911 lines
47 KiB
Plaintext
911 lines
47 KiB
Plaintext
Path: moe.ksu.ksu.edu!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!uwm.edu!spool.mu.edu!whscdp.whs.edu!stdnt163
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From: stdnt163@whscdp.whs.edu
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Newsgroups: alt.startrek.creative
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Subject: Star Trek Voyages #1 "Best-seller"
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Message-ID: <1992May21.102340.460@whscdp.whs.edu>
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Date: 21 May 92 16:23:40 GMT
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Article-I.D.: whscdp.1992May21.102340.460
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Organization: Washington HS, Milwaukee, WI
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Lines: 899
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Here is the "pilot episode" for the fan fiction series "Star Trek Voyages,"
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created by myself and Mark Krawczyk. The series has 23 episodes so far, and
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hundreds more planned. This episode has already been posted to r.a.s.m, and
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there was very little response. So now it is here. We intended it to be a fan
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series. Any suggestions or stories ideas you have will be seriously considered.
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Unlike The Powers That Be at Paramount, this series will reflect every
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reasonable comment or suggestion made by Trek fans. This is, in a way, OUR
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series. Please e-mail or post any comments or suggestions you wish.
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Thank you for your attention.
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James Queen.
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Star Trek Voyages #1.
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________________________________________________________________________________
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Captain's Log, Stardate 5006.8
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The Valiant is prepared to leave Starbase 23, after receiving
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a few crew replacements. I must note, with pride, that Commander
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Mark Krawczyk, whose efficiency report is in my hand, is among the
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new officers.
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Our next exploration assignment will be on the edge of "The
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Zone", the uncharted area of Federation treaty space.
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Federation Starship USS Valiant, NCC-1724, cleared its
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moorings and thrusted away from Starbase 23. The ship turned
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toward its destination, "The Zone."
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In his quarters, Captain Benjamin Hackley switched off the
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computer log and laid down on his bed. He usually relaxed in his
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cabin, just to be sure he was calm and collected, before returning
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to the stressful situations a Captain's rank brought on. He knew
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that, eventually, relaxing wouldn't help. For after 23 years,
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space exploration was beginning to damage his nerves. He had had
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enough of it, and now he was simply waiting for the last two years
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of this mission to end, so he could accept his promotion to Admiral
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and rest behind a desk. He could just transfer now, but that
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wasn't like Ben Hackley. He would finish the job he had started.
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He had been offered four desk jobs already, along with
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promotions, but had turned them all down. He wanted to be the
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Captain who had run more exploration missions than people believed
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were endurable. So here he was, on his fifth 5-year mission.
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More than he could endure.
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He had read the records of James T. Kirk's historical 5-year
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missions, over and over again. He envied Kirk's youth. He wished
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he could react and fight and decide and plan as fast as Kirk could.
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He used to be able to, but that was back when he was working on his
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second mission. When the 5 years were over, Hackley returned to
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Earth, but his ship didn't. It was left as a derelict, and a
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transport had brought the crew home.
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Of course, that didn't happen to Kirk's crew. The Enterprise
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had returned, in one piece. The mission had hurt the ship, though.
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It returned charred, scored, scraped, and holed. More so than
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after its first 5-year mission. More dangers had arisen this time,
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and, therefore, more rewards were given to the crew who had
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returned. They were heralded again, with more celebrations for
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performing a "miraculous" feat twice. There were enough cheers
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when it returned from the first 5-year mission, the only ship of
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its class remaining.
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It had done it again, but this time, other Constitution-class
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vessels remained. Newer ones, like this second USS Valiant, built
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to replace the one lost in the Eminiar system sixty-five years ago,
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shot down by a computerized war between two of its planets, its
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crew forced into disintegration chambers when they were hit and
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considered "dead." Kirk had solved that problem, too, and brought
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peace to the worlds.
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New as it was, the Valiant still hadn't seen a complete
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overhaul in two years, and it showed. Hackley had pleaded for one
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at Starbase 23, but Commodore Holsten had wanted the ship into "The
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Zone" as soon as possible. Hackley had left Holsten's office in
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disgust, and fear. The Valiant had seen a lot of action. It had
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been jury-rigged enough, and got weaker by the month.
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Hackley didn't want his ship falling apart around him.
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He had relaxed too long. He shook himself back to the present
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and sat up. His eyes moved to the personnel record lying on his
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shelf. The bold print at the top read: Krawczyk, Mark Taylor.
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The service record was astounding. Mark's cadet cruise had
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been aboard a ship-of-the-line. His first and second tours placed
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him in the merchant marines. His third assigned him to Starbase
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duty. His fourth tour took him to a smaller exploration vessel,
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where he earned the much-talked-about perfect report. The record
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indicated a 120% efficiency, something that had only occurred three
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other times in Starfleet's history, and done by Vulcans. From
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Constitution-class ships, down to merchant marine tours with bad
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efficiency ratings, and up again to exploration and a perfect
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rating, Mark had seen the highest and lowest groups in Starfleet.
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Hackley wondered how Mark had pulled it off. He stood and
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donned his uniform. He walked out of his cabin, looking forward to
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his first meeting with Commander Krawczyk.
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"Best-seller"
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Written by James Queen.
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"Mark!"
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James Queen was standing on the Valiant's hangar deck,
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greeting the last group of new officers, when he saw Mark Krawczyk.
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Jim wore a standard, light blue Starfleet uniform that nearly
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matched his eyes. His brown hair was smoothly styled. On his
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sleeve were the gold stripes identifying him as a Commander. On
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his face he wore a shocked expression.
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Mark was dressed the same way, but his expression was content
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and just a little impatient. His eyes were better matched to his
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light brown hair.
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It was the impatience Mark showed that made Jim realize he
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still had a job to do. He immediately snapped to attention.
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Mark stepped forward. "Permission to come aboard, sir?"
