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Star Trek: Orion - No Man's Land

Bry_Sinclair

Vice Admiral
Admiral
Vicious plasma storms roared all around them. The Badlands had claimed many ships over the years, the energies that coalesced and erupted in the area were too unpredictable and most ships were incapable of safely navigating them, so no one went into them unless they had a very good reason—such as the Maquis using them to hide, or criminals smuggling contraband, or starships responding to a weak distress call.

The U.S.S. Orion had been returning from a supply run when she’d picked up the faint signal. Had it been anyone else but extremely diligent Lieutenant Aleksander Jachim, the Chief Operations Officer, monitoring the comm system it was likely the call would’ve gone unheard. Not for the first time, Captain Reihyn was glad to have the younger man on his crew. They had dropped out of warp and, after some doing, managed to establish brief contact with the source of the emergency call.

It was coming from a civilian refugee ship, which had apparently run afoul of a Cardassian patrol craft and been forced to shelter in the plasma storms. Unfortunately, their engines had been overtaxed and they were all but adrift within the Badlands.

As much as Reihyn wanted to help, the Orion would never have survived a trip into the storms, and the nearest ship was the Tecumseh, which was even larger and had less chance of safely getting in and out. They couldn’t just ignore the call for help, so they were going in by shuttle. His plan was to assess their status, look at the damage and make what repairs they could. If the ship could be piloted out of the storms, the Orion could take them under tow to the nearest station, if it couldn’t they would need to be evacuated. From what they’d been told there were less than two hundred aboard, which the Orion could handle with ease.

So now, he sat at the conn of the shuttle Issan being buffeted about like a leaf in the wind, trying to find a single transport in a volatile expanse of space famous for messing with sensors. He kept his eyes fixed on his console, finding the swirling mass of pink and purple energy that filled the viewport to be daunting despite how beautiful it was.

“How we doing, Lieutenant?”

“Shields are holding,” replied Chief Engineer Enan Lanali from the ops station on the opposite side of the cockpit. “Stabilisers are compensating as quickly as they can, but there’s just too much chop for them.”

“Are you’re sensors showing anything?”

“Just the other shuttle, sir.”

He knew had she seen anything then he would be the first to hear about it, but it felt like something captains should keep on top of.

“I’m coming up empty here as well,” he told her. He tapped the communications array. “Issan to N’dira. Anything on your end?”

“No sensor contacts and nothing to report, unless you count what the Doctor’s grumbling,” replied Lieutenant j.g. D’Kehra, his Security Chief (and occasional sex partner) from the other type-seven shuttle.

He smiled, just imagining Doctor Sioll Baxx being unhappy about their current predicament and more than willing to voice his opinion to the other five on the shuttle. For the mission he’d decided on twelve crewmen, including a security team of four, another four engineers, Baxx and a medic, Chief Ramirez and himself. He had considered giving his First Officer, Clarissa DuMont, the mission he had decided to take it upon himself—missing the work of away missions. Though she still seemed reluctant to be in command, she had led successfully operations before, even commanded the ship for three days, when he’d been called into a series of meetings, without any problems.

“Understood, stay sharp. Issan out.”

The cockpit fell quiet as the two officers focused on the job at hand. As they ventured deeper into the Badlands, he grew more aware of the time the Orion was spending sitting so close to the border. The old girl wasn’t rated for combat and, aside from her assignment to Minos Korva, had managed to stay out of the fighting. Her one foray into an active battlefield had shown how ill-prepared she was, so he had left orders for them to immediately withdraw should they detect any hostiles approaching their position.

As the minutes stretched out with nothing appearing on sensors and only a vague heading they’d been able to approximate from the weak signal, which had long since fallen silent, Reihyn had to question at what point did they give up the search. When did he put the lives of his crew ahead of the refugees? They could search the area for days and still never find the transport, even if they passed within twenty thousand kilometres of it—the storm fronts were just so intense they could obscure anything, including the N’dira which was only two hundred meters to port. It was a decision he didn’t want to make, but it was a possibility he may face. For all they knew the Cardassian patrol ship was still searching for them and could’ve finished the job they’d started, or could stumble onto the two shuttles.

He shook his head, trying to clear such negative thoughts from it. Focus on finding these people and then getting home. For a second he paused in his scrutiny of the sensors to wonder when he’d started to call the Orion ‘home’. It was short lasted.

Issan, I think we have something,” stated D’Kehra over the comm. “The Chief thinks he’s got them ahead, bearing two-one-one-mark-zero-five-seven.”

He ran his own scan along the heading and was greeted with a sensor contact. From what the instruments could determine it was made of Federation standard materials, whilst the profile looked to be that of a Sydney-Class transport—a type of ship popular among civilian agencies.

“Confirmed. Adjust heading, increase to full impulse.”

“Aye sir. ETA will be in six minutes.”

His navigation system showed the same estimate, barring any new plasma wakes or eddies that might hamper their progress. He breathed a sigh of relief, as he wouldn’t have to make the call that ended their search. The first hard job was complete, the second fast approaching.

He glanced at Lanali, about to ask her to open a channel to the transport but stopped when he saw a frown on her usually smooth brow. “Problem Enan?”

She looked up at him then back at her display. “I thought I saw a faint metallic signature to stern, sir. It barely registered for less than a second and vanished again.”

He checked his own screen but saw nothing. “It could have been a piece of debris caught in a field or a sensor ghost.”

