
how about the people on board it?
|
|
|
|
After a slight pause, he moved towards the elevator. There
|
|
was one chance, but only one. And if he were lucky, they
|
|
would all be dead in a few minutes....
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
"Commander?"
|
|
|
|
Riker looked up, to see the concerned look on Worf's face. He
|
|
felt drained, yes, and the last thing he felt like was going
|
|
into a fight, especially with the knowledge that he was still
|
|
partially under the Borg's domain. But talking about it was
|
|
not something he felt like doing either.
|
|
|
|
"Just a little tired, Mr Worf." He said, trying to force a
|
|
smile. "I don't think I'm cut out for speaking at the moment,
|
|
for the Borg, Data, or anyone."
|
|
|
|
Surely Worf would get that hint, he thought. Evidently not.
|
|
|
|
"Does this have anything to do with your recent...
|
|
transformation?"
|
|
|
|
Riker sighed. "To a degree, yes. To be honest, I don't feel
|
|
comfortable still being linked like this to the Borg." He
|
|
stared down to his newly repaired arm, and to the new
|
|
Starfleet uniform he was wearing, instead of the metallic-
|
|
coloured clothing he had worn into the Borg. Except for a few
|
|
attached peices of circuitry, he seemed back to normal. He
|
|
still had chills when he touched the left side of his face,
|
|
though, as he felt the peices of circuitry attached to his
|
|
body. The majority of it had been removed, but there were
|
|
still areas where the circuits were still evident.
|
|
|
|
"Are you receiving anything from... Captain Picard?"
|
|
|
|
Riker was silent for a moment, then answered: "No; the Borg
|
|
are remaining unusually silent. They aren't transmitting to
|
|
Data, either. They must realize we've been "subverted" and
|
|
don't want to give anything away."
|
|
|
|
Worf continued to study him for a moment, then nodded. Riker
|
|
set himself about to be ready to relay more incoming
|
|
information from Data.
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
Geordi LaForge crawled up the narrow shaft that stretched up
|
|
from the engineering section, phaser in hand. Rung after
|
|
rung, he pulled himself up, deeper into the heart of his ship,
|
|
and hated himself for what he was about to do.
|
|
|
|
Finally he came to the control panel he was searching for. He
|
|
had realised there would be little hope of accessing it from
|
|
the ship's computer, or try getting at it from Engineering -
|
|
the Borg were too clever for that; he just hoped they weren't
|
|
clever enough to consider changing the manual override, or the
|
|
code for that matter.
|
|
|
|
"O794DATA-3562LAFORGE-2001HUGH." He whispered in the darkness
|
|
of the access tunnel.
|
|
|
|
The green light on the front of the control panel turned red,
|
|
and with a sigh, Geordi slid it aside, to reveal the complex
|
|
circuitry beneath it.
|
|
|
|
Okay, he thought to himself with a wry smile, they may be
|
|
half-machines, but let's see how the Borg do without life-
|
|
support.....
|
|
|
|
No sooner had he touched the necessary wiring, had a surge of
|
|
electric current run through his body, scorching his flesh.
|
|
His muscles in his hand contracted involuntarily around the
|
|
wiring, and his other hand released his hold on the metal
|
|
rung....
|
|
|
|
The contact with the current broke as he fell down, nothing
|
|
but darkness flashing past. In semi-consciousness, he reached
|
|
out for the ladder. No sooner had his hands grabbed hold of a
|
|
rung, than his shoulder felt as if it were being ripped from
|
|
its socket. But he held on for dear life, knowing if he let
|
|
go, he would plummet to his death. So, the Borg had
|
|
considered the possibility of someone trying to override the
|
|
life support commands manually, he thought, on the edge of
|
|
consciousness.
|
|
|
|
And then he was aware of that there was something more to the
|
|
darkness that surrounded him. If at all possible, it suddenly
|
|
seemed darker than before. And then he realized what had
|
|
happened - the powerful electric current had burnt out the
|
|
connections to his visor. The darkness was not only because
|
|
of the lack of light, it was also because he was blind.