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Jim stared straight ahead and saluted. "Permission granted,
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sir. Welcome aboard, Commander."
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Mark stepped off the shuttlecraft and headed toward the
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forward turbolift. Jim watched him leave.
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Neither of them expected to be on the same ship at the same
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time. Their next meeting was planned to be three months later,
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during shore leave. Jim was tempted to laugh as hard as he could,
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but he kept his composure. After all, he was a senior officer,
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setting a good example for the new crewmembers.
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New crewmembers?
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He'd forgotten again. He turned back to the puzzled face of
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a new recruit, waiting for permission.
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"Oh, uh, yes, welcome aboard."
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The recruit stepped down, relieved. When the shuttle was
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clear and the hangar bay was to be emptied, Jim went to the
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turbolift. When all personnel had left, the hangar doors opened,
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and the shuttle drifted out.
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Jim ordered the turbolift to go to the bridge. He felt the
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elevator slide towards the top of the ship. The noise from the
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engines increased as he entered the saucer section, telling him
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that the Valiant had just activated the warp engines. Usually, the
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sound was low enough not to be noticed, but when the ship went to
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warp speed, it was heard everywhere.
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When the turbo's doors finally opened, Jim was not surprised
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to find that the Captain was not on the bridge, nor was Mark. He
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walked over to the engineering panel and checked the outer hull
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stress display. Sure that the ship was handling perfectly, Jim
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walked back to the turbolift. His first thought was to report to
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the Captain, who should be talking to Mark now. He decided instead
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to go to Mark's quarters and wait for him.
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Leaning against the wall, Jim jumped when the doors to Mark's
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cabin opened. Mark walked out, and nearly ran Jim over. He looked
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at Jim brightly.
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"Hello, there!"
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Jim just stared. "Why aren't you reporting in to the Captain?"
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Mark grinned. "Well, he won't mind a few hours, will he?
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We're still three days from The Zone. I've got plenty of time!
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Besides, I've got better things to do."
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Suddenly, Jim understood. "Mark, just because you've got a
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one-twenty rating doesn't mean Starfleet will bow down and kiss
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your feet." He'd read about the Vulcans who'd earned one-twentys.
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One had had this same problem, believing he had extra privileges.
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One wasn't affected, and the third had nearly gone insane trying to
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do it again.
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Now Mark was shocked. "Who said anything about bowing? I'm
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just asking for a few hours." He turned toward the footsteps he
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heard.
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Captain Hackley was walking toward them, probably wanting to
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meet Mark in Mark's own quarters. That meant the Captain had liked
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what he'd heard about Mark. Jim was sorry it wouldn't last. He
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gave Mark a sneer.
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"Explain it to him."
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"Oh, really?"
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The Captain paced Mark's quarters. Mark stood patiently at
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attention. He'd certainly been through this before. He waited for
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the lesson the Captain prepared to teach. Hackley looked at Mark
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again, and the lesson began.
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"Commander, that one-twenty rating of yours means that you are
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more than qualified to be my chief science officer and that I can
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expect you to do a good job. It does not mean that you can bend
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regulations and rest as you please. Understood?"
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Calmly, Mark gave the routine reply. "Yes, sir."
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Hackley was sorely disappointed. He had expected a nicely
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done report from a fine officer. He didn't want a stuck up hotshot
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instead. It was a bad first impression, but then, Krawczyk had
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only been aboard for a few minutes, and had plenty of time to shape
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up.
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Considering this, Hackley's expression brightened. He smiled.
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"Good, now," he walked up to Mark and offered his hand, "It's a
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pleasure to meet you, Commander."
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On the recreation deck, Mark, Jim, and two other officers sat
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at a reserved table.
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"Mark," Jim began as he pulled out a chair, "I'd like you to
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meet Lieutenant Peter Ledolison, Chief of Communications, and
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Lieutenant Commander John K. Millis, Chief Helmsman. Gentlemen,
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this is Commander Mark Krawczyk, our new Science Officer."
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Everyone shook hands and exchanged greetings, then took their
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seats.
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Jim started, "Mark is the one with the -"
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"One-twenty," the two officers said in harmony. Peter
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continued, displaying a very slight British accent, "It's not easy
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to miss hearing about a perfect efficiency report."
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"It's not easy getting a perfect report, either," Mark added,
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then began eating the meal he had just ordered.
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"Are you worried that people will demand too much of you now?"
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Peter asked.
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Mark looked up, seeing Peter's brown hair and blue eyes, and
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noticing the similarity between Lieutenant Ledolison and Jim. "If
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they do, so what. I can handle anything they dish out."
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Jim groaned. Peter and John looked at each other nervously.
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Jim wondered how they were taking this. Peter might respect Mark
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for wanting to follow orders, but scorn on his unorthodox methods
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of doing so.
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John, an African-American native of California, believed
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Starfleet should be fighting Klingons and not itself, so he may
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also see following orders as good, but wonder about Mark's
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attitude.
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Jim, well, he just couldn't make up his mind yet.
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"In fact," Mark continued, chomping on part of his salad,
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"I'll probably get another perfect rating. It'll be easier the
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second time around."
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They were all silent. Mark kept eating.
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"Well," John finally began, "we should be approaching The Zone
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any minute, now. I suppose we should be on the bridge."
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Jim watched them leave, hoping they didn't look too eager to
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get away and discuss things about Mark. If they did look eager,
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Mark didn't notice.
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Jim realized he should be at his station, too. He stood and
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pushed the chair in, then looked at Mark. "I'll be in
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Engineering."
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Mark nodded and waved him off, finishing his drink. When Jim
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was gone, Mark set his tray near the food slot and strolled towards
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the turbolift.
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The Valiant approached the invisible border of The Zone. The
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hull was covered with replacement plates and makeshift repairs.
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The lack of an overhaul made the vessel seem like a building no one
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had lived in for years. The ship looked old and worn out.