Still looking at the sensors the Rigellian-Tomal nodded. “You’re right, sir,” she sounded unconvinced though.

“Try to contact the transport, tell them we’ll be there in a few minutes. I’ll keep an eye open, see if anything else shows up.”

“Aye sir.”

* * * * *

The old transport, from the same era as the Orion herself, looked as though she’d been through the wars. Her hull was a mishmash of panels, mostly pale blue, grey and white, though there were a few that looked as though they belonged on a Klingon ship, whilst other sections of her hull were scorched and blackened. Light came from only a few viewports in the forward section, whilst her nacelles and impulse engines were both dark.

Studying the ship, Chief Petty Officer Diego Ramirez felt something wasn’t right. All the civilian organisations he knew of took pride in their ships, keeping them looking as pristine. Whilst the blast patterns could’ve come from the battle with the patrol ship, her hull being in such a state made no sense. There was the possibility that it was privately owned, and that whoever the owner was had taken it upon themselves to rescue refugees—not unheard of, there were two Federation citizens who used their abundant resources to help the civilians caught in the middle of the war. However, they were known to be even more particular about the condition of their ships. Something about this ship reminded him of when he’d been in the Maquis, where they made do with whatever they could scavenge from junkyards.

“Lieutenant,” he began, looking at D’Kehra who manned the conn.

“I feel it too, Chief,” she told him, not taking her eyes off the old ship.

Just as she reached for the comm panel to speak with the Captain in the other shuttle, every sensor in the cockpit sounded.

“Two sensor contacts aft,” he yelled, routing as much power as he could to shields, as he looked at the telemetry that appeared. “Peregrine-Class fighters. It’s an ambush.”

“Break position and scatter!” Reihyn ordered over the comm.

“Hang on!” she called out, slamming the type-seven shuttle hard to port and pushing the engines beyond their tolerance. “Charge phasers.”

“Powering weapons,” he confirmed. He didn’t know just what luck a pair of type-IV phaser banks would have on a Starfleet fighter, but if this was the way he was going out he’d make sure he went down firing.

The communications array burst to life. “Starfleet shuttles please hold your position!” a desperate voice called out, the interference so bad he couldn’t tell if it was male or female. “Our ships mean you no harm. We sent them out to make sure you arrived in one piece. Please help us.”

He and D’Kehra shared a suspicious look as the Captain responded.

“This is Captain Reihyn of the U.S.S. Orion. Have your fighters stand down and maybe we can discuss lending you aid.”

Ramirez kept their weapons hot but ran a scan of the two attack craft, ships he’d piloted with the Maquis, so knew what he was looking for. “Sir, neither ship has active weapon signatures or targeting scanners.”

The voice from the transport said as much. “Had we wanted to do you harm, they would’ve had ample opportunity. Please, we don’t want any violence. We have severe damage and injured civilians onboard, we need your help.”

Doctor Baxx stepped into the cockpit from the aft compartment, his wrinkled face scowling as he listened to the open channel.

“For all I know you are carrying dozens of armed soldiers. What assurances do I have that my people will be safe?”

“I know you’re hardly likely to believe anything I tell you, but you have my word that your people will be safe onboard.”

“Standby,” the Captain replied, before a secure link was opened up between both shuttles. “I take it you heard that. Options?”

“Do we have any?” Baxx spoke up. “These people in need of aid and we came out here to help.”

“Captain,” Ramirez added on quickly, “our sensors do show one hundred and seventy-four life-signs aboard, all from Federation worlds. Regardless of who they are or what they did, they were once UFP citizens.”

“So you think they’re Maquis as well.”

“Yes sir. Going by the state of that ship, and the presence of the Peregrine’s.”

“Could this be a trap? Is this a tactic they’ve used?”

“Not in my experience, sir. But things may have changed a lot over the last eighteen months, given all they’ve been through.”

“Understood. We’ll proceed with caution, everyone going in armed—no exceptions!” he added before Baxx could voice his objections.

“Understood,” replied D’Kehra.

The secure channel closed and the broadband signal opened up again. “We will come aboard and assess your situation.”

“Thank you, Captain. Our shuttlebay is ready to receive you.”

* * * * *

Despite the objections of Crewman Anders and Ytog, both of whom held type-III phaser rifles, Reihyn stepped out of the shuttles forward entryway first. He kept his phaser holstered but his hand on the cool handle, just in case. From the other shuttle D’Kehra and Patel were the first on the deck, rifles raised, with Baxx close behind.

The two fighters had come in with them and landed either side, whilst the cavernous bay held two more. As the external doors slowly closed, interior ones opened and two human-looking women entered the bay, heading straight for them. Neither were armed.

As the rest of the shuttle teams emerged, the ventral hatches on the two fighters opened and the pilots climbed out. Reihyn noticed D’Kehra taking in all the details and lower the muzzle of her rifle slightly. He knew she was quick to assess situations, picking out potential dangers almost instantly, so if she sensed no immediate threat it was a good bet they were safe.

He approached the two women, both in simple coveralls and looking exhausted. He assumed one to be the ship’s captain, though couldn’t say which one with any certainty. They stopped a few meters away.

“I’m Captain Reihyn.”

“Captain Greta Kruger,” said the shorter of the two, her blonde hair cut short. “My Ops Manager, Ledana Xelis.” Given the deep black of her eyes, he suspected she was a Betazoid.