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
"That's the plan, then." Riker nodded, as he spoke to Shelby,
|
|
her image on the Borg screen staring back at him, intently.
|
|
|
|
"And if you don't get off the Borg ship in time?"
|
|
|
|
"Then we don't." He answered. "Either way, we'll destroy the
|
|
Enterprise, then maneuver this ship to collide with one of the
|
|
Borg ships. That will leave you with only one to worry
|
|
about." He paused for a moment, then gave a slight smile.
|
|
"Think you can handle that, Captain, or is it too big a
|
|
decision to make?"
|
|
|
|
"I can handle it." Shelby replied, though not looking pleased
|
|
at all. "I suppose you'll want all non-essential personnel
|
|
beamed back to the Garrett?"
|
|
|
|
The fewer that are on this ship when it rams the Borg, the
|
|
better, Riker thought as he nodded in agreement. Data would
|
|
have to "steer" this thing and would therefore have to remain
|
|
on board. And if the rest of them couldn't get off the ship
|
|
in time, Data would have plenty of company when he smashes
|
|
into the Borg ship, leaving in a baptism of fire.
|
|
|
|
"We'll rendezvous in fifteen minutes." He replied, finally.
|
|
"I'll get those non-essentials together to beam up then."
|
|
|
|
The image of Shelby disappeared from the screen, and Riker
|
|
turned to return to the others, knowing that, either way, he
|
|
would have to destroy the Enterprise, with all hands on board.
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
Locutus continued to stare out into space, at the distant
|
|
specks of light. He couldn't see them, to be sure; but he had
|
|
knowledge beyond the boundaries of sight. He had been in
|
|
contact with them for quite some time now; he had knowledge of
|
|
their approach. There was no doubt he would soon be united
|
|
with those from whom he had been apart for so long, an
|
|
unconscious part that formed the then conscious mind of
|
|
Picard. But now, all was different, for he was soon meet them
|
|
again, once more becoming a part of them, not only mentally,
|
|
but also physically. He knew it. They were coming....
|
|
|
|
END OF PART SIX.
|
|
|
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Newsgroups: alt.startrek.creative
|
|
Path: newserv.ksu.ksu.edu!moe.ksu.ksu.edu!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!cs.utexas.edu!uunet!psgrain!ee.und.ac.za!hippo!cc185.ru.ac.za!g92n3258
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From: g92n3258@giraffe.ru.ac.za (MR RL NICOL)
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Subject: I, LOCUTUS: PART SEVEN OF EIGHT - reposting is relevant
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Message-ID: <g92n3258.68.733856247@giraffe.ru.ac.za>
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Lines: 291
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Sender: news@hippo.ru.ac.za (Usenet News Admin)
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Organization: Rhodes University, Grahamstown, South Africa
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Date: Sat, 3 Apr 1993 16:57:27 GMT
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Well, from the header, I suppose you now know what yon Borgs think of the
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current dilemma raging in this newsgroup, or at least my opinion. But onto
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other matters and the seventh part of I, Locutus:
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And here is Part Seven, the penultimate chapter in the "I,
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Locutus" story. As I stated at the beginning of Part six, all
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the parts of "I, Locutus" will have been posted here by
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Tuesday evening, as I'll be away on vacation for a week or so
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after that! If one or more parts go missing, I'm afraid I'll
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be away until the 19th April, so only then will I be able to
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answer any mail and supply you with missing parts.
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All the best,
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Ryan.
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I, LOCUTUS:
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PART SEVEN:
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"Since I do not know how much you have forgotten, let me start
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from scratch. Your name is Beverly Crusher, and the vial that
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is in the hypospray marked X contains...." She watched her
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mirror-self, listened to her own voice and couldn't believe
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what she was seeing and hearing. "....schematics of this ship
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can be found in the Library Computer. The person I have told
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you about is named Locutus. Whatever happens, it is
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imperative you administer the full dosage. As you know from
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what I've told you, those areas of his brain rewritten by this
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virus will be neutralised. Since the creatures you've just
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heard about are only interested in controlling those portions
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of the brain that make a person unique from the rest - ones'
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memories - you won't kill him or incapacitate him to a point
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of no return, so don't worry. But remember, no matter what
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happens to you, you must get this dosage through to him. To
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the one they call Locutus."
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Beverly turned from the desk monitor and looked around her, at
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the strangely familiar setting she had found herself in. She
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could remember Jean-Luc, of course. And the Enterprise as
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well. But the... Borg? And since when did Wesley leave for
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the Academy?....
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But the peices fitted together, now that she had listened to
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this message, taped only half an hour ago, and yet filled with
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things she didn't know and could barely understand.
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Eradication. It was the only way, and the only hope they had,
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her previous self had told her. Beverly Crusher now knew what
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she had done; to get at these Borg, she destroyed those things
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she considered most cherished - her memories....
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* * * * * * * *
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Riker watched as Shelby's engineering team worked around the
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clock, extracting all the data they could from the access
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terminal which he had used to halt the Borg. With the help
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from Data, trapped within the confines of the Borg's
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circuitry, Riker was able to tell them how to pass certain
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security precautions the Borg had set up. All the information
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they gathered was being transmitted into the USS Garrett's
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ship-board computer to analyse and relay all pertinent details
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to Shelby and her officers, who would then consider different
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courses of action that could be taken once they confronted the
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two approaching Borg ships.