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The empty space in front of it, however, was just the
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opposite. It was home to the people in it. To the Federation, it
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was just unclaimed territory. There was no radiation save what
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emanated from the stars. No debris floated about. No man-made
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constructs marred the view.
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It was this view that Captain Hackley had been watching for
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several minutes. He buried it in his memory and savored it. Once
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he was behind an Admiral's desk, he wouldn't see anything like it
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again.
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He took his eyes off of the viewscreen and looked around the
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bridge. All of the officers were at their stations, including
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Mark, he noticed. Good. He felt better. Now he had to see how
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Krawczyk performed his science duties.
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"Unidentified vessel at three-one-six mark eight-two," Mark
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reported.
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Hackley walked up to the Science station. There's a good
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start, he thought. "Life forms?" he asked.
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Mark stared into his scanner. "Computer reads one-hundred
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sixteen, sir."
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Hackley looked back at the viewer. "On screen."
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The vessel appeared on the screen, and caught Hackley
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completely by surprise.
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He was looking at an old Earth, sixteenth century wooden
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sailing vessel, in space.
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"That's impossible." This came from Ron Pelten, the navigator
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sitting in front of the Captain. Hackley looked at him, then
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looked back up. He could hardly disagree. Space was much too cold
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for humanoid life to survive in a wooden vessel. Oxygen leaks and
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depressurization were also highly probable. From the looks of it,
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the ship carrying over one-hundred life forms looked like it could
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sustain nothing but space itself.
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"No it isn't," Mark said from his scanner. "It's not wood,
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but a common tritanium hull painted to look like wood."
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"Interesting," remarked Lieutenant Ledolison.
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"Yellow alert, sir?" offered John Millis, his hands on the
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weapons standby controls. Unidentified or not, John was not going
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to let some crazy aliens in a disguised ship get the jump on him.
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The Federation was strong enough to hold down any invaders, and he
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would prove it.
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But, looking at Captain Hackley's glare on him, he decided he
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wouldn't prove it right now.
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"That's not necessary, Helmsman," Hackley warned. "Mr.
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Ledolison, open a hailing frequency, send all standard hello
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messages."
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"Aye, sir." Peter turned to his control panel.
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Mark spoke up, "Captain, I read no coolant pipes, engines,
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weapons, or electronics, other than their artificial gravity plates
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and life support." Mark sounded puzzled. He continued to observe
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the vessel while calling up memory files from the ship's computer
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on old Earth naval vessels.
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Hackley looked back at the ship, if he could truly call it
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that. It had no propulsion or controls. It was essentially a
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metal hulk, carrying life forms, shaped like a sailing vessel.
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"Then it can't receive our hails," he decided, "Cut off messages."
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Peter cut the signals, then studied the vessel again,
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infinitely fascinated.
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"Mr. Pelten," Hackley called to his first officer, "would you
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like to try an exploration team?"
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Pelten got out of the navigation seat. "Yes, sir. Mr.
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Krawczyk, Mr. Ledolison." He called to Engineering as they headed
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toward the turbolift. "Mr. Queen, we have a technological puzzle
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I'm sure you'd be interested in."
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Jim's voice came over the bridge speakers. "I've been
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listening. I'll meet you in Transporter room Three."
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The gold, shimmering transporter beam deposited the four
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crewmen on a wooden floor. They immediately expected cold air to
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engulf them, but life support kept them rather warm. The hundred
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and sixteen people that were supposed to be living here were
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nowhere to be seen.
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"Stay together. Phasers on stun," Ron ordered.
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They all turned the knob on their weapons, then moved down the
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corridor. A quiet whining came from Mark's tricorder.
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"Most of the life forms are gathered in a hall one deck down,
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to the aft, " he reported. The other party members didn't need to
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be told. There was a considerable amount of noise coming from that
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general direction.
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They entered what appeared to be a storage room. Their eyes
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widened as they noticed swords and knives hanging around the room,
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and a pile of what appeared to be... cannonballs?... in one corner.
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"How are we supposed to get down?" Jim asked, "I don't imagine
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they have turbolifts."
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"How's this?" Ledolison called. He referred to a staircase he
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had found behind a hinged door.
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The four looked down into the darkness. They were getting
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light in here from torches mounted on the walls. The stairs looked
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rickety and the officers didn't quite trust them as they stepped
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down. Their skepticism was misplaced; the stairs were the same
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solid alloy that had covered the room they were now leaving.
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According to the tricorder, the group was now amidships, on
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the third level. The noise was much louder now, coming from a
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corridor running aft to their right. They were nearly halfway to
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the aft section when the hall came to an end. Lanterns lined the
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corridor on both walls. A large red carpet on the floor made the
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hallway seem to greet someone of royalty.
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The hinged door in front of them was lined in gold. The party
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found no other doors on the walls. After searching, they were left
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speculating about the first door.
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"You think all this noise is coming from behind here?" Ron
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asked.
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"Can't be," Mark replied, "It's coming from a hall all the way
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to the rear of the ship."
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"Maybe it's a very big hall," Jim suggested.
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"Maybe it's the Captain's quarters," Peter offered.
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The other three looked at him, then looked back at the door.
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That made sense. A grand hallway leading to a gold-lined door.
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They all mentally slapped themselves for not figuring it out first,
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but wouldn't tell the others that they did.
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"Okay," Ron finally said, "Either side, Phasers ready." He
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pointed to either wall. Mark and Jim got against the walls, Peter
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stood ready behind Ron.
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Ron jerked the door open, and waited.
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Nothing happened.
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Everyone let out a breath of relief, then looked embarrassed
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that they had been holding one in the first place.
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They crept into the room, made sure no one was around, put
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their Phasers away and started examining the room. No one was a
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bit surprised by what they saw. They had all read Moby Dick and
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Treasure Island. This was common for a captain's room. Trinkets,
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medals, and displays were scattered on various shelves. No doors
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other than the one they came in were visible. They noticed this
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and realized this was not the way to the life forms.