“Diego?” a voice called from the portside. He looked over at the other shuttle crew, in particular his Chief of the Boat.

One of the fighter pilots approached the group, a look of amazement on his rugged, scared face. It paled in comparison to the expression on Ramirez’s. At first it looked as though he’d seen a ghost, before relief and joy overcame the shock, stepping closer.

“Cam!”

The two men embraced, all sense of decorum or duty forgotten about. It was a moment that Reihyn wasn’t going to deny them, no doubt the Chief had suspected that all the people he’d known from his days with the Maquis were victims of the Jem’Hadar’s purge of the DMZ. In this war, there had been so few moments of happiness that it was something to be enjoyed for as long as it lasted.

He turned back to Kruger and Xelis, who were also watching the reunion. The civilian Captain raised an eyebrow at him. “I doubt there are many Starfleeters who would welcome Maquis ‘terrorists’ so warmly.”

“I doubt there are many Starfleeters out there who used to be in the Maquis.”

“I’m afraid your man may not find any others be knows—of all those onboard only eight were actively involved with the Maquis. The rest are all former colonists, non-combatants whose homes were obliterated by the Dominion. They have nothing left, nowhere to go. We need to get to safety. Can you help?”

Her words were delivered with such sincerity, such intensity that he couldn’t help but feel misty-eyed. If what Kruger was saying was true, these people were true innocents whose only involvement with the war had been being in the wrong place at the wrong time.

He looked at Lanali, who was also affected by what they’d been told. “Lieutenant, I want a full diagnosis of their systems, ASAP. Find out what’s wrong and see if there’s anything we can do to effect repairs.”

“Consider it done, sir.”

“Ledana will show you to engineering.”

“Come with me,” the Betazoid added.

Lanali called her team together, then followed Xelis out of the hangar. Baxx stepped forward, obviously itching to get to work.

“You said something about injured?”

Kruger nodded then looked at the other civilians in the bay. “Th’Vrey, show the medics to sickbay.”

“You got it. This way,” the Andorian pilot called. Baxx and K3 Brown headed after him, both eager to get to work and help out wherever they could.

“Lieutenant,” he addressed the last officer he had. “Have your team get the supplies off-loaded and distributed to the refugees.”

“Aye sir,” D’Kehra replied, slinging her rifle over her shoulder, before leading the security guards back onto the shuttles.

He looked back at Kruger. “We took what we had space for, it isn’t a lot but what we have is yours.”

“Thank you, Captain,” she said, tears welling in her eyes.

“Captain.” Ramirez by his side, trying to look composed once again, though failing miserably. “Orders sir?”

He gave the Chief a faint smile. “Give D’Kehra a hand with the supplies.”

“You too, Barrett,” Kruger said to the fighter jockey.

“Aye sir,” Ramirez replied as Barrett simply nodded.

As they headed for the shuttle, with the other two pilots, he refocused on the civilian captain again. “Why don’t we head to the bridge, I can contact the Orion and can begin preparations for evacuation—should it be needed.”

* * * * *

Lanali whistled as the panel was opened up and she saw just what they were dealing with. Their diagnostics of the transport, which was called Hope, had shown that the battle with the Cardassians had shorted out several EPS junctures throughout the ship. It was this damage that had crippled them, unfortunately it looked far worse than she’d expected.

Today marked the one year anniversary she’d set foot on the Orion, given the daunting task to get the ship to minimal operational standards in just two weeks before she was due to be launched. Though the old Constellation-Class ship hadn’t seen a day of active duty in over fifty years, her troublesome EPS network looked like a child’s ten-piece jigsaw puzzle compared to mess that the transport was in. So many lines were blown or melted, that running a bypass would be impossible—but their own engineer’s had known that already, or else they could’ve gotten the ship to at least limping. This was definitely a far bigger job than she’d expected.

She wished Alek had been there to help, he was better than she was with EPS manifolds. The thought of Lieutenant Jachim brought with it the familiar tingling in her pointed ears and warming of her cheeks. He wasn’t with them, so it fell to her. Luckily, Crewman Torlin was adept with the painstaking work, so they would focus on that, whilst Ellis and de Haan would see to the damage caused to the impulse driver coils. Warp was out of the question, but there was a slim chance for their sublight engines—that way they could at least get clear of the plasma storms. But the ship would have to be evacuated then, as the structural integrity would never hold up to a warp tow, even at just factor one.

“I know, it’s pretty messed up, isn’t it,” admitted the Hope’s Chief Engineer, a Kasheetan called Lokk-Huu. “You Fleeters must be used to something far newer and shinier.”

She smiled at her counterpart. “Actually, the Orion is about the same age as the Hope. She was reactivated a year ago to bolster the ranks.”

“Really?”

“Yup, so I’m used to ships with a few thousand light-years on the clock. Not to mention having to repair and rewire systems these old with little in the way of spares.”

Lokk-Huu’s lips peeled back, revealing his sharp incisors—the closest his species could get to a smile, even if it was pretty unnerving. “Then I’m really glad to have you onboard, Lieutenant.”

She returned his smile then looked at her engineer. “We’ll start here, head down to the next deck and get stuck in. Remember this is just a patch job, it doesn’t have to be pretty—”

“So long as it works,” the Tiburonian finished for her. “That is the motto we live by, Lieutenant.”

