In
Nerva’s Ops, T’Shak found herself quickly adapting to the
station’s ways of recording and allocating data, power and other
resources, noting and comparing the patterns… and adapting to
working closely beside Haluk, who worked swiftly and efficiently. And
silently.
Prompting
her to speak. “They use the electromagnetic catapult as a
communications array, decreasing response time for messages being
sent across the Quadrant. Most economical.”
He
said nothing in reply, never looking up from his analysis fo the
displays.
“I
have run diagnostics on the timecodes for their sensor logs during,
before and after the alleged appearance of the White Rabbit from the
Rabbit Hole,” she continued, raising an eyebrow. “It is clear
that a human devised those names. One can never say they lack the
capacity for jejune creativity.”
Haluk
remained silent.
She
stopped speaking. She would never admit aloud that she had an
interest in Haluk, not even to the one onboard that she could truly consider a friend. Haluk was Vulcan, approximated her age,
and possessed intellectual and physical attributes that one could
accurately consider aesthetically appealing.
And
this was not even taking into account the rumours that he was a
member of the V’Shar, the Vulcan Security Directorate – a
so-called ‘secret agent’, as Nola Brice would intone, intimating
that this was some sort of exciting, romantic spur – rumours that
Haluk has always disavowed.
And
yes, T’Shak considered it a fortuitous opportunity to work alone
with him, away from the prurient interests of others… strictly in
order to establish a professional relationship with him, of course.
But now it had become obvious that he had no interest in even doing
that, and in fact her attempts at what humans called ‘small talk’
would no doubt dissuade him from spending any time with her in
future-
“Excuse
me?”
Both
Vulcans turned in their chairs to face Venner, the large, bald human
male, the member of Kramer’s crew working in Ops. He was three
metres away, at another console, but now faced them, his beige
jumpsuit hugging his huge frame as he noted, with a thick accent
T’Shak recognised as Terran, Austrian or German to be specific,
“You’re here to examine our sensor logs. Why are you in our
Security Database?”
T’Shak
raised an eyebrow in bemusement, not aware of what he was talking
about. But before she could respond, Haluk did. “Please excuse me,
Sir. I made an error.”
Venner
grunted, his blubbery face turning pink. “I didn’t think Vulcans
made errors.”
“I
am fatigued,” Haluk explained – reaching out and gently taking
T’Shak’s hand in his own. “My wife and I are attempting to
conceive, and I have had little sleep of late.” He looked to T’Shak
now. “Isn’t that right, Beloved?”
T’Shak
stared at him, acutely cognisant of the heat from his hand, the
strength of his muscles, every groove and indentation of his skin,
and it took an unprecedented amount of self-discipline on her part
not to let the shock of the unexpected intimacy show on her face, as
she looked to Venner. “My husband is quite correct. I have been
most insistent that he take advantage of my current levels of
fecundity.”
“To
avoid further errors, my wife and I will now engage in a meditative
exercise,” Haluk offered. “If you will permit us?” He turned
his chair to face her, looking into her eyes intently, before drawing
her nearer.
T’Shak’s
pulse raced despite her attempts to control it, confusion competing
with arousal at the other Vulcan’s touch, his bizarre display of
feigned familiarity, as he drew up to the left side of her head, the
one not seen by Venner, until his mouth was near her ear, and he
whispered, almost imperceptibly, “Forgive my actions, Crewman, but
this is necessary. He is still observing. Place your hand on the side
of my face, to mirror intimacy.”
She
did so, seeing from the corner of her eye that, as stated, Venner was
still watching them.
“I
accessed the station’s Security Logs deliberately,” Haluk
continued, “To confirm my suspicions that the human was here to
secretly monitor our activity. I will now employ greater subterfuge
in continuing my scans. Are you willing to maintain the artifice of
our being a married couple?”
T’Shak
heart remained at a quickened pace, and she adjusted her hand and
forearm to hide her lips as she replied, at an equally low whisper,
“Of course, Mr Haluk. I will cooperate with any level of intimacy
you wish display.”
She
felt him react slightly. “I doubt if we will be required to exhibit
our conjugal status any further than this… but I will keep your
alacrity in mind.” He paused, and then added, “You may release
your touch now.”
*
In
his office, Kramer was moving once more to the drinks cabinet…
until Bunol, sitting at his husband’s desk examining the images on
several monitors, said without looking up, “Don’t.”
The
Human stopped, spun on his heels and stormed around. “Damn it!
What’s taking him so long? How difficult can it be to convince
someone to do what you want?”
The
Rigelian’s mouth lifted at one corner. “As I recall it took you a
few tries before I agreed to go to bed with you.”
“Did
I ever tell you that you’re not funny?”
Now
Bunol met Kramer’s gaze. “Not being a Lethean, or indeed a member
of any type of telepathic race, I have no direct knowledge of the
physical or logistical problems. But Seirren explained it wouldn’t
be easy to do what he’s doing to multiple targets, from a place
directly below, through several centimetres of bulkhead, and without
alerting them...”
Kramer
grunted, moving to the observation windows. “I bet he only said
that to jack up his price.”