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A desk in the center of the room, with a rather uncomfortable
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looking chair behind it, held inkwells, various papers, a few more
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trinkets, feather pens, a timepiece, and a book.
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A rather large book, opened nearly to the end. While the
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others studied the treasures and artifacts, Peter stood over the
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desk and read a few passages from the book:
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The Captain stood over his men and raised his chalice in a
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toast.
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"Ahoy maties! Today we be celebrating the final vanquishin'
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of our enemies, da Horidins!"
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Cheers erupted all over the great hall. The men sang songs,
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and feasted on the plunder of their last raid. They were doing
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this forty minutes later, when a buzzing noise disrupted them.
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They ignored it, and continued eating. Ten minutes later, the
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Captain screamed.
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The pirates dropped their food, and stared at the Captain.
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"The King has called to me again!" the Captain called out, "We
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have been invaded!"
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All of the men dropped their food, grabbed their swords, and
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stormed out of the room.
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Peter was becoming very interested. He turned the page. He
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turned another. He turned more.
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They were blank.
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Peter looked around. The rest of the team was still studying
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the objects on the shelves. While concentrating on them, and Peter
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on the book, they had failed to notice that the noise had ceased,
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and a rustling was now heard to the starboard.
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"Guys, listen!" he yelled.
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They all looked at each other, then listened. The noise was
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now coming from the hallway. They drew their Phasers and ran to
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the door. Ron looked into the hallway...
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and ducked.
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A sword flew through the air where his neck would've been.
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Another blade flew through the air and missed Ron.
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It hit Peter in the side.
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Peter gasped and fell to the floor. Mark had aimed his Phaser
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and pushed Ron out of the way. while Jim activated his
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wrist-communicator.
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"Valiant, emergency beam-out! Now!"
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Mark fired. As the closest four people fell, stunned, the
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golden wave of the transporter pulled the team away from the
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attackers.
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"He'll be fine," Brian Halmen assured.
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Captain Hackley stood over Ledolison as the diagnostic bed
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completed it's scan. He looked at Doctor Halmen, who finished
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applying some synthetic skin to the wound. Halmen turned to
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Hackley, and spoke with a mild Italian accent.
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"Don't give him any exercise for awhile, Ben."
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Hackley nodded, and his Italian friend walked away, toward his
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office. After a minute, Peter opened his eyes.
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"Where am I?"
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"You're in sickbay, on the Valiant." Hackley raised his hand
|
|
to Peter's arm and comforted him. Hackley was only sub-consciously
|
|
looking at Peter. He was remembering standing over three other
|
|
young officers, at three different times, on three different
|
|
starships. They were all Lieutenants, new to exploration. All
|
|
three had the same look in their eyes when they'd come aboard, the
|
|
excitement and want for adventure, the eagerness to see the
|
|
unknown.
|
|
All three had been wounded one or two years later, and all
|
|
three had been laying on beds like Peter. The look was gone from
|
|
their eyes, replaced by an expression of shock and terror. The
|
|
realization of the dangers the unknown offered and how their lives
|
|
could be taken at any given time, had wrecked havoc with their
|
|
minds. Two of the officers had transferred planetside when they
|
|
had recovered enough. The third died.
|
|
Hackley looked into Peter's eyes and searched for the
|
|
realization.
|
|
Peter's eyes looked back at him. They showed no fear. They
|
|
showed a new understanding, but they had not lost the look for
|
|
adventure in the unknown.
|
|
Hackley was surprised, and relieved.
|
|
Peter spoke up. "Permission to speak freely, sir?"
|
|
"Granted."
|
|
"Damn, that was interesting!
|
|
"Good enough, mister." Hackley couldn't bring himself to
|
|
discipline him for his language. He simply smiled. "Briefing in
|
|
five minutes," he ordered.
|
|
"Yes, sir," Peter replied, now attentive and controlled.
|
|
|
|
"It's a pirate ship," Hackley echoed.
|
|
The three other officers at the table nodded.
|
|
"That's what we decided," Ron said.
|
|
Hackley nodded. "Jim, you're analysis?"
|
|
Jim looked at his data pad. "Tritanium hull, adequate life
|
|
support, but you knew that. All I can add is that it has the same
|
|
thing on the inside."
|
|
Hackley frowned. "Mr. Krawczyk?"
|
|
"I don't quite know what to call it. It can't be called a
|
|
ship, despite its shape and purpose. I'd call it a space station,
|
|
except that it doesn't have sufficient equipment. There's no name
|
|
for it, sir, but a sailing ship modified to float in space.
|
|
Ron jumped in. "There were no navigation charts inside,
|
|
either, sir. Except for a form of...treasure map. They certainly
|
|
weren't going anywhere. Perhaps they were meant to float."
|
|
Hackley considered this. The briefing room was quiet when
|
|
Ledolison walked in, a cast bound around his waist.
|
|
"Your analysis of the vessel, Mr. Ledolison?" Hackley asked.
|
|
"It's a pirate ship." Peter replied as he sat down.
|
|
The other officers grinned. Hackley still looked concerned.
|
|
"What did you all find inside?"
|
|
"Trinkets," Ron began.
|
|
"Cute gold medals, " Jim offered.
|
|
"Pirates," Mark said.
|
|
"A very interesting book," Peter said, catching everyone's
|
|
attention "A book that told what was happening on the ship."
|
|
|
|
In the Transporter room, the officers crossed their fingers as
|
|
something shimmered into existence on the Transporter pad.
|
|
The book had been beamed over. The officers didn't celebrate,
|
|
they just ran to the book and opened it.
|
|
"It ended here," Peter pointed. The area that was blank
|
|
before had been filled in. Confused, the officers read:
|
|
|
|
"The King has agreed to let us invade," the Captain cheered.
|
|
The pirates growled and raised their swords.
|
|
Then, with the King's power around them, the pirates vanished.