* * * * *

As battered and bruised as the transport was on the outside, the inside was far worse. Everywhere Ramirez went there were panels from the bulkhead, deck and ceiling missing, evidence of fires, smashed monitors, ripped out fittings, how she kept flying was a mystery. As bad as the ship was, the people were worse. They had all been through hell though only a handful were managing to cope, many of the others looked so distraught by what they’d gone through they barely seemed to register the world around them. It was even more heart-wrenching when he looked at the children, all too thin and frail, many were obviously ill, some cried quietly whilst others were out of tears.

He handed the last ration pack he had to a young Trill man, who protectively clutched an infant, not yet a year old, to his chest. He viewed the box of emergency foodstuffs with suspicion—or rather the uniform of the man handing it to him—before reaching out a shaking hand and accepting it, without uttering a word. Ramirez left him alone, heading down the dimly-lit corridor. Before leaving the Orion, they’d managed to load up only a few dozen of the packs, as well as essential medical supplies and some gear the engineering team might’ve needed, none of it was enough to meet their needs, but with limited space on the shuttles they couldn’t take all they needed—not unless they’d used all four of their shuttlecraft, though even then that would barely be adequate.

Rounding a corner he saw Cameron Barrett approach empty-handed, his own batch of supplies already handed out. After eighteen months without seeing the man, he looked so different. His grey eyes were haunted by his experiences since they’d last been together, now surrounded by dark rings; he’d lost weight, making his face gaunt, whilst his typically smooth jaw bristled with stubble; and then there was the scar. It looked recent; starting at his right temple it cut along his high cheekbone then down to his jaw and ended on his chin. It only highlighted just how bad things were with the refugees, since a few minutes with a dermal regenerator would’ve healed the injury without a mark.

As they met halfway down the darkened hallway, before Ramirez could even say a word, Cam slammed him up against the bulkhead so hard his head banged against the metal. The next thing Ramirez knew their lips were locked in a familiar struggle, one he had long-since thought he’d never know again. The kiss was brief but intense, more so than they had ever been—and they had always been very passionate together.

When they parted he found himself looking into Cameron’s eyes and, for the briefest moment, they were just as he remembered them. It was fleeting though, as they soon clouded over with darker memories.

“You have no idea how hard I had to fight the urge to do that in the hangar,” Cam said softly.

“Me too,” he admitted. He paused a moment, before he continued. “I...I thought you were dead.”

Cam traced the scar. “Almost was a few times, but we kept going. I’d thought you’d be in prison, not back in uniform.”

He reached up and gingerly touched the harsh wound on Cam’s face. “I was up until this time last year, then they gave me the choice: the penal settlement on New Zealand or serve onboard the Orion. I chose the latter. She may not be a combat ship, but at least it’s better than rotting away in some cell. Though the first time I set foot onboard I did question my choice.”

“It looks like you’ve done well, Diego. They seem like an interesting crew.”

That made him chuckle. “That’s definitely one way of putting it. What about the others?”

Cam shook his head. “They didn’t make it. Most were killed on the second day of the Dominion attacks. I made it out with Gahr, Robert, Kejj and Motoko. Gahr and Robert were killed on recon a month later, Kejj died after she went hand-to-hand with three Jem’Hadar six months after that. Motoko gave her life saving the Hope three weeks ago.”

He felt tears in his eyes. “I’m sorry. I failed you all. I should’ve been here with you.”

“If you were I don’t think I’d be here now,” Cam told him. “I’ve only kept going as hard as I have because you were alive. I was fighting to survive so that one day we could have this.”

Ramirez shed his first tears since being captured by Starfleet, wrapping his arms around the man who meant more to him that any other ever had or ever would.

* * * * *
 
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Even after two and a half days onboard, Reihyn couldn’t get used to the bridge layout. It was so disjointed and mismatched that he wondered it had always been like that, or it was a result of whatever repairs had been made to the Hope over the years. One thing was abundantly clear however, what crew there was aboard were on the verge of exhaustion. All but a handful of those onboard were civilians, farmers, shop keepers, artisans—ordinary folk who’d tried to make a new life for themselves on another world. Most hadn’t been on ships in many years, with some being new to space travel.

Just as Kruger had said there were only eight with direct ties to the Maquis, they had come onboard in the fighters and acted as the transports defenders, whilst the ship’s actual operational crew was less than twenty—though they had never been trained for being in a warzone. He had to admire their guts, taking it upon themselves to try and save as many people as they could when the Jem’Hadar had first entered the former Demilitarised Zone, only to pay for that act of compassion by being hunted down by the Dominion.

It was amazing the ship had survived this long, though not all of the refugees had been so lucky. The 178 currently onboard was almost half of what they’d started out with, the damage they’d sustained and attacks they’d faced had taken the lives of one hundred and sixty civilians. Now that he was involved, he would make damn sure that all those who were left survived to make it back to Federation space.

Fortunately, they were almost ready to get underway. Lanali and her crew, along with the transports engineers had managed to get the ship partially repaired, enough to get them out of the Badlands and rendezvous with the Orion, so the ship could be evacuated and the refugees taken to safety. They needed to run stress tests of the impulse engines as well as a diagnostic of the EPS network, to ensure that everything was functioning as it was meant too, once that was complete they would be ready. Another couple of hours and they’d be underway.

An alarm from ops sent a chill down his spine.