“Maybe,”
Bunol conceded. “But telepaths are rare. Telepaths with flexible
codes of conduct are rarer still. If he can create a convincing
illusion for Captain Mistry and her people, and she agrees to buy the
artefact, he’ll be more than worth it.” He smiled again. “And
then we can go off and retire on Casperia Prime, and leave this
pesthole behind us.”
Kramer
glared out at the Rabbit Hole. “Bastard Arkarians.”
Bunol
shrugged. “You can’t blame them. After many generations they
managed to break the political power of the waste export unions, and
begin recycling their theta waste from home. Quicker, safer,
cheaper.”
“And
with their ordinary freighters and transport ships not needing to
stop here, they may as well have just hurled us into the Rabbit Hole
like their waste.” He shuddered. “I don’t have to tell you,
Guyad, I thought we were going to have to walk away from this, from
nearly a decade’s investment, with almost nothing.”
“As
did I,” Bunol admitted ruefully.
Then
Kramer rushed up, dropped to one knee beside the sitting Bunol and
hugged him. “But it’s going to be okay now! They’re gonna buy
the story, buy the statue, and we can leave this place and retire to
Casperia Prime! Thanks to you and your brilliant mind!”
Bunol
hugged him back. “And thanks to you and your ability to hoard.”
He nodded to the image of the White Rabbit onscreen, which they had
found two years before in the wreckage of an Orion smuggler ship that
had drifted into their area. It couldn’t be scanned or cut up into
scrap, and Bunol had wanted it tossed into the Rabbit Hole, but
Kramer had insisted on keeping it in a store bay, with the rest of
the junk they had accumulated over the decades. You never know when
it’ll come in handy, his husband had insisted at the time.
Well,
he had been right, for once. “We never did work out where that
thing came from.” He shrugged. “Maybe it is Iconian?”
“Wouldn’t
that be something?” Kramer mused, his anxiety lacing his alleged
amusement. “We go to all this trouble to fake an Iconian relic, and
it turns out we don’t have to.”
“‘A
Man Plans’,” Bunol quoted. “‘And the Universe Laughs.’”
But he didn’t feel so philosophical, acutely aware of how
precarious his plan was, despite his ‘brilliant mind’. The idea
had come to him after the news about the Arkarians changing their
theta waste policies, and it had become obvious that they weren’t
renewing their contract with Nerva, without even offering any
compensation for their imminent loss of revenue. It became
increasingly likely that they would all have to cut their rather
considerable losses.
Then
Bunol recalled some former associates who had made a living with fake
relics had read an article about the Iconians and the extensive
archaeological interest in the extinct race, given how little was
actually known about them. He knew of several associates from his
past who had made money from fake artefacts, religious icons, maps to
the remains of alleged Iconian settlements on distant worlds.
The
rest fell into place: the use of Nerva’s fabricators to create the
pedestal plates; a computer program that took the few known examples
of Iconian script and extrapolate more, none of which had any genuine
meaning but which looked authentic; further forgeries of the station
logs to support the backstory, a backstory that was so fantastic that
it had to be true; sensor blocks in the bay to disrupt any attempts
to scan the object or the surrounding area more thoroughly; the
talents of Seirren to plant images and influences in Mistry and the
others; and a contrived urgency that would hopefully prompt Starfleet
to accept the offer to purchase the so-called White Rabbit, and give
Bunol, Kramer and the others a chance to escape and set up new lives,
new identities, elsewhere, by the time that Starfleet took away the
Rabbit and failed to duplicate the telepathic side effects elsewhere.
A
communications signal flashed onscreen. Kramer turned to it. “Who’s
calling? The Starfleet vessel? Arkaria?”
Bunol
frowned at the signal parameters flashing up onscreen. “The signal
is originating from… from a part of space I’m not familiar with.
It’s not Federation, Orion, Klingon, Romulan, Tholian-”
“Are
you sure it’s meant for us?”
The
Rigelian nodded. “That’s what it says in the header. In fact,
it’s addressed specifically to you and me...” Curious, he opened
the channel. “This is Nerva Beacon, Guyan Bulon and Malik Kramer
present. Who is this?”
He
expected a visual image of the caller to appear. Instead, they had a
still picture… of a stylised illustration of a crescent moon, on
some old black cardboard, with a ghostly smiling face on it, and an
ancient sailing ship seemingly floating within the concave side,
while below, the words THE MOON were written in elaborate script.
“What
the…” Bunol muttered.
Kramer
grunted. “Looks like it’s from a… they used to call them Tarot
Cards. Cards they used to use to tell fortunes-”
Then
both men were startled by an electronically-altered, gender-neutral
voice. “Mr Bunol, Mr Kramer, Greetings: I’m calling on behalf of
an organisation known informally as Moonfleet.”
Bunol
and Kramer looked to each, silently mouthing the name.
The
Caller continued, as if able to see them. “You won’t have heard
of us. But we’ve heard of you.”
“And
what is Moonfleet?” Bunol asked suspiciously.
“We’re
a book club.”
Kramer
made a sound like mirthless laughter. “What the- we don’t have
time for this, Guyan-”
“You
don’t have much time for anything, Mr Kramer,” the Caller agreed.
“None of you, so we should proceed to the reason for our call. We
are aware of your plan to swindle the Federation with your fake
Iconian relic.”