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It had been Riker's idea to copy the "file" in which Data's
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so-called mental patterns had been transmitted, so that even
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if the Data stuck in the Borg circuitry was destroyed when the
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ship collided with one of the other Borg ships, there would
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still be something left of the original Data around which a
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new android could be built.
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The Data in the Borg circuitry had begun to analyse this new
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moral dilemma, but Riker had cut him off quickly. There was
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little time to philosophise, what with more important things
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to attend to, and after all, the Data in the ship's circuitry
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wouldn't be around for much longer for it to be much of a
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dilemma for him, if they succeeded in their plan. And if they
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did not, then what did it matter in a Federation controlled by
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the Borg?
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"Commander Riker," Worf's voice broke the silence that had
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surrounded him, and the commotion inside of him - commotion
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caused from the continual presence of Data... and of the Borg.
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"Yes, Mr Worf?"
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"The USS Garrett has slowed down, allowing us to catch up with
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her. Those to be transferred to her have been notified and
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are standing by." Worf spoke, his gaze not averting from
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Riker, even for an instant.
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"Thank you, Mr Worf." Riker paused. "I take it you're ready to
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beam back with them."
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Worf continued to stare at him, seemingly unmovable. "I am
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staying here, Commander."
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Riker sighed. "Mr Worf, you will be beaming back with the
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others, and that is the last word on the subject."
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Worf continued to gaze steadily into Riker's eyes. "Captain
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Shelby requested that I accompany you here to see that you do
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nothing that may... compromise our strategy. I have acceded
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to that request, and will continue to do so."
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So that was it, Riker thought. Shelby doesn't trust me. He
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couldn't blame her, actually; not when he was still linked
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like this to the Borg. And then the thought occurred to him:
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Am I still under their control? Like an unsuspecting pawn in
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their game, like Jean-Luc Picard had been for Starfleet?
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"Very well, Mr Worf." He sighed. Perhaps it would be a wise
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precaution for someone to look over him, after all.
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* * * * * * * *
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The two Borg ships loomed ahead of him, on the Bridge's main
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viewscreen. Now that they had reached the Enterprise, they
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had all but stopped in space. Not all of the crew had been
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assimilated; the so-called "bug" did not work instantaneously,
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for its job was a slow one, as it altered each brain cell into
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a set pattern that would turn the owner of that brain into one
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of the Whole. That was happening for the majority of the
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ship's complement, but there were still many who had not been
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reached. Once transported to one of the two Borg ships, the
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process could be sped up. But first it was Locutus' duty to
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beam over, and be physically transformed into a Borg, so that
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his appearance could complement his Borg-mentality.
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"Locutus." The woman's voice carried from the aft turbo-lift.
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Locutus turned to see that it was the doctor. She had already
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been impregnated with the virus, but owing to the time that it
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took for it to complete its task, she was not yet a complete
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Borg. Thus she was difficult to reach without vocal
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communication. But he could sense a definite feeling of
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urgency.
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"Yes?" He moved towards her, the three Borg soldiers in his
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vicinity moving with him.
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"Go to Hell." With incredible speed, Crusher pulled her hand
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free from her lab coat and jabbed the hypo into Locutus' side.
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Almost as quickly, but not quick enough, the Borg soldiers
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responded. The one grabbed her newly-healed wrist and threw
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her across the bridge, to smash against the far wall. The
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other two held onto Locutus, who had half-collapsed as the
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substance contained in the hypo was released into his system.
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Crusher, a half-smile across her face despite the pain from
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being thrown, looked up to see Locutus and the three Borg
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soldiers disappear in a transporter beam. After that, she
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lost all consciousness.
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* * * * * * * *
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"Mr Worf, prepare to beam out of here!" Riker called out
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suddenly.
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Worf took one look at him, then followed him to stand in one
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of the countless, now-empty, slots in the wall that were
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normally reserved for the Borg. He didn't understand what
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Riker was proposing, or where they were going to be beamed,
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but from the tone of his Commander's voice, he could tell
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there was no time for explanation. Besides, they were the
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last two left on the Borg ship, besides Data's consciousness,
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and where they beamed couldn't be more worse than being on a
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ship headed for destruction.
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Riker placed his hand on a circular disc that jutted out of
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the wall, and indicated to Worf to do the same.
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God-speed, Data, he thought; then the materialization effect
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of a Borg transporter, thanks to his friend stuck in the Borg
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circuitry, caught him in a swirling haze, and he was gone.
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* * * * * * * *
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No sooner had the surroundings of the Borg ship disappeared
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than he found himself standing in a lonely, darkened corridor.