He, Kruger and Xelis had been working in the alcove where the engineering station was located, running checks on systems from the bridge and working on a new patch for the navigational array. They stopped and looked at each other, before the Betazoid darted over to her station, on an elevated section behind the Captain’s chair. It took her a moment to look over the sensors, but as she did her already ashen face paled further.

“There’s a Hideki-Class ship just entering sensor range.”

Kruger stepped forward. “Any indication they’ve seen us?”

“I don’t think—” the sensors screeched again, cutting her off. “They’re altering heading, on a direct intercept course.”

“Scheisse,” Kruger muttered heading for her post as Reihyn hurried for the vacant helm. “Sound general quarters.” The ship had been at red alert ever since they had arrived, and he suspected it was rare they weren’t. As soon as she sat she tapped the intercom. “All hands, the patrol vessel has returned. Secure yourselves. Pilots to your fighters.”

He slipped into the ship’s flight control, took a moment to familiarise himself with the configuration then tapped his combadge. “Lanali, we need impulse engines now.”

“We’re working on it, Captain. How long have we got?”

“They’ll be in weapons range in four minutes.”

“We’ll give you all she’s got, sir.”

“You always do, Lieutenant. Reihyn out.” He looked over his shoulder. “What’re our shields like?”

“They’re holding at twenty-eight percent,” Xelis told him.

“When we last faced off against them, they were at seventy-two and we still got thrashed,” added Kruger.

He slowly turned back to the viewscreen, which had shifted to show the approaching hostile ship. Though the smallest and weakest class the Cardassians had, it was still too much for the nearly-crippled Hope.

* * * * *

Ramirez had been in the engineering section, seeing to a poor patch job someone had made to a hull breach the transport had taken in their last encounter with the patrol ship, when the alert sounded. As soon as he heard the call for the pilots, he dropped his tools and ran for the hangar, knowing that Cam was about to head out and face off against the Cardies.

He couldn’t let him, not so soon after finding him again.

The corridors were empty, all of the passengers hidden away either in their quarters or emergency shelters, waiting for what was coming and what it might bring, as such he managed to bolt through the ship, opting for the vertical Jefferies tubes as not all the turbolifts were fully operational. All he could think of was stopping Cam from going out there, there had to be someone else who could do it, as well as cursing the Cardassians more than he ever had before. Those cold-hearted bastards had already taken so much from him; they weren’t taking this as well.

He reached the hangar, chest burning, heart pounding, in time to see Cameron heading for one of the fighters, a towering Andorian by his side.

“Cam!” he barked, halting the man on the spot. As he turned to look at him, Ramirez sprinted over to him.

“Diego?”

“Don’t go out there, please!”

“I have to, there’s no one else who knows these fighters. We have to keep the Spoon-Heads away from the ship, give them time to get out of here. It’s what we do.”

Ramirez’s heart was torn. He knew what Cam was saying was right, that they had to keep all the others safe, but doing so could well mean his death. Even though he had returned to active duty and was wearing the uniform, knew all the dogma about the needs of the many and sacrifice, for that moment he wanted to throw it all out the airlock and be selfish.

He reached up and rested his hand on Cam’s scarred cheek. “Big damn hero,” he said softly, looking into his world’s familiar-but-different eyes. “I’m coming with you.”

“But—” Cam began.

Ramirez didn’t let him finish, he walked passed him and headed for the fighter. “Hey, th’Vrey! I’ve got this one.”

The Andorian looked at him, saw the expression on his face and knew better than to argue. “Sure thing, Chief.”

He looked back at Cam, who was staring at him in disbelief. “It’s time to save the day. What you waiting for?”

* * * * *

“Sir,” D’Kehra said stepping onto the bridge. He looked back at the statuesque Orion. “I’ve got my people martialling the civilians, getting them ready for evac—should that be needed.”

“Good, let’s hope it doesn’t come to that.”

She then looked at Kruger, standing a little stiffer. “Lieutenant D’Kehra reporting for duty, sir. Where would you like me?”

“If you’re any use with power management, we’ll need someone manually handling the shield output. With so many power conduits out we’re having trouble getting anything more into the generators and maintaining what little we do have.”

“I’m on it,” she replied and took the engineering console.

The Hope’s helmsman had made it to the bridge, but he was even younger than Ensign Mecell and had been a trainee pilot before the transport had been caught behind enemy lines, so he was more than happy to pass up the responsibility to Reihyn, a Starfleet trained flight controller who had a vast experience of combat operations to draw upon.

“Weapons range in forty seconds,” he announced, watching the orange circle getting closer with every second on the tactical display. They were still waiting on impulse, but as much as he wanted to call down and ask for an update, he knew Lanali was doing all she could.

“All fighters report ready for launch,” stated Xelis.

“Open the hangar.”

Reihyn watched the display as four blue triangles appeared from their position. Immediately they assumed formation and headed towards the Hideki. Their manoeuvres were flawless; the kind of formation flying that could only be perfected over time. Though he had never agreed with the Maquis’ tactics or methodology, he could understand their motive—they were protecting their homes, family and friends, all just causes to take up arms. Today, he was thankful to have them there. They weren’t in uniform, nor were all of them Starfleet-trained, but they would fight harder and longer than any pilot he knew; this was what they did.

Just as he was about to report that had twenty seconds until the Hideki could fire, the impulse power indicator changed from red to green and the display showed him they had fifty percent power available. Thank you, Enan, he silently praised as he called out, “Impulse online.”