Kramer
turned beet red, and he gasped, but Bunol remained cooler, though
sweat beaded down his high green forehead. “I’m afraid we don’t
know what you’re talking about, Whoever You Are-”
“It’s
‘Whomever You Are’,” he corrected. “And your plan will fail.
Captain Mistry’s little team possesses an eclectic range of talent
and experience, and if there is a flaw, they will find it. We
calculate you possess only a 1.8% probability of success, and only a
3.4% probability of avoiding custodial sentencing. It is with
absolute certainty that you will not profit from this venture.
However,
the Moonfleet is prepared to generously offer you recompense for
services rendered: 20 bars of gold-pressed latinum.”
Kramer
and Bunol straightened up, glanced at each other, Kramer whispering
breathlessly, “That’s… that’s nearly two and a half million
credits! That’s far more than what we’re asking for the statue
from the Federation!”
“We
don’t want the statue,” the Caller clarified. “We want you to
kill Captain Mistry and her crew, and destroy her vessel.”
Kramer
stepped back from the desk, as if the Caller was ready to reach
across the Quadrant and grab him. “Kill? Are you kidding me? We’re
not hit men! We don’t-”
But
Bunol raised a hand for silence, his brow creasing heavily in thought
before turning back to the screen. “Assuming that we might be
interested in your offer -- and I’m not saying we are -- we don’t
even know who you are! How do we know you’ll pay?”
Below
the image of the tarot card, a series of numbers appeared. “I
believe you’ll recognise this as the hidden account you have on
Bolarus IX, along with the current balance in it… such as it is. We
are prepared to transfer payment once we confirm that you have
rendered what we have requested.”
Bunol
leaned in, reading the numbers. Yes. yes, it certainly looked like
their account; he never bothered asking how this Moonfleet was able
to identify it, let alone access it.
“Is
it true?” Kramer asked him.
Bunol
nodded warily, but noted, “It still doesn’t mean we’ll get
paid.”
“No,”
the Caller admitted. “All that’s guaranteed is that you won’t
get anything if you don’t do it.”
Kramer
was shaking his head, sweat pouring from him. “No. No, Guyan, we
can’t do it- we’re not killers- and Starfleet will be after us,
for the rest of our lives, they’ll never stop!”
Bunol
leaned forward again. “We’re not a starbase, we don’t have
weapons any larger than hand phasers! How can we be expected to deal
with the Starfleet people on board, and destroy a starship, too?”
The
Caller sighed. “For 20 bars of gold-pressed latinum, you really
should be able to do your own thinking. But if it helps: you also
have at your disposal a telepathic mercenary, an electromagnetic
catapult, and a singularity that consumes all matter… and evidence. It would not be the first Starfleet vessel lost to a spatial hazard. But I would recommend you come to a decision quickly. Captain Mistry
will soon see through your deception. And she will not be pleased.”
“Why?”
Kramer asked. “Why do you want her dead? Her ship destroyed?”
There
was a pause, and then, “We will not call you again, and there will be no record of this transmission when it ends. But if you are
successful, you will be rewarded beyond the dreams of avarice. Good
luck, Gentlemen.”
The
screen went dark.
Bunol
stepped away, moving to the windows, while Kramer went to the drinks
cabinet, downing a shot uncaringly before speaking again. “That-
That did happen, didn’t I? I didn’t imagine it?”
“No,”
Bunol said simply.
After
a moment, Kramer set aside his glass and drew up to him, his face
etched with concern. “You’re not really considering it, are you?
I mean, I don’t mind fleecing the endless coffers of the
Federation, but… this is murder.” He rested a hand on Bunol’s
forearm. “We can’t just kill them.”
“No.
We can’t.” He turned and kissed him on the cheek. “Go check on
the others, see if they managed to get that recycler going again in Fabrications.”
Kramer
stared warily at him, before nodding, swallowing and departing.
Bunol
immediately returned to the desk, opening a channel. “Venner, I
know you can’t speak freely with the Vulcans there, so just answer
Yes or No. Are they still working there?”
“Yes.”
“Are
they suspicious?”
“Yes.”
He
nodded to himself; his pessimistic side expected this. And while he did not believe in miracles, he did believe in seizing what he could, when he could. “Do you have
your disruptor handy?”
There
was a pause, before the reply. “Yes.”
Bunol
nodded. “The situation has altered… but we can still salvage
this. Open the exhaust ports on the maneuvering thrusters and flood
the area with plasma; that will disrupt their communications. Stand
by.” He switched to another channel. “Caine! Bridger! Power up
the Catapult! Ready the test module magazine and stand by!”
He
paused before the last call. He wished it hadn’t come to this. But what could he do? “Mr Seirren… there’s been a change of plan…”
*
Mistry
swallowed, looking to the others in wonder. This was… astounding!
Every Starfleet Captain worth their salt dreamed of First Contact
with a new race… and, if possible, avoid killing, getting killed,
or starting a war.
And
here she had hers! And what was more, it was the Iconians! Beings of
legend! This was just the start! They were obviously still alive,
somewhere, with the wisdom of hundreds of millennia-
The
figure turned to one side. “Huh?”
Mistry
watched, blinking. “Excuse me?”
It
didn’t seem to respond, still looking to one side. “Yes. Yes, I
can do that. Yes, all of them. It’ll cost double.”
She
looked to S’Li. “What’s going on?”