|
|
The King's whirlwind would transport them to the invaders' ship.
|
|
Then the spacemen would bow to them!
|
|
|
|
The officers looked at each other, then looked around the room
|
|
for the attack that the book warned would happen.
|
|
|
|
Captain's log, Stardate 5015.3.
|
|
After being attacked by a group of pirates, our landing team
|
|
has escaped a wooden sailing vessel, drifting in front of us. We
|
|
have beamed over a strange book from the ship, which tells us that
|
|
the pirates are planning to attack at any time.
|
|
|
|
"We have unwillingly become a part of someone else's little
|
|
fantasy, Admiral," Captain Hackley reported to the person on the
|
|
viewscreen. Admiral Jerry Regiffe wasn't surprised by what the
|
|
Valiant had run across. In fact, Hackley thought he saw a bored
|
|
and impatient look on Regiffe's face when it first appeared on the
|
|
screen. He thought he heard the Admiral thinking, what has that
|
|
ship gotten into now?
|
|
"I have no suggestions, Captain," Regiffe replied. "This
|
|
can't be called interference, since you didn't do anything, and
|
|
since these 'pirates' can't be considered a race."
|
|
"If you're referring to the pirates being part of the strange
|
|
book, sir," Hackley said, "we still haven't proven that the book
|
|
has anything to do with them. It's a pirate ship, the captain may
|
|
be writing a book about pirates."
|
|
"Then you'll have to get more information," Regiffe ordered,
|
|
"Until then, you're going to have to wait it out. Regiffe out."
|
|
The viewscreen showed space again.
|
|
Hackley frowned for a moment, then turned to Mark, up at the
|
|
science station.
|
|
"Mark, where are the pirates now?"
|
|
The sensor screen threw a blue glow on Mark's face. Then it
|
|
disappeared and Mark hit a few toggles. "They're crowded back in
|
|
the main hall again, sir."
|
|
Hackley frowned again. Damn, he wanted them to attack. If
|
|
something was going to happen, it should happen now, while the crew
|
|
was fairly expectant. If the pirates waited too long, the crew
|
|
would relax, and be caught off guard when the attack began.
|
|
He walked down to his command chair and pushed an intercom
|
|
button. "Transporter room, Jim, Peter, how you doin'?"
|
|
Peter's voice came back over the speaker. "Nothing yet, sir.
|
|
It still says 'the space men would bow to them.'"
|
|
"Thank you, Lieutenant. Keep us informed." Hackley hit the
|
|
intercom again. "Commander Millis, report to the bridge."
|
|
"Captain!" Mark yelled.
|
|
Hackley spun, "What?"
|
|
The scanner was beeping again. "They're gone. There are no
|
|
pirates left on the ship."
|
|
"Captain!" Jim's own voice buzzed, "This is the transporter
|
|
room. The book is changing."
|
|
"Sir," it was the communications officer replacing Peter this
|
|
time, "Security reports men in old Earth attire have materialized
|
|
in some corridors on Deck 5. Deck 6 reports pirates, and Deck 19
|
|
says intruders have appeared in the hanger bay."
|
|
Hackley was moving towards the science station. "Send full
|
|
security forces to all three decks, have phasers set for stun."
|
|
Mark displayed the areas occupied by the pirates on his
|
|
science monitor. Hackley hit the intercom again. "Security,
|
|
report to decks 4 and 7 to keep the intruders isolated."
|
|
Security began warning all personnel away from the occupied
|
|
areas, while Engineering sealed off certain occupied corridors.
|
|
Hackley studied the schematic and called to Pelten.
|
|
"Commander, sound Red Alert."
|
|
|
|
While staring in wonder at the metal doors that slid open to
|
|
get out of their way, the pirates moved toward a stairwell on Deck
|
|
5. Security arrived, and six men fell, stunned. The remaining
|
|
pirate slashed one guard, and charged down the stairwell, scared
|
|
beyond reasoning.
|
|
As a guard approached, the pirate noticed the shiny metal
|
|
thing that used bright light to knock out his comrades. He had to
|
|
stop the spaceman from using it on him.
|
|
The pirate charged and lunged his sword. Knowing that most
|
|
people in space were afraid of phasers, this guard didn't prepare
|
|
for a man to charge him.
|
|
The pirate swung and missed, knocking a chunk out of the
|
|
bulkhead. As the guard turned, the pirate swung again, and the
|
|
guard collapsed.
|
|
The pirate ran through the strange sliding metal doors and
|
|
nearly ran into four more men in red uniforms, holding those evil
|
|
metal light weapons.
|
|
He watched as a dozen of his colleagues collapsed under the
|
|
spacemen's treachery.
|
|
He was angered. He lashed out at the spacemen.
|
|
The guards were unaware of the blade cutting the air behind
|
|
them, and so were quite surprised, when the sword cut into them.
|
|
The pirate dispatched four of them before the fifth turned and had
|
|
a chance to fire. The pirate fell among the guards on the floor.
|
|
By the time the standing guard had turned back to his original
|
|
targets, they were upon him.
|
|
The man was hacked up, and unrecognizable when the pirates
|
|
fled from incoming reinforcements.
|
|
|
|
In the hangar bay, pirates lay unconscious everywhere. The
|
|
open area had allowed the security guards to stun everyone safely
|
|
and for a long time.
|
|
The turbolift doors opened, and Ron Pelten approached the
|
|
guards.
|
|
"Did any of them talk to you?" he asked.
|
|
"No, not one," the guard frowned, "The loonies just kept
|
|
yelling 'for the King, retrieve his artifact.'"
|
|
Ron's eyes squinted, then widened.
|
|
"Keep them knocked out," he said, as he started back for the
|
|
elevator, this time at a run.
|
|
|
|
The door to Engineering slid open, and the engineers pulled
|
|
out phasers. Two guards arrived from the upper deck and ran down
|
|
the gangway.