Behind him Krueger’s seat squeaked as she sat forward. “Engage!”

He hit the control before she’d formed the first syllable. The transports sublight engine came to life and moved them forward, though she was limited to half impulse, not enough to outrun the patrol ship, she was no longer a stationary target—which improved their odds significantly. Until evasives were needed, he kept them on a straight course, heading for the Orion.

“I’ve managed to get shields up to thirty-three percent,” D’Kehra reported. “I don’t think I can get much more though.”

“It’s better than what we had, so I’ll take it.”

“Captain, the fighters have engaged the Hideki,” Xelis said solemnly.

“Switch to aft view.”

The viewscreen shifted to show the engagement they were leaving behind, the one they all hoped would keep them safe. He knew that they fighters only have five micro-torpedoes between them, whilst one had phaser coils made from spare parts, and all their shield generators were taxed well beyond their specs. But that was their first and only line of defence, a group that many would deem terrorists.

The Peregrines entered the battle firing, their orange and red phaser beams clearly visible against the purple-pink plasma. The Hideki took the hits before unleashing from her own forward bank. The fighters scattered, shooting off in different directions, a couple firing as the zipped past the patrol ship. The Cardassian vessel may not have been as powerful as a Galor, but she was far nimbler. She veered off course, after one of the fighters, unleashing all she had.

From the bridge they could only watch as the fighter was hit once, twice. The third shot saw her shields collapse and a fourth reduced the fighter to little more than scrap. The other three swept in behind the patrol ship and retaliated for the loss of their wingmate. Just then the image began to distort as the screen filled with static.

“The plasma field is interfering with visual sensors.”

The last thing they saw was another fighter taking a hit, before the image was nothing but grey snow.

* * * * *

“Shields holding, just,” Ramirez said from the weapons station.

“Hang on!” stated Cam before pitching them into a spiral. The Hideki’s next shot missed. Before she could get off another the other fighters slammed her with the full force of their phasers. Cam broke out of the spiral and heading in the opposite direction.

Ramirez kept his finger in place above the trigger, ready to unleash their arsenal at a moment’s notice. The familiar rush of adrenaline through is system keeping him alert and focused, pushing the sense of danger and the fear to the side. All the times he had flown such missions against the Cardies, he had felt the same way. He had never gone into battle with any false pretences, he understood that every time he went out he might never return, he knew that all it took was one shot and that would be the end, but that didn’t stop him. Not then and not now.

“I’m hit!” one of the others cried over the secure comlink.

“Gorman, pull back. Fretz, come at them for below, we’ll hit them from the top.”

“My stabilisers are out, navigation not responding,” stated Gorman.

“Hit your engine control!”

They swung into view and could see the damaged fighter being targeted by the Hideki. He quickly assessed the enemy, found the best target and opened fire with their full forward phasers. Four ruby beams slammed into where the Hideki bridge was located, though the shields took the full force, he kept firing. Hammering the specific location with everything they had. It got their attention, as they veered off, trying to protect their command centre.

With the other fighter out of immediate danger, they needed to get back into the fight, quickly. “Gorman,” Ramirez said into the link, “do a complete shutdown of your navcomp, reset your dampeners, then reboot. That should get you back online.”

“Copy that.”

Cam nodded. “Fretz, we have to keep them occupied until Gorman’s operational again.”

“Understood,” she replied. “I was thinking Kester Prime.”

“Good call. Form up; we’ll approach on heading two-seven-mark-one-oh-eight.”

He looked at the pilot. “Care to fill me in?”

“Put everything into forward shields. We’re going to ram our torpedoes down their throats.”

“Both of them?”

“Just one, we may need the other.”

Ramirez nodded and input the commands. He diverted everything they had for the front screens and readied one of their two last torpedoes. On the sensors Fretz’s ship came up on their dorsal side, a mirror image of themselves, heading down the same course, straight for the Hideki at two thirds impulse. The patrol ship turned towards them, ignoring the stricken fighter for the moment, focusing on those that were still a threat.

Its forward disruptor emitter glowed as they charged up another barrage. Even with their forward shields reinforced they wouldn’t be able to stand more than a couple of direct hits, but if they timed it perfectly then they wouldn’t take any.

Just as the sensors chirped, Cam yelled, “Fire!”

The two fighters fired torpedoes, breaking formation and running. They launched just as the shields around the Hideki’s forward weapons bank were lowered, permitting them to fire. The two small projectiles ploughed into the unshielded disruptor port, already fully charged and just moments from discharging. The combination of their own energy and the matter/antimatter payload of the torpedoes was devastating. By the time they swung around it was over and the entire forward section of the small Cardassian ship was twisted, blackened and open to space.

“Nicely done, Fretz. Alright let’s—”

Gorman’s fighter exploded just as another Hideki emerged from a dense pocket of volatile gases and plasma, smashed through the remains of the fighter she’d just destroyed, then opened fire on the two remaining Peregrines.

“Frak!” gasped Cam as he pulled back on the controls, trying to evade the incoming disruptor fire.

Ramirez watched the sensors as Fretz took a hit on her port wing, sheering it off and throwing the craft into a spin. The Hideki closed in on the crippled ship. He and Cam looked at one another, knowing that this was it. Fate really was a bitch. After eighteen months thinking Cam was dead, to meet up in the middle of the Badlands, only to have it all taken from them.