The
Caitian shrugged. “Curiouser and curiouser.”
She
glanced at the others. Colossal and Thizheris were examining their
probe consoles, the former confirming. “Still nothing being
recorded, Captain. This would appear to be telepathically transmitted
into our heads.”
The
latter crossed his arms. “Then why do I feel like we’ve just been
put on hold?”
Mistry
looked back at the image, trying to mentally reach out to it. Her
desire to make contact seemed to have triggered it before.
“Greetings! I’m Captain-”
It
turned back to her.
And
she began falling. She cursed, arms flailing, immediately imagining
some gravity failure, a hull breach, a transport beam into space. She
reached for her wrist communicator to send a distress signal, but
somehow couldn’t reach it.
She
felt herself shrinking.
She
felt herself growing.
Playing
cards and teacups and books and pocket watches and top hats and chess
pieces and rabbits fell with her.
What
was going on? She thought to herself. Had something gone wrong with
the telepathic communication with the Rabbit? Had she gone mad?
“I’m
afraid so, Dear Captain,” S’Li, falling alongside her, grinning.
“I am afraid so, you are entirely bonkers. but I will tell you a
secret… all the best people are.”
“Professor!”
She reached out for him, hoping they could hold onto each other, find
some purchase to stop their fall.
But
then he disappeared… except for his grin.
In
the infinite distance, an electric guitar offered a familiar,
hypnotic beat, and then another joined it in alternate Phrygian
scales as a woman’s voice informed her that One pill makes you larger,
and one pill makes you small / And the ones that mother gives you,
don't do anything at all / Go ask Alice, when she's ten feet tall…
*
On
the Bridge of the Harken, Commander Gallop had been taking the
opportunity to allow the Engineering crew to run diagnostics on the
warp core while they were scanning the Rabbit Hole, when his
attention was drawn to an alert from the Helm.
He
didn’t even have time to speak, when the ship was rocked by an
impact, pitching hard to starboard, flinging crew from their chairs
and slamming them into rails, stations, walls or each other, and the
lights dimmed, leaving only the Red Alert flashing overhead.
Gallop
felt something crack inside him as he hit the nearest rail -- one
rib, maybe two, he thought, something he hadn’t experienced since
his last tussle with a Klingon, before his kids were born -- but he
bit back the pain to help Lt Ross back into her place at the Helm,
shouting out, “Status!”
Behind
him, Second Officer Lt al-Rad was holding onto the Ops station
corners. “Collision! Something struck us! Deflector’s barely came
up in time! Kinetic feedback damage to port nacelle and struts-
INCOMI-!”
Another
strike, another lurch, though they were more ready for it this time.
But a quick glance on the damage control board told Gallop that they
suffered further damage. “Wixtar! Raise the shields! Ross, get us
moving! Katheer, what’s hitting us? Space debris? It can’t be
enemy ships, we would have detected them, unless they were cloaked-”
“Only
short-range sensors available,” Wixtar reported, his bald blue
Bolian head covering in dark cerulean blood. “No enemy vessels-
Commander, it’s Nerva, the Catapult-”
Another
impact, another lurch, further alarms as the lights dimmed and chaos
reigned.
“We’ve
lost thrusters!” Ross shouted. “Shields down to 40%!”
Gallop
gripped the arms of the Captain’s Chair. Nerva’s Catapult was
firing things at them? What the Hell was going on? “Reinforce the
shields! Contact the Landing Party, find out what’s happening!
Ross, Evasive!”
He
looked up at the flickering viewscreen, seeing the Nerva Catapult,
which now looked very uncomfortably like a gun barrel, firing at
them. He recalled his basic Academy instruction on the need for
deflectors and shields in space, and how they were indispensable for
most starships as even the most minute particles could cause serious
damage to a ship when traveling at high enough velocities. He didn’t
know what the Catapult was firing at them, and it was certainly not
being propelled to warp speed, but it was obviously enough to do
damage, even against shields.
Another
impact, another lurch, and then Ross shouted, “We’re being
knocked towards the Event Horizon of the Rabbit Hole!”
*
In
Nerva’s Ops, T’Shak was noting a huge amount of computer
processing time having been taken up recently for some undisclosed
function, and she was analysing some of the details, which seemed to
involve the Iconian script -- were the Nerva crew trying to decipher
what was on the White Rabbit? -- when she felt Haluk stiffen beside
her-
And
then shove her forcefully out of her chair, making her fall to the
floor, even as a disruptor bolt struck the station where she had sat,
making it explode and burst into flames.
She
twisted on the floor, trying to rise again as she watched Haluk rise
and charge towards Venner, who was standing holding a disruptor
pistol, and trying to hit the Vulcan male. Haluk’s face was one of
cool composure, however, as his arms moved to block the pistol and
his legs struck out to try and disable the large Human.
Then
another human emerged from the nearby door behind Haluk and charged
in to join the fray.
T’Shak
helped herself back to her feet, recalling her basic training and the
additional lessons learned from Mr Wixtar in Security. It was her
duty, as a member of Starfleet; Mr Haluk was only a Civilian Advisor,
despite the rumours-
Without
looking behind him, Haluk produced something from the left sleeve of
his jacket, and a small, silver cylinder appeared, and from it, a
thin beam of phaser energy struck the new arrival, sending him
sprawling.