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Immediately his hand reached down for his phaser as he felt a
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presence beside him.
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"Worf."
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It was Riker. Worf lowered his phaser and took a more
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careful, detailed look at his new surroundings. To his slight
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surprise, he recognized it as being a corridor on the
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Enterprise.
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"The shields are up, but the Borg transporters never have had
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a problem with that." Riker whispered, then turned and started
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heading cautiously for the turbo-lift.
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Once inside, he turned to Worf. "If the Enterprise is as
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close to the Borg ships as our last readings indicated, then
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we've got to re-take the bridge and get the hell out of here.
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When Data collides with one of them, we don't want to be near
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that explosion."
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"Readings indicate there are seven Borg soldiers on the main
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Bridge." Worf said as he read his tricorder.
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"Can you get Geordi's co-ordinates? We don't know what
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alterations the Borg have done to the ship, and we'll need his
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help if we're going to get anywhere."
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Worf hesitated for a moment as he tried to pinpoint Geordi
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LaForge's location from his communicator. "This way,
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Commander." The two of them exited the turbo-lift.
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* * * * * * * *
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The Borg knew of his presence, the danger he presented to
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them. They raised their defences, but by using the energy
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reserves that surrounded him, he was quick to cut them down.
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Their own barrage of weapons tried to stop him, but he took
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the wounds they inflicted. They were small compared to what
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was to come.
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Data maneuvered towards the further of the two Borg ships, the
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one further from the Enterprise. Not that it would matter of
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course; if the Enterprise did not get out of the immediate
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vicinity before the collision, that small distance between
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them and the targeted Borg ship would not count for much.
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They too would join him in the floating debris, as the
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collision would envelop them, tearing the Enterprise into so
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many tiny pieces.
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Time was running out.
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* * * * * * * *
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"We're running out of time." Riker said as he and Worf helped
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lead the blind Chief Engineer towards the turbo-lift.
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"Just get me to the bridge, and our problems will be solved."
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Geordi muttered, at a half-run and holding onto Worf's
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muscular arm.
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Within seconds they were back in the turbo-lift.
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"Bridge." Riker called out into the air, and the elevator
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began to rise. Both he and Worf held onto their phasers and
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aimed them at the door, ready.
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The instant the doors swished open, they darted out into the
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bridge, phasers aimed for any sign of a Borg.
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"Mr Worf, where are your soldiers." Riker asked, still in his
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crouching position, but this time looking up at the equally-
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puzzled Klingon.
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"I'm at a loss, Commander." Worf muttered, staring at the
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empty bridge.
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Not that empty, Riker thought as he spotted the crumpled form
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of Beverly Crusher on the other side of the bridge. But there
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were other things to attend to....
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Immediately he seated himself at the operations console, while
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Worf sat to his right.
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"Let's get the hell out of here."
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Geordi moved down the bridge ramp, feeling his way towards the
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three centre seats.
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On the view-screen, the two large Borg ships began to slide
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out of sight.
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"We're not going to make it, are we?" Geordi muttered; he
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couldn't see a damn thing, but he could still feel the
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sluggishness of the Enterprise.
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"No," Riker grimaced, "we're not."
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* * * * * * * *
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It was too late, and Data knew it. There were only seconds
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before impact, and the Enterprise had barely moved. Whatever
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had happened, Will Riker and Worf had failed. Though,
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technically-speaking, Data couldn't feel, he still felt a stab
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of... sadness? Intriguing, he thought, if not a little late.
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There was little time to analyse this new aspect of existence,
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but Data used the time he had left.
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That all ended as they collided....
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END OF PART SEVEN:
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Expect Part Eight, the conclusion, before Tuesday Night.
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Newsgroups: alt.startrek.creative
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Path: newserv.ksu.ksu.edu!moe.ksu.ksu.edu!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!darwin.sura.net!haven.umd.edu!uunet!psgrain!ee.und.ac.za!hippo!cc110.ru.ac.za!g92n3258
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From: g92n3258@giraffe.ru.ac.za (MR RL NICOL)
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Subject: I, LOCUTUS: EIGHT OF EIGHT - Assimilation Completed!
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Message-ID: <g92n3258.70.734014797@giraffe.ru.ac.za>
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Lines: 497
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Sender: news@hippo.ru.ac.za (Usenet News Admin)
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Organization: Rhodes University, Grahamstown, South Africa
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Date: Mon, 5 Apr 1993 13:00:10 GMT
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Well, here it is. That's right; the conclusion to "I,
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Locutus" (finally). Sorry it's taken so long, but better late
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than never. At any rate, enjoy it; comments, criticisms are
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welcome, including flames for not tying up lose ends, getting
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the characters wrong, not being proficient in the
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extraordinary art of technobabble, etc. But for now, I'm off
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on vacation......!!!!!