With the gentlest touch of the controls, Cameron sent the fighter charging towards the second patrol ship as Ramirez opened fired.

* * * * *

Captain log, stardate: 52201.2.

The
Hope emerged from the Badlands an hour ago and all aboard have been transported to the Orion. The Cardassian patrol ship never did catch up to us, which means that the fighters did their duty.

It was only when we left the plasma field that I learnt that Chief Ramirez was onboard one of those ships. We have yet to hear from them. The
Orion is maintaining her position as we scan for any signs of them. All is quiet along the border.

End log.


* * * * *

Reihyn knew he was hovering, but he couldn’t help it. Jachim had detected a metallic signature from within the plasma field—not that that meant much, with how much debris there swirling around inside the storm fronts. Given that they couldn't tell exactly what it might be, he’d ordered them to red alert and had D’Kehra standing ready on their weapons, ready to target whatever may appear. If anything did.

“Anything?” he finally asked.

“Nothing yet, sir,” his Polish ops manager told him, not looking away from the sensors.

“What if we ran a tachyon scan, wouldn’t that increase sensor resolution? The Orion does have a tachyon array.”

“I’m running tachyon sweeps, sir, but even they are being distorted. This stretch of the Badlands is noted for being even worse than the rest for sensor resolution.”

“Damn,” he muttered under his breath.

He knew he was being a nuisance, being more of a hindrance than a help, but since losing five of his crew when the Kukri had been destroyed he had vowed to do everything in his power to keep from losing another. Up until today he’d never faced losing another man; though this would be different, Ramirez would be classed as missing in action not killed, and that would always gnaw at him.

Just as he turned to head back to his seat, to silently stew, a rapid beeping stopped him. Hopeful, he looked at Jachim.

“I’ve got a sensor contact,” he announced. “It’s a fighter, Peregrine-Class. She’s taken heavy damage, missing her port wing and nacelle, multiple hull micro-fractures, minimal power readings.”

“Life-signs?”

“I can’t tell; radiation from the nacelle is obscuring sensors and transporters.”

He spun to DuMont. “Lock on a tractor beam and tow them into the main hangar, alert the bay for radiation protocol and get a medteam there, on the double.”

“Aye sir,” she replied as he was already heading for the lift.

“Bridge is yours, Commander.”

* * * * *
 
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“Tough little ship,” commented Corpsman McGuire.

“Of course, it’s Starfleet-made,” Baxx stated, waiting on tenterhooks. They couldn’t get near the ship until it was given the all clear by the shuttlebay crew, who were suited for radiation and running it through a thorough scrubbing process.

Back in sickbay, he’s left K3 Brown getting the radiation unit prepped, whilst the rest of his staff were still seeing to the refugees, giving them full examinations, treating the minor injuries, handing out food and water. Their injured had already filled the main ward, though none of them were too serious, at least nothing life threatening. Most would be easily treated onboard, though some would be transferred to the hospital on whatever station they docked at.

As anxious as Baxx was however, the Captain was worse and doing a poor job of hiding it. They were all worried about Ramirez; after all he was one of the crew, their resident jack-of-all-trades. The thought of losing him was tough to face.

After what seemed like a lifetime the hangar crew gave the fighter the all clear. The reaction was immediate, as the medical team and Captain Reihyn burst in and hurried straight over. Throughout his many years, Baxx had always been a runner, enjoying the clarity it brought when he hit the natural high, even after he retired he kept up with it so was still very spry—which saw him leading the pack towards the fighter.

As soon as he got to the fuselage, he ducked underneath and headed for the ventral access ladder. He climbed up into the fighter’s aft compartment, which was the same width as the cramped cockpit and a little less than two meters in length, long enough for the average human, Bajoran or Trill to lie down in, though not much use for anything. There were two prone bodies slumped in the corner, two humans, one male and one female.

As he ran a scan McGuire poked his head up through the hatch, a concerned look on his face.

“The male is alive, though barely.” His tricorder chirped again. “I’ve got two other life-signs. Tell Gregson and Vaand to get him out and up to sickbay, then help me in the cockpit.”

He stepped up to the doors and with a little muscle managed to push them open, whilst behind him the two corpsmen and medtech awkwardly tried to get the unconscious human lifted out of the fighter. As the doors parted and he got his first inside, he took note of a Bolian female slumped in one chair then he saw the last life-sign.

Petty Officer Second Class Ross McGuire had just finished helping to get the survivor (who already had a nasty scar on his face) out from the aft compartment, when he heard giddy laughter come from inside the fighter. He poked his head back in and saw Baxx in the cockpit. “Doctor?” he asked carefully, climbing up to see what had happened to the elder surgeon.

“He’s here. Tell the Captain, he’ll be alright.”

* * * * *

Even groggy and half-asleep as he came round, Ramirez could feel the familiar tremor of the Orion at warp. With his eyes closed he heard the beeping of medical monitors and the hushed clicks and chirps of K3 Brown—never had the Nasat’s native noises sounded so reassuring. They’d made it back.

Cam! The voice from the back of his hazy mind cut through whatever drug he’d been given and he opened his eyes. He was staring up at the ceiling, his vision took a few moments to adjust to the brightness, then turned his head to the left and saw Fretz. She had a regen-pad on the side of her face and her eyes were still closed, but her breathing was steady. He turned to the right and saw one of the patients from the transport.