|
|
Pirates collapsed again, leaving only a handful, who were now
|
|
crouch behind walls.
|
|
The guard closest to the gangway aimed, and screamed. A sword
|
|
was buried in his back, and as the other guards turned to look, the
|
|
hidden pirates pulled out daggers and threw them.
|
|
All the daggers missed and hit the rear wall.
|
|
The guards looked at their sources, and the second volley
|
|
arrived. One guard fell, a dagger embedded in his shoulder. The
|
|
others fired, and four men fell behind the walls. One was hidden
|
|
completely and wasn't hit. The surprise attacker was also put to
|
|
sleep by the guard closest to him.
|
|
Four more pirates came through the doors, and one fell behind
|
|
the wall and pulled out his sword as his three friends were
|
|
stunned.
|
|
At that moment, Jim walked in. The pirates turned toward him,
|
|
and he swung. The fist cracked against the jaw, and the pirate
|
|
dropped his sword. Jim snatched it as the other stood.
|
|
The pirate swung, and Jim took a gash in the side. Biting his
|
|
lip, he swung, and the pirate deflected the blade. As the pirate
|
|
swung and missed, his comrade was getting up and pulling a dagger
|
|
out. A security guard noticed this and set his weapon for narrow
|
|
beam. Jim swung and was blocked, and he heard a phaser beam behind
|
|
him as the dagger fell out of the stunned pirate's hand. The
|
|
pirate with the sword swung, and a slice opened in Jim's uniform.
|
|
As he fell unconscious, another phaser beam threw the pirate
|
|
against the wall and let him drop in a heap.
|
|
Commander Pelten entered from the workshop. He saw Jim on the
|
|
floor and looked at the guards.
|
|
"Who's in the transporter room?" he demanded.
|
|
Just the chief and Mr. Ledolison, I imagine," replied the
|
|
guard.
|
|
At a run, Pelten entered the turbolift. "That book must be
|
|
protected!" he called.
|
|
Another door slid shut as a pirate on the upper deck crawled
|
|
out of his hiding place and rejoined his fellows.
|
|
"The King's tome is in their transportation place," the man
|
|
reported.
|
|
The pirates marched down the corridor, opening every door,
|
|
searching every room.
|
|
|
|
In the transporter room, Peter Ledolison was aiming his
|
|
phaser. The pirate hiding behind the wall in the corridor raised
|
|
his dagger. He turned and threw, and Peter fired. His shot
|
|
bounced harmlessly off of the wall plating, but the dagger buried
|
|
itself in his thigh. He screamed and fell, but was still alert
|
|
enough to hear more phasers, and people hitting the floor nearby.
|
|
Dr. Halmen came in with a stretcher, and ran a scanner over
|
|
Peter's body as his aides lifted him up and over.
|
|
Halmen frowned at his readings, then looked at his aides.
|
|
"C'mon, OR's just down the hall, let's go."
|
|
The medics left, and the phaser fire continued in the opposite
|
|
direction. Ron Pelten ran into the room and found the book,
|
|
unprotected, then ran to the computer console.
|
|
"Captain, this is Pelten, you'd better send help to
|
|
Transporter room One. The pirates are after the book."
|
|
"Understood," Hackley's voice said, "We're on our way."
|
|
The door opened behind him, and Ron turned and fired. The
|
|
phaser blast missed, and Ron had to move out of the way. The main
|
|
horde had arrived, and Pelten had only half of his phaser power
|
|
left. The rest had been used on the way to the transporter. The
|
|
pirate lunged, and the blade caught Ron's thigh. He screamed and
|
|
collapsed. Phaser fire was again heard down the corridor. The
|
|
pirate turned and ran out the door where his shipmates were
|
|
preparing daggers and watching their fellows fall in threes. In
|
|
front of him, the pirate Captain began summoning the king's powers,
|
|
and ordering his men to grab the book. The pirate reentered the
|
|
room, but his mates collapsed. As the Captain screamed the final
|
|
words and the weapons turned on him, the pirate knew he wouldn't
|
|
reach the book. He had one second to get his vengeance on the
|
|
spacemen, because the Captain had to save his worthless neck.
|
|
Well, he would get the most vengeance he could.
|
|
The Captain fell unconscious, the guards reached the door. As
|
|
the King's power tickled his mind in preparation for transport, the
|
|
pirate raised his sword. The guards took aim, and the pirate buried
|
|
the sword in Pelten's back. Then, the whirlwind took him, and the
|
|
king returned him to his vessel.
|
|
The guards piled into Transporter room One and searched
|
|
everywhere. Dr. Halmen entered and looked around. He pulled out
|
|
a medical sensor and stopped when he realized who it was with a
|
|
sword standing out of his back. He immediately crouched down and
|
|
ordered an emergency first aid kit.
|
|
The door opened again, and Hackley's mouth dropped open.
|
|
Halmen began to apply first aid while Pelten was placed on the
|
|
stretcher. His eyes widened at the wound gaping in Ron's back.
|
|
Sickbay doors opened, and Pelten was placed on the bed. First aid
|
|
continued, and Hackley perceived the sword to be dancing on Ron's
|
|
back. And it was laughing.
|
|
Hackley blinked several times and resisted the urge to yank
|
|
the weapon out of his first officer's body.
|
|
The first aid failed again. A cardiostimulator was latched to
|
|
the bed, but would not be used. The protoplaser was activated, but
|
|
wasn't helping.
|
|
"With all your technology, you can't even beat people seven
|
|
hundred years behind you!" the sword cried, "and it's simply
|
|
because you're just as mortal as they are!"
|
|
In Hackley's mind, the sword laughed hysterically, holding its
|
|
gut.
|
|
Hackley watched the sword, representative of the pirates who
|
|
killed an innocent man for no apparent reason, study the diagnostic
|
|
screen. Finally, the meters fell, and the sword laughed again.
|
|
Hackley closed his eyes and left.