A
second later, his other hand shot up to Venner’s neck, pinching it
and causing the man to drop like a sack of goods to the floor.
Haluk
straightened up, collected Venner’s dropped disruptor and drew up
his wrist communicator. “Haluk to Captain Mistry, respond.” After
a moment, he continued. “Haluk to Harken, respond.” He looked to
her. “Please try your own, Crewman.”
She
complied, having no more success.
“The
Captain and our associates will be in danger, we must proceed to them
immediately.” He handed over the pen-shaped device. “The control
is near the tip. There is enough charge remaining for six stun shots;
be economical.”
She
nodded. “This is non-standard equipment, Mr Haluk, as were your
self-defence techniques.”
“Is
there a point to your statement, Crewman?”
“Yes:
are the rumours regarding your association-”
The
Vulcan male almost sighed. “I have been asked 513 times if I am
associated with the Vulcan Security Directorate as a so-called
‘secret agent’. For 513 times, I have denied it. It is vexing
that people choose to believe such an outlandish notion.”
She
nodded, suppressing her embarrassment at having brought up the
subject. “Forgive me, Mr Haluk. I should have been enquiring about
your status following that altercation.”
He
adjusted the sleeves of his purple jacket. “I am shaken, but not
stirred.”
*
Mistry
kept falling into a swirling blackness, as if the Rabbit Hole outside
had appeared here… wherever she was-
“OFF
WITH HER HEAD!” Dzenabe shouted from a window without a house
around it.
“!kcatta
cihtapelet rednu era uoY” the White Knight informed her.
“Feed
your head,” Colossale urged her, while sitting in a teapot.
She
watched the White Rabbit bounce into view, his antennae dipping down
as he checked his pocket watch. “The Admiral! The Admiral! Oh my
dear paws! Oh my fur and whiskers! She’ll get me executed, as sure
as ferrets are ferrets!” And then he leapt down upwards-
“How
disappointing,” Dad noted sourly, adjusting his top hat and sipping his tea. “I
warned you not to go into space, Audea. Not to put on a uniform. You could have been a Professor at Oxford, not a mindless tool of Starfleet. And
now you’ll die.”
She
gasped, her head pounding. “I don’t think-”
“Then
you shouldn’t talk,” he advised, turning to face a mirror that
offered no reflection.
“OFF
WITH HER HEAD!”
Logic
and proportion had fallen sloppy dead. She had to get away-
“How
do you run from what is inside your head?” the Cat’s Grin asked
her.
“!niatpaC,
regnad ni er’uoY” the White Knight bellowed in her face. “!eciov
ym no sucoF”
The
pounding was getting louder, more insistent, suffusing her very
being.
“Feed
your head!”
*
On
the Harken, Gallop swallowed his fear at the sight of the Rabbit
Hole, looking ready to swallow them up. He swiveled in the Captain’s
chair to face the Tactical station, having already worked out that
they were beyond the range of phasers. “Mr Wixtar! Arm photon
torpedoes! Target the Catapult! Destroy it!”
The
Bolian took a moment to look at him, saying nothing but complying.
Gallop
read the look easily enough. There was a risk that the damage they
inflict could affect not just the Catapult, but the main station.
They could lose everyone onboard, including the Captain.
But
they had no choice.
*
Outside,
a volley of torpedoes, glimmering with red coruscating energy, banked
and swooped as one towards the cylindrical structure.
Another
test module was propelled from it, striking one of the torpedoes and
destroying it, and itself.
The
other three torpedoes continued, flaring even more brightly, as if
prepared to avenge their fallen comrade.
They
succeeded. The Catapult erupted in a growing blossom of fire that
swept upwards, upwards…
...Until
safety features on Nerva automatically jettisoned the Catapult array
from the main body of the station, before the destruction reached it.
*
On
the Harken, Gallop swallowed. 8 P “Report!”
“No
casualties, minor injuries only,” Al-Rad responded, “Minor
damage on Decks 2 and 3 Aft Port, shields at Minimal but holding,
Port thruster down, but starboard thruster still online-”
“Is
that enough to get us away from that damn hole and back to the
Landing Party, Ross?”
“If
it’s not, I’ll get out and push, Sir!”
In
the Radio Shack, Nola helped herself back to her feet and moved to
help those who had been thrown around like leaves in a storm. “Is
everyone alright? Anyone hurt?” She moved to the scientists,
getting Leavitt back to her feet. “Are you okay, Doctor?”
Leavitt
nodded. “Thanks, Kiddo. You’d better get back and send the status
report to Damage Control.”
Nola
swallowed; yes, that was SOP during Red Alert! She turned back,
seeing Dzenabe assist some of the fallen crewmembers. “Are you
okay, Doctor?”
The
other woman glared at her over her shoulder. “Mind your own
business, Underling.”
Nola
looked back at Leavitt, who stopped recalibrating the sensor grid to
quip, “Sounds like she’s warming up to you.”
*
The
thundering suffused her being, and she kept falling.
And
she was alone surrounded by strangers she knew ripping her to pieces
ripping her and putting her together again and Dad was there hating
her hating her for not taking that tenure at Oxford screw you Dad
I’ll do what I want and the cards and chessmen were swarming around
and if you go chasing rabbits, and you know you're going to fall Tell
'em a hookah-smoking caterpillar has given you the call-
“...niatpaC
raeD”
falling
falling falling falling falling falling falling falling
“Dear
Captain… focus on my voice...”