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All the beach... sorry, best (Vac is already getting to me)
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Ryan.
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I, LOCUTUS:
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PART EIGHT - The Conclusion:
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Jean-Luc Picard stared at the strange beings who surrounded
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him; half-biological, half-machine. Where in Hells name was
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he?
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The creatures that surrounded him seemed to sense something
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was amiss, for they moved closer in to him, restricting his
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movements. Still they continued to guide him down the narrow
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metal corridor, a rhythmic clanging at every foot-fall.
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Confused and bewildered, Picard moved along with them, not
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that he had any choice in the matter.
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The corridor came to a sudden dead end, forming a gang-plank
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of sorts, and the creatures before him parted to either side,
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allowing him to walk to the edge. Unsure, yet alert, Picard
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moved forward, and found himself facing an abyss. It seemed
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to stretch down by many miles, and up as well. Where he was
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and what he was looking at, he had no idea, but he could not
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shake the uneasy feeling he had every moment he stared at
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these strange beings by whom he had found himself surrounded
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and every time he looked across that abyss at the towering
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structures that seemed to surround him.
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"Jean-Luc Picard of the starship Enterprise." Many voices
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called out, ringing in unison.
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He hesitated, then answered those many voices: "I am Jean-Luc
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Picard."
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"A futile effort, to try and destroy that which is named
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Locutus." The many voices continued. "You shall now be
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assimilated into the whole; you will become one with the
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Borg."
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Picard froze. He did not know why, but every muscle in his
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body tightened at the mention of that name. An uneasy feeling
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settled over him, and he turned slightly to glance at one of
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the strange creatures that stood nearby... gaurding him?
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"Are you the... Borg?"
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The creature gave no answer. Instead it remained standing
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there, expressionless.
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"We are the Borg." The voices replied, and Picard felt an
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instinctual urge to run....
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* * * * * * * *
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No time. Riker watched as the Borg ship, carrying Data's
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consciousness rammed into the side of one of the other two
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Borg ships.
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There was only one thing left to do.
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"Head for that Borg ship!" He ordered, pointing to the other
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one, that was nearest to them.
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Worf reacted immediately; with not a moment's hesitation, he
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plotted the course that would put the other Borg ship between
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them and the explosion. The Enterprise lurched forward, and
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the nearest Borg ship sprung forward, as if closing in on the
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kill, then swung away again as the Enterprise angled around
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it.
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Goodbye Data, Riker thought as the brightness of the explosion
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illuminated the space for a second before the vaccuum
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diminished it. Large pieces of debris flashed past in the
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distance; pieces that would have proven fatal had it not been
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for the bulk of the remaining Borg ship protecting them in its
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shadow.
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Riker had almost relaxed when there was a sudden lurch that
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nearly threw him from his seat.
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"We've been hit!" He heard Geordi cry from behind him, unable
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to see what was happening around him.
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"Negative, Commander." Worf replied. "The Borg have caught us
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in their tractor beam."
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"This is not my lucky day." Geordi muttered. He couldn't see,
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couldn't react, and as a result couldn't do a thing to help.
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* * * * * * * *
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"Sir, the Borg have the Enterprise in their tractor beam!"
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Shelby turned to the Lieutenant before her. "Open fire on the
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Borg ship. Destroy that tractor beam. Ensign, try and raise
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Commander Riker."
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"Firing, Captain."
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Twin beams of energy lanced out from the underside of the USS
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Garrett, striking the point of origin of the tractor beam.
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"Tractor beam has been eliminated."
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"I can't seem to raise the Enterprise, sir." The ensign
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reported. "The Borg ship is giving out some kind of
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interference."
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Shelby continued to stare at her viewscreen. "Why the hell is
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the Enterprise still loitering around there? They don't want
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to be near there when that Borg ship goes. Ensign, keep
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trying to raise them."
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What in Heaven's name is Riker up to? She wondered.
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* * * * * * * *
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"Borg shields are partially down, Commander." Worf reported as
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he inspected his Security station. A Lieutenant and an ensign
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had replaced Riker and him at the ops and conn, and medics had
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removed Doctor Crusher and Geordi LaForge to the sickbay.
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"Partially? What do you mean?"
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"The USS Garrett has performed numerous serious blows to the
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Borg ship." Worf responded. "As a result, the Borg's shields
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have weakened. In essence, there are so-called holes in
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them."
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Riker digested this for a moment, then asked: "Is it possible
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to beam an Away Team through one of those so-called holes?"
