Counter to Sandhurst’s expectations, Captain Ramirez had taken a more cautious stance than usual when confronted with such circumstances. She had determined that as the Mizarian colony was not affiliated with the Federation, there was no legal obligation to come to their aid. Instead, Ramirez had contacted Command and requested backup.
It was unheard of for her to be so reticent, a clear indication that Ramirez understood the stark danger this species represented. And so the crew watched and waited while the Mizarian planet was rendered uninhabitable by energies that Lieutenant Akbary and her science department struggled to fathom.
A hastily assembled taskforce had been ordered to track and confront the intruder vessel. The starships
Sasaoka,
Crazy Horse,
Hyperion, and
T’Kumbra had arrived at
Gibraltar’s location, with Captain Solok of
T’Kumbra assuming overall command of the strike group.
Four more ships made little difference. When their attack commenced, Starfleet weapons systems had next to no effect on the Skorrah, while theirs proved as lethal as they were unconventional. Federation technology was constrained by the physical laws of this universe, while the Skorrah appeared to have borrowed new laws from elsewhere.
The typical elements of a space battle were not to be found, at least not from the Skorrah. They fired no energy bolts, no collimated beams, no torpedoes nor mines. Their weapons failed to register on Starfleet sensors when employed, and the starships’ shields proved useless to prevent the ensuing carnage.
The destruction of all five vessels took only moments.
Within the charnel house that was
Gibraltar’s bridge, Sandhurst felt the agony of the Skorrah liquefaction field recede. Those horrors were suddenly and unexpectedly replaced by the calm, welcoming environs of the hillside bar in Vethlis at the Kathleron Anchorage ring where Sandhurst had first encountered the female time agent.
He was seated at the same patio table as before, only the person sitting across from him was unfamiliar.
“What… how?” he stammered.
The other man, a Human male by appearance, was nondescript in a way that might serve as the ultimate camouflage. He was dressed in a similarly unremarkable fashion, seeming to blend into the background as though possessing a personal cloaking field.
The man directed a comforting smile at Sandhurst. “Just take it easy. It always takes a moment for you to reorient yourself.”
Sandhurst looked around, taking note of the breathtaking balcony view of the descending cityscape below. “How did I get here?”
“We’ve been here the entire time,” the man answered patiently.
“I was just…” Sandhurst looked down, surprised to find himself in uniform. A touch of his collar confirmed the presence of the four rank pips of a captain.
“You were just aboard
Gibraltar, commanded by Captain Ramirez until your crew’s tragic demise at the hands of the Skorrah.”
Sandhurst nodded slowly in response, beginning to recall a host of other divergent realities that sat jumbled in his mind like pieces of a scattered puzzle. “How many?” he asked finally.
“This was iteration fifteen-thousand one-hundred and three,” the man replied.
Sandhurst’s eyes narrowed as he examined the plainer-than-plain individual across from him. “How and why is this happening?”
The man turned and raised a hand, gesturing to a servitor drone for drink service. The floating robotic waiter appeared with two glasses and the man took one for himself and handed one of them to Sandhurst. “You were caught in an existential crisis and were grappling with conflicting moral imperatives. You and what remained of your crew had cobbled together an interstellar coalition wherein the members sacrificed some of their colonies in order to keep the hibernating Skorrah fed, and thus, asleep. You’d hoped to maintain this fragile coalition as long as it took to find some way of defeating or imprisoning the Skorrah…”
“The starship.” Sandhurst interrupted, his muddled memory beginning to clear. He examined the glass, surprised to see it contained Romulan ale, his drink of choice in this particular establishment.
“Yes,” the man confirmed. “Starfleet managed to send a ship into the LMC, the presence of which threatened to upset the applecart, so to speak.”
“How does this explain you… explain
all this?” Sandhurst gestured expansively.
“In a critical moment, you wished… prayed, in point of fact, to know that you’d made the right choice. The
only choice. I heard this request, and seeing as I owed you a sizeable favor, I granted it.”
Sandhurst took a bracing draught from his glass, eyeing the man warily. “You say you owe me?”
The man settled back into his chair. “You rescued my brother from the clutches of a rather disagreeable individual. At the time you asked for something in return, but I was regretfully unable to assist you with your predicament.” He took a long sip from his glass and winced, coughing convulsively. “Tha—that’s stronger than I anticipated.”
Sandhurst blinked, finally putting the pieces together. “Q?”
The man nodded, eyes watering as he coughed into his fist. “Yep,” he croaked.
“You told me you couldn’t help me when we last met,” Sandhurst recalled. “You said there were new rules imposed by the Continuum, no interference. What’s changed?”
Q dabbed at his eyes with the corner of his napkin. “From my perspective that was eons ago, and change is a universal constant. Rules are revised, even in the Continuum. As it happens, I was going about settling up old debts when I perceived your entreaty.”
Another sip of ale presaged Sandhurst’s next question. “Settling debts? You going somewhere?”