The
voice became a light, a signal, repetition, pulse, pattern. Order.
Stability.
“That’s
it. Keep focusing-”
Mistry
sat up, gasping, her head feeling like it had just had a warp core
breach. She glanced around, seeing S’Li, Colossale and Thizheris
standing or kneeling around her, along with Dr Morgan, running a
medical tricorder sensor wand in her face. Mistry slapped it away.
“Get that bloody thing out of my face.”
Morgan
drew back, grunting. “You’re back to your charming self. Thanks
to the Professor.”
Mistry
frowned, looking to the Caitian. “You? What did you do?”
S’Li
shrugged, smiling self-deprecatingly. “In my Salad Days, I indulged
heavily in certain… less than legal recreational pastimes…
including telepathic trips. You learn to recognise and shake it off
after time.”
Thizheris
grunted. “That’s probably the only instance I’ve heard you refer to
Salads.”
“He
was the first of us attacked to fight off the effects,” Colossale
reported.
“Attacked?”
That put her on alert, making her rise to her feet… and see Lt
Wixtar standing there with several Security crewmembers, phasers
drawn. “Lieutenant! Report!”
The
Bolian straightened up. “With the assistance of Mr Haluk and
Crewman T’Shak, we’ve taken control of Nerva, Ma’am, and have
the crew in custody. We’re just waiting to find out what’s going
on.”
Mistry
nodded, glancing up at the now-silent, now-inanimate statue. “So am
I...”
*
Epilogue:
“USS
Harken, Captain’s Log, Stardate 2320.58: We, and our ship, have
recovered from the actions of Malik Kramer and his group, which
started as a swindle, and ended in attempted murder. The Arkarians
have been notified, and they are sending a ship and crew to take
custody of Nerva, while we convey the criminals to the USS Skylark
for their eventual transport and trial at Starbase 25. Under guidance
from Mr Colossale, a neuroblocker has been fitted onto the Lethean
mercenary Seirren to suppress his telepathic abilities.
Kramer
and his partner have talked about an unknown party contacting them at
the eleventh hour and offering them a fortune for our deaths, but a
check of their station communication logs can find no evidence of
this… though Mr Haluk’s subsequent diagnostics found evidence of
some sophisticated redaction programs at work. But as there are no
records or rumours anywhere of this ‘Moonfleet’, it will have to
be a mystery for someone else to solve.
As
will be the true origins of the statue, now in one of our cargo
holds, taken as evidence for the Nerva Crew’s trial. It may not
have any telepathic properties, but it’s still made of neutronium,
an element so rare that most sensor technology outside of Starfleet
wouldn’t even recognise it; ironically, Kramer could have made a
substantial legitimate profit from it if he’d known.
But
it’s another mystery for someone else to unravel. I’ve had enough
of chasing rabbits.
And
now can resume our normal duties… after I take care of some ship’s
business...”
*
Dzenabe
stood in front of the Captain’s desk, arms crossed, watching and
waiting impatiently.
Mistry
sat behind her desk, working on a PADD in hand, never looking up,
until finally the Wakandan spoke up. “Captain, let us just-”
Mistry
still didn’t look up... but raised a finger, its meaning obvious.
Now she rose to her feet, setting the PADD down on the desk. “I
need your assistance on something, Kisdi. Have a look at these, would
you?”
Dzenabe
grunted, unfolded her arms and lifted up the PADD, examining the
display.
“What
do you see?” Mistry invited.
The
Wakandan frowned. “There appears to be two Command reports on this.
Reports created by you.”
“Yes.
Both start out identically, detailing an incident that occurred in
the Radio Shack of this ship on 2320.55, where you insulted, harassed
and threatened a member of my crew, despite my previous warning to
you.”
The
scientist grunted. “Crewman Brice’s account-“
“Crewman
Brice has not contributed to this report,” Mistry informed her
coldly. “These are witness statements from Dr Leavitt, and
Engineering Crewmen Santiago, Riiyoun, Singleton and Bowler, who were
present assisting you and Dr Leavitt with the sensor analysis.
The
reports also detail what I believe to be the cause of your present
attitude: the decision taken by Starfleet Intelligence to refuse to
allow you to publish an article in the Journal of Subspace Research
because it would reveal classified information about our mission two
months ago assisting the Cosmostrator.”
Dzenabe
bristled. “It was unjust! My analysis of the subspace fluctuations
we experienced would have advanced our understanding of transwarp
physics!”
Mistry
nodded. “Having read it, I agree. It might even have made you a
nominee for the next Zee-Magnees Prize in Subspace Physics. But it
would have also revealed classified information about the
Cosmostrator and its activities in the Typhon Expanse. That’s why
your article was rejected, at least for the time being... and on my
recommendation, I should point out.”
The
Wakandan’s brow furrowed. “I cannot be expected to muzzle myself
on account of some arbitrary bureaucratic objection!”
“Actually,
that is precisely what you’re expected to do. It was thoroughly
explained to each of you before you agreed, of your own free wills,
to serve onboard: that there will be incidents, missions, details
that you will not be able to disclose, whether it’s in letters home
or in prospective articles. I know it can be difficult, but that’s
part of the price we pay. I appreciate your frustration and
disappointment.