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Worf was quiet for a moment. When he replied, his tone was
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one of calmness and admiration. "Yes, sir. It is possible."
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Riker nodded. "Inform three of your security officers to meet
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me in Transporter Room Four. You're in command, Mr Worf."
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Worf was momentarily stunned. "Commander, with all due
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respect, I believe I would be the most reasonable choice to
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lead the Away Team; considering your present condition and the
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fact that you are in command..."
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Riker didn't stop walking, but turned when in the elevator.
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"You have your orders, Mr Worf. Carry them out."
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The doors slid shut, but Riker took with him the look of a
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very annoyed Klingon Security Chief.
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* * * * * * * *
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"Captain, we're reading a drastic drop in the Borg's power!"
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Felmers called out from his station. "Both the explosion and
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our anti-matter charges seems to have done quite a bit of
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damage."
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"What is the status of the Borg's shields?" Shelby asked from
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the captain's chair.
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Felmers bent down to take another look at the readings before
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him. "Generally low from the explosion of those two Borg
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ships, and there are areas where there's no shielding at all."
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Shelby nodded, satisfied. "Fire phasers at those openings.
|
|
Let's hit them at the tender spots."
|
|
|
|
Staying near that Borg ship was your decision, Will. She
|
|
thought, not without a certain amount of regret.
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
As the shimmering from the transporter beam faded away, Riker
|
|
found himself staring straight into the face of a Borg
|
|
soldier. His first instinct was to fire his weapon, but he
|
|
stopped. That would just raise the alarm, and besides, this
|
|
Borg wasn't going anywhere. Sure enough, it was one of many
|
|
lined against the wall in its own individual compartment.
|
|
|
|
He turned to look at the three security gaurds that had
|
|
accompanied him. All looked alert, and just a little nervous.
|
|
Understandable considering the Borg track-record. All three
|
|
had their phasers out, but as ordered before transporting,
|
|
they had not fired when they found themselves in the midst of
|
|
the Borg collective.
|
|
|
|
Riker looked around, feeling that cold feeling that came over
|
|
one when returning to a place that filled your mind with
|
|
horrors. He had, after all, seen and felt enough horrors in
|
|
the last few days to last him a life-time. After a slight
|
|
pause, he looked down at the tricorder he held in his hand.
|
|
He still held onto the phaser in the other; he was damned if
|
|
they were going to get him again.
|
|
|
|
"I've got the co-ordinates for the captain's communicator;
|
|
we'll head in that direction."
|
|
|
|
Slowly, they moved forward through the maze of wires and metal
|
|
conduits. Looking at his surroundings, Riker could hardly
|
|
believe he had ever left the Borg ship with Data on it. They
|
|
were exactly the same, in every detail. They soon came to a
|
|
turn in the passage, as it opened up to what seemed like an
|
|
abyss. On the far side, Riker could make out countless levels
|
|
stretching upwards - and downwards - as far as the eye could
|
|
see. And on every level, he could make out thousands of Borg,
|
|
lining the wall in their own slots. Now they had a choice of
|
|
moving left or right on what seemed to be a metal gang-plank
|
|
that ran along the side of the "abyss". Once again, he
|
|
studied his tricorder, then motioned for the security detail
|
|
to follow him as he turned left.
|
|
|
|
As he moved down the gang-plank, he couldn't help but look to
|
|
his right, where the world seemed to fall away, into a
|
|
bottomless, artificial pit. Though he couldn't locate the
|
|
source, he felt a distinct throbbing, as if they were near
|
|
some great power source. No Borg, except for those in their
|
|
slots along the wall - puppets without a master - were
|
|
visible. They were getting close now.
|
|
|
|
Then the whole world seemed to collapse around them.
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
"Get me the USS Garrett!" Worf roared from the captain's
|
|
chair. "They're firing right on Commander Riker's position!"
|
|
|
|
"I'm sorry, sir." The Lieutenant at the security station
|
|
replied, a small amount of panic clearly evident in his voice.
|
|
"All transmissions are being blocked by the Borg."
|
|
|
|
"The Borg ship is beginning to break apart, sir!" The ensign
|
|
at the ops console cried out.
|
|
|
|
"Maintain our position." Worf answered. "And keep the shields
|
|
down, so we can beam the Away Team back as soon as it is
|
|
necessary."
|
|
|
|
It was risky, he knew. It meant that they were vulnerable to
|
|
attack from both the Borg ship and the results of its
|
|
destruction. But it was the only honorable thing he could do.