Q nodded in reply. “Yes. We’ve been asked… well, to be more accurate we’ve been
told that we’ve worn out our welcome here and will be moving on.”
A skeptical expression met this admission. “The Continuum is being… what, tossed out on it’s ear? By whom?” Sandhurst inquired.
“The management,” Q answered cryptically. “We’ve hung around this plane of existence much longer than most do at our evolutionary stage, and it appears we’ve finally caused one too many messes. It didn’t help that one of us has been a bit too preoccupied with humanity and finally broke that last, fragile straw of someone else’s patience. So, onward and upward we go.”
Sandhurst cocked his head, having decided to accept that at face value. “Picard’s Q?”
A sober nod from Q confirmed it. “Yeah.
That guy. Doesn’t know when to quit. Real jackass.”
Sandhurst raised his glass in a toast, “In that case, safe journeys to you and your people,” he offered.
Q completed the toast with a clink of their glasses. “Thank you.”
Sandhurst finished his drink and set the glass aside. “I think… I think I remember all of these alternate realities,” he mused. “How is that possible?”
“I’ve made it possible for the time being. Once I return you to your own timeline, you’ll forget, of course. A Human mind, even one augmented by Amon genetic modifications, could never retain the memories from all of those disparate lives.”
“Then how does it benefit me to have experienced fifteen-thousand plus versions of these events? What was the point?”
“The point of it is that when I return you to your proper place and time, I will leave you with the absolute conviction that what you’ve chosen is the only path forward. You won’t know how you know that, but you will
know it in your bones.”
Sandhurst contemplated that in silence.
Q gestured towards him. “You’ve agonized whether giving yourself to the Amon to begin with was the right decision. So far as we’ve seen here, any other choice ends in the deaths of billions, possibly trillions. Take some solace in that.” He waved his hand in a casual gesture.
The man who was Donald Sandhurst looked down to see his enhanced Amon physiology restored. He was once again clad in the pseudo-Starfleet uniform that he had designed for the mixed crew compliment of the starship
Europa, no longer wholly a Starfleet vessel. The man he had been passed through him, ghost-like and then slipped away. Zeischt, Amon warrior, prophet and BattleMaster reasserted himself.
Zeischt released a long sigh as he considered this. “Well, that’s something.”
Q appraised him, smirking. “It should help to salve your conscience, since you’d already set things in motion that made open conflict with that starship probable.”
The Amon captain cocked his head. “Such as?”
“You left a log buoy in that nebula containing fictitious mission logs, years of them. You booby-trapped a century-old Federation starship caught in a dimensional schism with a malevolent psionic entity you’d captured after it started to prey on
Europa’s crew. You did these things, knowing that the entity would attack the other starship’s crew, weakening them if not destroying them outright.”
“Hedging my bets,” Zeischt replied coldly. “There’s too much at stake to allow the Federation’s over-inflated sense of morality to condemn entire galaxies to death.”
“Now there’s the man great swathes of the LMC have come to fear,” Q jibed, gesturing expansively at Zeischt. “The crew of that ship,
Valhalla, they’re good people, undeserving of what you’ve unleashed upon them.”
Zeischt looked away briefly, his eyes sweeping across the breathtaking night time vista of the great hoop of the Kathleron Anchorage. The day-side of the ring far above them cast an ethereal glow across the darkened sea and the cliffside city above it.
“Sandhurst couldn’t stop the Amon, and he couldn’t have stopped the Skorrah,” Zeischt said finally. “He wasn’t strong enough, or smart enough. I could only do these things by becoming Amon.”
Q held up his hands in a warding gesture. “You’re preaching to the choir, Captain. I know full well how lethal the Skorrah can be.”
“Given all that, the lives of a single Starfleet crew are a small price to pay in exchange for the lives of every sentient being in the Local Group.”
“There was a time when you would never have considered trading lives in such a fashion, regardless of the numbers involved.”
“I’m a betrayer,” Zeischt said heavily. “I betrayed Starfleet by joining the Amon. I betrayed the Amon and helped hunt them to extinction, violating my adopted peoples’ most sacred laws. And now I must betray Starfleet again by consigning that ship’s crew to death.”
Zeischt held his empty glass up to the light, admiring both it's solidity and fragility. He set it down and then took a last long look around. “I’d always wanted to visit this place. Never got the chance. Now I won’t remember having been here.”
Q looked at Zeischt appraisingly. “You’re ready, then?”
“I am,” he confirmed heavily. He met Q’s eyes and allowed himself a fractional smile. “Thank you for this. I’m surely undeserving of such consideration.”
Q shrugged. “I’m happy to have been able to repay my debt to you. It was fascinating to see all the possible iterations of what may have been, what may yet be.”
“Send me home,” Zeischt said, and the next instant it was done.
The semi-corporeal quasi-deity known as Q let out a bemused sigh. Soon, it would be time for him to go as well. For the first time in his experience he knew no more about what fate had in store for he and his people than did Zeischt. The idea both thrilled and terrified him.
He gestured to the servitor drone for a final drink. One more for the road not taken.
END