I
don’t appreciate that you would take it out on an innocent.”
Mistry
rose to her feet. “The two reports on that PADD have different
endings: in the first report, you tell me that agree that you were in
the wrong, and that you promise to apologise publicly to Crewman
Brice.
In
the second report, your stubborn refusal to swallow your pride and do
the right thing leads me to immediately suspend your Security rating,
and arrange for your return to your homeworld. Naturally, this
incident, and my revocation of your Security rating, will remain on
your personnel record, and may adversely affect any future projects
directly or indirectly involving Starfleet or the Federation Science
Council.”
“What?”
“Of
course, you can always return to Wakanda to continue your research…
assuming you’ve been forgiven for that little incident that delayed
their moon terraforming project by twenty years.”
Dzenabe’s
expression went taut. “You would do that to me? Cripple my career away from this paltry little vessel of yours? Because of some child who
doesn’t have a fiftieth of my intellect or worth to you?”
Mistry
raised her chin. “No, I would do that to you because you’re a
nasty bitch who thinks superior intellect automatically equates to
superior value. Who thinks her talents, her triumphs, her lineage,
makes her immune to the consideration of the feelings of others.
Maybe
back on Wakanda. But not on this paltry little vessel of mine.
And
as gifted and as worthwhile as you have been, and could keep on
being, continuing to protect untold millions even if you don’t get
any public recognition for your efforts, there’s still something to
be said for decency. And humility. I’ll remind you of the Wakandan
proverb: ‘The sun shines down equally on mighty palaces and humble
huts’.”
Dzenabe
scowled… though with it came concession. “I do not need to hear
primitive homespun aphorisms from you, Captain. But... I will make my
apologies to your underling, in public. And I will curb my stridency
so as to avoid further distasteful meetings such as this.” She
handed back the PADD. “Will that sate you?”
Mistry
paused, and then accepted the PADD. “Me? Maybe. But you have to
start remembering it isn’t just you and me onboard.”
*
Leavitt
threw some chips into the pot. “Yeah, she was practically ready to
knock the poor kid to the ground, before Nola stood up to her.”
Colossale
rearranged the cards in his hand, before reaching for his tiny glass
of tranya. “If only you had recorded it, it would have been most
entertaining.”
Haluk
matched Leavitt’s bet, maintaining his usual poker face. “I fail
to appreciate the entertainment value of traumatic emotional
conflict.”
“It’s
there when you get to see someone like Dzenabe get put in her place,”
Leavitt chuckled, taking another swig of her beer before asking, “So
when’s the wedding? And will your spymasters attend in disguise?”
The
Vulcan looked to her. “And I fail to appreciate the human need to
tease. Crewman T’Shak and I are mere colleagues, and I am not a
member of the V’Shar. Your repeated jibes are indicative of some
form of mental illness.”
“Teasing
as a habit is not confined to humans,” Thizheris informed him,
discarding his hand. “However they do show an expertise at being
foolish.” He looked to S’Li, on his right. “Wouldn’t you
agree, Professor?”
Leavitt
looked up, smiling. “Raise or fold, Putty Tat.”
S’Li
stared at nothing in particular, before asking, “Did she frighten
her?”
“Hmm?
Who?”
The
Caitian’s gaze met Leavitt’s. “Dzenabe? Did she frighten Nola?”
Leavitt
stopped and drank again. “Yeah, but that’s not surprising. Kisdi
could make a Klingon soil his trousers.”
Colossale
and Thezheris laughed. S’Li didn’t. “She shouldn’t have done
that. Nola’s just a cub. She reminds me of my granddaughter,
Ma’Sala. Ma’Sala has just joined the Caitian Planetary Navy.
They’re both full of fire and spirit. They should be supported by
their elders, not intimidated.”
Haluk
raised an eyebrow. “I do not condone Dr Dzenabe’s attitude or
actions, but I have no doubt that Captain Mistry will resolve the
issue effectively.”
The
Mess Hall doors parted, and Dzenabe strode in, ignoring her fellow
scientists and the few others present at that time of evening as she
proceeded to the food synthesizers.
“Charming
as ever,” Leavitt noted, looking at S’Li again. “I said Raise
or Fold, Professor.”
The
Caitian’s eyes were on the back of Dzenabe as he set his cards
down. “I fold. Please excuse me.” He rose to his feet, took his
cane and proceeded to the synthesizers as well.
Thizheris
frowned at the departure, reached across and picked up S’Li’s
cards.
“That
is unethical,” Haluk commented.
“I
don’t care.” The Andorian’s antennae rose as he showed them the
cards. “He folded with a Full House...”
All
eyes at the table followed S’Li as he hobbled up to Dzenabe,
tapping her on the shoulder with the head of his cane. “Doctor, may
I have a word with you, please? It’s about Crewman Brice.”
Dzenabe’s
posture stiffened, and she never turned around as she replied, “I
am not in the mood, Caitian. If you value your fat furry hide, return
to your game.”
“I
won’t stand to have her bullied!” he declared, raising his voice.
“Is that clear, Doctor?”