|
|
Dr. Halmen pulled the sword out of the body.
|
|
Ron Pelten was dead.
|
|
|
|
Captain's Log, Stardate 5016.2
|
|
My First Officer, Ron Pelten, is dead. The pirate attack has
|
|
come and gone, and we've discovered that the mysterious book is
|
|
something of great importance. Commendations go to Ensign
|
|
Carlstel, Ensign Mortesh, Ensign Dallen, Ensign Kentresky,
|
|
Lieutenant Reft, and Lieutenant Mannewicks, who were all injured in
|
|
the attack. Posthumous commendations are recommended for Ensign
|
|
John S. Yerich, and Commander Ronald L. Pelten, who both died in
|
|
the performance of their duty.
|
|
|
|
"Then the whirlwind took him, and Ekarik was returned to his
|
|
ship. The mission had failed. Captain Garr cursed mightily and
|
|
walked to the altar. He would have to apologize to the King. The
|
|
spacemen were too powerful."
|
|
Mark closed the book. Captain Hackley put his head in his
|
|
hands, then folded them. He looked at doctor Halmen.
|
|
"Doctor, how are your patients?"
|
|
Halmen looked at his data pad. "Ensigns Dallen and Kentresky
|
|
are up and walking. It will be a few days for Lieutenant
|
|
Mannewicks, but Lieutenants Reft and Ledolison are out for the rest
|
|
of the week. Ensigns Mortesh and Carlstel have handed me their
|
|
resignations, which i'll get to you this afternoon. Commander
|
|
Queen should be around in three days."
|
|
Hackley frowned and thought for a moment.
|
|
"Captain," John Millis spoke up, "I suggest we destroy the
|
|
ship. These pirates are just figures out of a story. They have
|
|
started a war against us. We have given them the advantage by
|
|
allowing them this attack!"
|
|
"Sit down, Mr. Millis," Hackley said, "These pirates are
|
|
entities created by an intelligent type of....storyteller....whose
|
|
playing field we've stumbled on to. The attack was not the fault
|
|
of the pirates, but the work of the writer's imagination."
|
|
Millis sighed and looked away.
|
|
Hackley continued. "Now, personally, I don't feel like
|
|
learning any more about them, as Admiral Regiffe suggests. It has
|
|
cost us too much already. I'm going to leave the play area
|
|
immediately." He pushed the intercom button, "Bridge, this is the
|
|
Captain. Contact Starfleet. Inform Admiral Regiffe that we will
|
|
be leaving this sector."
|
|
The bridge replied, "Aye, sir."
|
|
Hackley looked up. "Mr. Krawczyk, you will join me in a
|
|
landing team to return the book to the pirate ship."
|
|
Millis stood. "Captain! You can't go over there!"
|
|
Hackley was moving toward the door. He turned to face Millis.
|
|
"Mr. Millis, that book is the reason my First Officer is dead. It
|
|
is an intriguing piece of alien work, but it is something we have
|
|
wrongfully taken. I intend to return it myself and, if possible,
|
|
apologize."
|
|
Millis gaped and stared in shock.
|
|
Hackley left the briefing room, with Mark close behind.
|
|
|
|
The golden silhouettes of Captain Hackley and Commander
|
|
Krawczyk became people, standing on the deck of the pirate ship, as
|
|
the transporter effect wore off.
|
|
The tricorder whistled and Krawczyk pointed. "The Captain's
|
|
Quarters is this way sir."
|
|
The two officers walked down the staircase. The carpet was
|
|
still there, and the sound of activity from the aft section
|
|
designated the location of the pirates.
|
|
Mark pulled out his phaser and opened the door. Hackley stood
|
|
forward, with the book in his hand. They both opened their mouths
|
|
and eyes wide.
|
|
Seated behind the desk, gloating, was a greenish-red humanoid,
|
|
with sickle shaped appendages, running behind him, coming from the
|
|
jaw. It was dressed in blue-green robes, lined in silver.
|
|
Perfectly round eyes were situated above a form of nose running
|
|
down to the upper lip, and flaps of skin ran from either side down
|
|
to the sickle-shaped appendages.
|
|
On the floor lay the pirate Captain Garr, killed by the King's
|
|
wrath.
|
|
Hearing footsteps, the alien looked up and, noticing the book,
|
|
smiled.
|
|
"Grfundelishikolistefel!" it exclaimed as it stood.
|
|
Mark activated the tricorder's universal translator.
|
|
"My book," it cooed, "You've decided to return it! How
|
|
absolutely marvelous."
|
|
Hackley stepped forward. "My name is Captain Benjamin Hackley
|
|
of the Starship Valiant. I am a representative of the United
|
|
Federation of Planets."
|
|
"Oh, details!" the creature yelled, "I've needed details, I
|
|
get sick of calling you spacemen all the time. It just gets so
|
|
boring."
|
|
Hackley looked at Mark, who looked back.
|
|
"Oh, please, come in. Make yourself at home. It's not every
|
|
day I get to speak to my characters in person." The storyteller
|
|
sat back in his chair.
|
|
"We are not characters in some fantasy," Hackley uttered, "We
|
|
are living sentient beings, who have no desire to be used as toys."
|
|
The creature looking offended. "Oh, oh my, I'm terribly
|
|
sorry. I thought you would enjoy beating mt pirates. It makes a
|
|
great story."
|
|
Hackley sighed. Mark recorded the trinkets all around the
|
|
room on the tricorder.
|
|
"You see," the alien continued, "originally, the pirates were
|
|
to have been defeated by my heroes, on the good ship Shordestak.
|
|
But before I introduced them, you appeared. The pirates you saw
|
|
were simply figures I use to help visualize my story. It makes it
|
|
much easier to detect errors."
|
|
"Anyway, you seemed like good opponents, and I thought you
|
|
might have been one of my friend's creations, so I wrote you in.
|
|
When your people boarded the ship, it allowed me to start the
|
|
conflict between the two parties."