He pushed his head and chest up off the biobed. “Cam?” he croaked, wincing in pain that radiated from across his chest.

K3 appeared by his side, standing on the special stool she needed to reach patients, her antennae quivering, large, black eyes focused solely on him as she set a pair of pincer on his shoulders and directed him back down.

“Chief, please don’t get up, you need rest.”

He fixed the brown pillbug-like corpsman with a hard look. “Where is he? Did he make it?”

“Diego,” a familiar voice said from the foot of the bed.

He felt tears as he looked down and saw Cameron Barrett approach his bed, left arm encased in an ortho-fuser. He came up on the opposite side of K3 and took his hand, the relief on his face clear for all to see.

The Nasat looked from one man to the other. “I’ll fetch Doctor Baxx,” she excused herself, knowing enough about human expressions to know when to give them a moment alone.

“I thought…” he began, unable to finish the thought let alone the sentence.

“You had me worried there too, good thing you’ve got such a thick skull.”

He let out a chuckle which hurt his ribcage. “Well, you always did say I had great bone structure.”

Cam grinned.

“Chief,” Baxx said as he approached the biobed. “How are you doing?”

“It only hurts when I laugh, or talk, or breath.”

The wrinkled Bolian let out a humourless laugh. “Well twelve cracked ribs and a punctured lung will do that for you. You’ll need another treatment or two, just to make sure the bone it knitting together, as well as deep-tissue regeneration for muscles and the rest, but the lung has been repaired and the rest of your injuries weren’t as serious. A week in sickbay and you’ll be good as new.”

“Thanks Doc.”

“The Captain wants to speak with you, if you’re up for it. But just say the work and I’ll kick him out.”

Knowing Baxx, he would probably, literally, kick the Rigellian out of sickbay. As entertaining a notion as that was, he thought he best not—he was in enough trouble as it was. He nodded. “I might as well get this over with now.”

The CMO beckoned for the Captain, who appeared a moment later, his tattooed face unreadable—he had definitely gotten better at that over the last year. He thanked Baxx, who left them alone.

“Sir, I can explain,” he began.

Reihyn held up a hand, silencing him. “Chief, next time you decide to run off on some half-cocked notion of being a hero; it’d be nice to be told about it before you go AWOL.”

“Yes sir. I’m sorry; everything was just so chaotic there just wasn’t any time.”

“You do realise you’ve violated two conditions of your release: being absent without leave and fraternising with other known Maquis.”

“Yes sir,” he said, well aware that either one was enough to see his commission rescinded and him being sent back to a penal colony—one not as nice as New Zealand.

“Have anything you want added to the official record?”

“No sir. I would do it all again.”

The Captain nodded. “I thought you’d say that.” He paused for a long moment, looking deep in thought, before refocusing on him again. “I guess it’s a good thing there were no known Maquis on the transport, and since communications were down at the time the Hideki came for us then there was no way you could’ve reached me.”

Ramirez stared at the younger man in disbelief. Reihyn was willing to risk an official reprimand, which would most likely see him demoted, for him. He couldn’t have that; he was the Captain after all.

“But sir—”

He set a hand on Ramirez’s shoulder. “Chief, nothing would be served by having you locked up again. You saved my life and everyone else's on the transport out there and,” he looked up at Barrett, who’d been watching the back and forth in silence, “I think all the people from the Hope have been through enough. However they came to be aboard, they deserve some peace now.”

“Thank you, Captain,” said Cam, voice wavering.

Reihyn gave him a nod then looked back at Ramirez. “Rest up, Chief, you’re going to need it.”

“Aye sir.”

He glanced back at Cam. “Mr Barrett, it was a pleasure to meet you. Thank you for all you did for those people.”

“It was the least I could do.”

Reihyn left the two of them alone again. He gazed up at Cam, who was looking stunned. “Your Captain is certainly different. I like him.”

“So do I.” He reached up and cupped Cam’s scarred cheek. In that moment he couldn’t remember ever feeling so elated, drained and content in his life.

* * * * *

END
 
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Cheers, was beginning to wonder if this one wasn't up to par with the others.

When I first thought up the original idea of finding a ship of refugees it was very different. The ship was an actual Maquis one that had been on the run, carrying out guerrilla attacks, Cam was a character called Gray and just a friend who had saved a family member of Ramirez's, who together tried to convince him to join them again, and the end would've been different, with the focus more on Reihyn's fate.

It's amazing how stories change and evolve as you actually start to write, though all of these started out with only just a one or two line idea. Working on Part 7 now, but it's proving harder to write as I know what is coming.
 
I missed this one somehow, again a really good one....some might think Ramirez and Cam happening to find each other is a bit contrived, but we've all had those "Small World" moments in our lives
 
Another good story in the series, Bry. Too bad there wasn't a border cutter around to lend a hand. They thrive in the badlands. ;) Guess the Border Service folk were rather busy, there being a war and all.
Well I wasn't wanting to show the Orion up by having the professionals there, demonstrating how it should be done :lol:
 
So we get to focus on Ramirez in this outing and get a couple of surprises while we're at it, too. And then in best Star Wars tradition, an all-or-nothing, edge of your seat, dogfight with the Cardassians.

Liked the ending here as well, keeping up the suspense of if Ramirez survived worked well, keeping me wondering until the very end.
 
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