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
The artificial world that surrounded him shook, throwing him
|
|
from his feet, towards that great abyss that stretched out
|
|
near him. Riker held on to the railing, feeling himself slide
|
|
over it as the Borg ship underwent another convulsion. He
|
|
gripped the cold metal bar tightly, his feet feeling the empty
|
|
air that stretched for miles below him. One of the security
|
|
gaurds mananged to clamber to help him back over the railing,
|
|
to the "safety" of the gang-plank. Riker managed to mutter a
|
|
thanks just as an explosion rattled the ship. Riker fell
|
|
against one of the Borg soldiers alongside the wall and
|
|
managed to roll out of the way as the soldier responded to the
|
|
"attack" with a swipe at the starfleet officer with its
|
|
mechanical appendage.
|
|
|
|
"Let's keep moving!" He yelled to the security officers,
|
|
noting their rather stunned expressions. Slowly, with a tight
|
|
grip on the railing, he moved on, pausing to hold on for dear
|
|
life every time the Borg ship shook from an attack.
|
|
|
|
The co-ordinates of Picard's communicator were nearby and
|
|
moving, which meant that it hadn't been abandoned like the
|
|
first time they had tried to retrieve the captain from the
|
|
Borg.
|
|
|
|
Riker just hoped they could find Picard, or Locutus, before
|
|
the ship destroyed itself.
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
"How are our energy reserves doing?" Shelby asked.
|
|
|
|
The ensign in front of her looked up from his station
|
|
momentarily. "We won't be able to hold on much longer,
|
|
Commander. I'd say we have seven minutes until our shields
|
|
collapse."
|
|
|
|
They'd lasted longer than any other Starfleet vessel had any
|
|
rights to last already, Shelby mused. The USS Garrett was
|
|
good when it came to fighting the Borg.... But not
|
|
invincible.
|
|
|
|
Felmers looked up from his sensor readings. "Captain, if we
|
|
released our anti-matter container with a twelve-seconds time
|
|
delay, the Borg ship should be finished."
|
|
|
|
Shelby took this all in, but never took her eyes from the
|
|
Enterprise. What was Will doing? Unless he had an Away Team
|
|
on the Borg vessel....
|
|
|
|
"Ready the anti-matter container, Lieutenant." She ordered.
|
|
"But hold release it on my order."
|
|
|
|
She would give him five minutes to get out of there. But no
|
|
more. After that....
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
They had begun to move away from the gang-plank on the edge of
|
|
that metallic precipice, making their way into what seemed
|
|
like the heart of the Borg ship. The co-ordinates for
|
|
Picard's communicator had stopped moving, which either meant
|
|
that the carrier of the communicator was standing still, or it
|
|
had been dropped. As he moved through the silhouete of the
|
|
Borg ship, Riker hoped it was not the latter. If the
|
|
communicator had been parted from Picard, then there was
|
|
little hope of ever re-capturing the Captain.
|
|
|
|
The passage-way had come to a sudden end, opening up into a
|
|
large, cavernous area. Riker slowed his pace down, and
|
|
signalled the gaurds to do like-wise. As he moved cautiously
|
|
forward, he tried to look through the dimness that seemed to
|
|
have settled around them. The explosions had stopped for the
|
|
moment, though every now and then the floor shook, less
|
|
violently than before.
|
|
|
|
And then he made out the form of the Borg soldier, standing
|
|
over a gaunt-looking individual, who was lying on a table - a
|
|
table not so unlike the one he had been lying on when....
|
|
|
|
Sensing their presence, the Borg looked up, its mechanised arm
|
|
hovering over Picard's face. Riker needed to further
|
|
encouragement. He had a strange sense of satisfaction as the
|
|
beam from his phaser engulfed the Borg soldier, felling it
|
|
instantly.
|
|
|
|
There were others all around him, but he didn't care. The
|
|
three security gaurds were already firing their phasers,
|
|
dispersing those Borg soldiers that had come to aid their
|
|
fallen co-worker, while Riker hurried to help his captain from
|
|
the metal bed to which he had been secured. The three
|
|
security gaurds continued firing, changing the frequencies on
|
|
their phasers as fast as the Borg could adapt to them, and
|
|
moved inwards towards Picard in an ever-tightening circle.
|
|
|
|
"Enterprise, this is Riker. Emergency beam up!"
|
|
|
|
O'Brien's voice filtered through Riker's badge: "I'm sorry,
|
|
Commander. But you're in an area of the Borg vessel where
|
|
their shields are still up. You'll have to move...."
|
|
|
|
The phaser whine surrounded him, distorting the voice of the
|
|
Transporter Chief. Riker had to shout to be sure he was
|
|
heard. "There's no way I can do that, Enterprise!"
|
|
|
|
The deathly-white faces moved closer.
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
"Release anti-matter container."
|
|
|
|
"Anti-matter container released. Twelve seconds till
|
|
detination."