|
|
"However, I wasn't expecting you to enter this room. It's my
|
|
private study, and you just happened to find the book here during
|
|
my lunch break."
|
|
Mark stifled a laugh, and Hackley placed the book on the desk.
|
|
"Without the book, I could only use my powers to write in it
|
|
for a short time. To further the plot conflict, I sent the pirates
|
|
after it.
|
|
"You're the King," Hackley concluded.
|
|
"Yes. I'd hoped hordes of pirates would be able to get the
|
|
book back. But, they were scared off by your technology. The
|
|
pirate captain had to retreat. It was the only thing that would
|
|
make sense in the story. Surely, they would not fight what they
|
|
considered such 'powerful magic.' It's funny, sending my own
|
|
character to retrieve the book he was written in. I was just going
|
|
to try and use the so-called 'King's powers' to make you give it
|
|
back when you arrived."
|
|
"We are not figments of your imagination!" Hackley yelled,
|
|
"You've killed my First Officer and a Security Guard, and wounded
|
|
six others."
|
|
"I had no idea you would react this way!" the storyteller
|
|
complained, "I thought you were someone else's creations." It
|
|
sighed, "It's too bad. I was getting close to the end. I was so
|
|
sure it would be another best-seller."
|
|
Hackley wasn't impressed.
|
|
The writer looked at his book and opened it to the last
|
|
written page. "I suppose I'll have to think of a way to eliminate
|
|
you. I still don't know how to finish it."
|
|
Mark had finished his recording and returned to the captain's
|
|
side.
|
|
"We shall leave you to your thinking," Hackley said, and
|
|
pushed his communicator-watch. He studied the alien storyteller
|
|
for a moment. "Transporter room, stand by." He leaned on the desk
|
|
and smiled.
|
|
The alien looked up.
|
|
"We have interfered with your story enough," Hackley said,
|
|
"but, since your characters are already involved in their writing,"
|
|
he waved a hand at the pirate on the floor, "why don't they help
|
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finish it?"
|
|
The storyteller blinked. "You mean, you'll stay and fight?"
|
|
"I mean I'll stay and return your book," Hackley said, "as an
|
|
offering of peace. How about: the pirates agree, and both ships
|
|
leave the area to return to their respective kingdoms with
|
|
treaties."
|
|
The writer nodded, then smiled. "That's good. Yes, there can
|
|
be peace instead of fighting, so I can make you allies. Maybe I'll
|
|
give you a return story."
|
|
Hackley closed his eyes. Mark looked worried.
|
|
The storyteller was scribbling in the book now. "Yes, this
|
|
can work. It will be a great ending. Everyone leaves peacefully."
|
|
The officers showed relief.
|
|
"There," the alien said, and smiled at Hackley, "You see? It
|
|
will be a best-seller."
|
|
Hackley smiled. Mark nodded.
|
|
|
|
Captain's Log, Supplemental.
|
|
Starfleet is aware of the situation, and a trade agreement is
|
|
in the works. The storyteller has agreed to give Starfleet a
|
|
recurring role a mysterious, powerful race of merchants. The
|
|
Valiant is returning to Starbase 23, where I will receive a new
|
|
First Officer.
|
|
|
|
In his quarters, Captain Hackley filed away the letter that
|
|
would inform the Peltens of their son's death. In doing so, he
|
|
filed away the presence of the exceptional first officer he had
|
|
known for six years.
|
|
Suddenly, Hackley turned and clenched his fists. He pushed
|
|
away a strange sense of relief and freedom he had felt during the
|
|
past half hour.
|
|
He imagined the sword sticking out of Ron's back, and he
|
|
considered his own mortality. He thought of the dangers he had
|
|
faced during his past. For 25 years he had commanded a starship
|
|
and escaped destruction at the hands of the unknown. He looked at
|
|
his future. He saw himself getting old, and counting his final
|
|
years of command. He saw his First Officer, running his ship,
|
|
making sure it was as efficient as possible...running it...for him.
|
|
He was afraid.
|
|
He was relieved. He was angry. He had complete control of
|
|
his ship, now. There was no help, no First Officer. He wanted
|
|
one, last year of command. He wanted to command the starship, all
|
|
by himself, before he became senile.
|
|
Had he wanted Ron Pelten out of the way?
|
|
Hackley cringed.
|
|
He walked to the other side of the room.
|
|
He thought of Jim Queen, Peter Ledolison, and four others
|
|
laying in sickbay. They had been wounded because....because Millis
|
|
had been right. Hackley had waited for the attack. He should've
|
|
taken action to prevent the pirates from boarding.
|
|
Should I have killed the pirates? he wondered.
|
|
He thought of the storyteller, happily writing his
|
|
best-seller. If he had destroyed the ship, he would've killed the
|
|
writer. He would be at war with a race of storytellers. His
|
|
officers would not be dead. He wouldn't have made the wrong
|
|
decision. His officers would die anyway, as casualties of war.
|
|
He had defeated his own argument, and was now thinking in circles.
|
|
Could I already be senile? he considered.
|
|
"No," he answered. He had made the right decision. There was
|
|
peace with the storytellers, his officers would live.
|
|
One of them didn't.
|
|
He would have to get another First Officer.
|
|
The relief and freedom left him. He didn't know what to feel.
|
|
What to think.
|
|
He needed to be calm and collected.
|
|
He laid down on his bed and relaxed.
|
|
The Valiant sailed on.
|
|
--
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------------------------------------------------------------------
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James Queen | STAR TREK VOYAGES
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------------|
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We miss | Created by James Queen and Mark TaiLore
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Gene, Rod, | Based on "Star Trek" created by Gene Roddenberry
|
|
and Barry |
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|
------------| Follow the adventures of the USS Valiant.
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STDNT163: WASHINGTON HIGH SCHOOL, MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN, 53210
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------------------------------------------------------------------
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