Dzenabe
turned, reaching out to shove him out of the way-
S’Li
was quicker, dodging and swinging out his free arm, claws extended,
catching the woman across her right cheek and sending her sprawling
to the floor.
The
other scientists at the game table rose, but before anyone could say
or do anything more, S’Li grabbed the hooked handle of his cane,
twisted and pulled… drawing out a thin black blade almost a metre
long, the pointed tip close to Dzenabe’s face.
The
woman clutched the side of her feet where he had raked her, eyes wide
with pain and fury. “You animal! How dare you? Get that blade out
of my face or I’ll snap it in two!”
He
didn’t move; none of his typical slowness or shakiness was in view.
“This is a blade forged by the Guild of the Kaetini on Cait. Forged
from a metal beyond your ken.
You will not snap it in two.
And
you will not harass or threaten Crewman Brice again.
She
is under my protection.
And
a Caitian protecting a cub is a fierce thing indeed.”
He
stepped back, watching her intently as he carefully sheathed the
blade back into his cane and secured it. “Disregard that at your
own peril.”
He
turned and departed. As the doors closed, Dzenabe rose up, touching
the claw marks gingerly before glaring furiously at her fellow
scientists. “I’ll have him arrested! Thrown off the ship!”
“For
what?” Leavitt countered coolly. “I saw you tripping over his
feet as you pushed past him, he reached out to catch you and keep
from falling, and accidentally scratched your face.”
“That
sounds about right,” Thizheris agreed.
“He
is a doddery old thing, isn’t he?” Colossale added with a
chuckle, raising his glass to Dzenabe in mock salute.
She
looked in disbelief to Haluk now, who sat back and assessed her,
steepling his fingers. “I cannot condone Professor S’Li’s
actions before, or my colleagues’ actions now, any more than I can
condone yours… but I do note that the first two
are the direct result of the last. In social as well as scientific
situations, actions beget reactions. You would do well to remember
that, should you choose to continue to function with others.”
*
In
the corridor, Nola walked with T’Shak. “So, was it exciting to
see him in action?”
“Excitement
is an emotion. I am a Vulcan.”
Nola
nudged her. “So, the answer is Yes?”
T’Shak
did not respond.
“You
could thank me, for arranging it all.”
T’Shak
nodded. “Thank you, for arranging to put me in danger from
criminals.”
Nola
was about to respond, when she saw S’Li leaning against a wall,
using his cane for support and trying to catch his breath. She rushed
up to him. “Professor, are you okay? Should I call Sickbay?”
The
Caitian straightened up, reaching up and adjusting his spectacles.
“Dear Cub, it’s good to see you! No, no intervention from Sickbay
is required, I’m just suffering from a mild case of dyspepsia. Too
much fried food tonight. I’m just going to have an early night.”
Nola
nodded, smiling. “Well, okay then, I’ll escort you to your
quarters.”
“Oh, there’s
no need for that, you’re off-duty.” He tried to wave her off.
But
Nola slipped an arm around his, grinning. “That’s okay, I don’t
consider taking care of my favourite Caitian as duty. And don’t try
to put me off, either; I can be a tough little firecracker when I want to
be.”
He
chuckled, leaning on his cane as they walked together. “So I’ve
heard, Dear Cub. So I’ve heard...”
Great story. I liked the ending with S'Li knocking some sense in that snooty Wakandan woman. I also liked the connection between him and Ma'Sala. Great work. :)
ReplyDeleteThanks, Jack! There's actually another connection to Surefoot besides Ma'Sala and the Kaetini: Mr Haluk will eventually be Commander Haluk, Sasha's liaison while she underwent post-grad training in My Summer on Vulcan (which makes it more interesting that S'Li's gtranddaughter would eventually become the head of the Mother's Claws, and Haluk would be familiar with her through that connection)
DeleteOh my word! Almost unbelievable that Bolun would have the stones to try and take out a Federation starship and its crew. But greed is a nasty, controlling bitch. Kinda like Dzenabe. And oh! I love that S'Li is a relation of Ma'Sala, what a perfect connection between Harken and Surefoot! Love that Dzenabe got put in her place more than once, she really needed knocked down a peg or two. I wonder about Haluk, like everyone else. But maybe he's only meant to make us wonder, lol. In any case, you know I am already looking forward to the next one.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Christina! Yes, Fortune Favours the Bold, but doesn't guarantee Smarts. And hopefully Dzenabe will have learned her lesson. As for Haluk, as I told Jack above, his secret is no real secret to anyone who remembers him from his appearance in Surefoot.
DeleteI never intended to make any connections like this to my Surefoot tales, it seemed a little too self indulgent... but I couldn't help myself :-)
What a fantastic wrap-up to this story. The scheming station crew’s lethal plot blows up in their collective faces (along with the catapult) and our ‘favorite’ Wakandan gets a dressing down from Mistry and a beat-down from S’Li. I’m wondering if the mysterious puppet-masters over subspace aren’t the Orions, seeking vengeance for earlier events? It’s also possible that it could be representatives of some other power whose plans have been thwarted by Mistry & Company. Excellent work all the way around, most especially with your outstanding character development.
ReplyDeleteThank you! I'm pleased with how the story wrapped up, and how teh characters are forming themselves the more I write them... and I'm hoping I'm not shooting myself in the foot by setting up these behind-the-scenes adversaries LOL
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