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
"You can't get us back, Worf! Get the hell out of here!"
|
|
Riker shouted, as he held onto Picard's limp form. He tried
|
|
to lift his phaser; give the Borg a going-away present.
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
"Seven... six..."
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
"I said get the hell out of here!"
|
|
|
|
The Borg moved forward.
|
|
|
|
"Enterprise...!" Futile.
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
"Three... two..."
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
The Enterprise shot away from the Borg ship, near the speed of
|
|
light. There was a moment of stillness, then...
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
"Zero."
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
Space lit up for an instant as the anti-matter was released,
|
|
reacting instantly with the matter that surrounded it. The
|
|
already-battered Borg ship burst, spewing debris for miles
|
|
around, forming what seemed like a large cloud in the area of
|
|
space it once occupied.
|
|
|
|
"That's our job done." Shelby sighed.
|
|
|
|
But it's not over, she thought. Do you hear me, Ranklin?
|
|
It's not over yet.
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
Data looked down at the frail-looking woman he had once known.
|
|
He was easy to mend; it had taken the USS Garrett's engineers
|
|
the three weeks it took for them to limp back to Earth to put
|
|
him together again, restoring his "mind", that had inhabited
|
|
the ship's computer, back to his newly re-fitted body.
|
|
|
|
But humans weren't that easy to put together again.
|
|
|
|
"Ard'rian." He said, quietly. She still did not move; just
|
|
lay there, curled up in a foetal position, facing away from
|
|
him. "It is me, Data."
|
|
|
|
"Go away." The voice was barely a whisper; almost a sob. The
|
|
pale, shaved head moved slightly, turning towards the pillow.
|
|
|
|
"Go away," It repeated. There was a slight hesitation. Then
|
|
one word was added, "...machine."
|
|
|
|
Data continued to look down at her crumpled form for a while.
|
|
Then he turned, and left.
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
Riker walked into the Enterprise's sickbay. He was whole
|
|
again, thanks to the aid of both ship's doctors. It had been
|
|
a close call, when the transporter had yanked them out of the
|
|
Borg ship, just when the shields failed and the it was about
|
|
to explode. It had been split-second timing that he would
|
|
make sure would earn O'Brien a commendation.
|
|
|
|
He had seen Geordi out of sickbay two weeks ago, when his
|
|
visor had been fixed. The Chief Engineer had not been too
|
|
happy about being blind for a whole week, but now with his
|
|
sight back, he was already working to restore the Enterprise
|
|
back to its prime condition. After all, the Borg had done
|
|
more than enough tampering to the ship to keep Geordi busy for
|
|
the coming months that they would be in orbit around Earth,
|
|
helping to normalise the situation there.
|
|
|
|
He smiled a hello at Beverly Crusher, who had just left her
|
|
office. The memory of his first meeting with her after the
|
|
encounter came back. She had greeted him, and taken a long
|
|
look at his beard, as if she had never seen it before. To
|
|
her, of course, she hadn't. Riker knew she had a lot of work
|
|
ahead of her, so recapturing old memories via ship records and
|
|
personal logs would have to wait till later. Still, she had
|
|
found plenty of time to ask him questions about Wesley, and
|
|
how he had grown up into a responsible officer. Riker found
|
|
himself enjoying the talk, especially when it came to telling
|
|
her about Odan and how the trill had inhabited his own body
|
|
for a period of time.
|
|
|
|
But in all that time, Jean-Luc Picard had not come out of the
|
|
coma that the Borg had placed him in, and Will had regularly
|
|
stood next to the bed in sickbay on which the captain had been
|
|
placed, watching him. He had once thought he would never
|
|
understand how Picard had felt, at the hands of the Borg. But
|
|
now he did; and it hurt.
|
|
|
|
"Captain," He smiled as he approached the bed, "the good
|
|
doctor was kind enough to tell me you were finally awake."
|
|
|
|
Picard stared up at him, looking a little dazed.
|
|
|
|
"It's William Riker." Riker said, trying not to show the pain
|
|
he felt at having to remind this person - who he had worked
|
|
next to for so many years - of his name.
|
|
|
|
Picard nodded slowly, but his eyes retained the haunted look
|
|
that had been in them since he had come out of the coma.
|
|
|
|
"I... remember you."
|
|
|
|
Riker merely smiled.
|
|
|
|
Picard was quiet for a moment. When he spoke, his voice
|
|
carried a hint of awareness, of something deeper than
|
|
previously known. "You're.... Number One?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes," Riker nodded, slowly. The smile broadened for that one
|
|
moment. "I'm your Number One."
|
|
|
|
THE END.
|
|
|
|
|