This is not the original draft of Act III. I apologize for not giving raw material, but the original Act III went in a direction that totally threw me for a loop and I realized if I didn't constrain myself, there would be a Part IV to Damn the Torpedoes!
I'm hoping the second scene doesn't come off as contrived...
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Act III
News of the facility's impending destruction put Ariel and Saleb in with the first wave of troops. Ariel carried a menacing-looking rifle that she called a "Type-3." Saleb wielded a smaller "Type-2." He wondered how small the "Type-1" was, and Ariel shook her head at him.
"Trust me, you want people to know you're carrying," she said as she checked her weapon and stepped onto the transporter platform. "You ready to go?"
Saleb honestly wasn't. Like him, everyone wore a copy of the Starfleet insignia on their chest. Each one prepared to provide the starship's computer system with information on their general health, as well as a position within the facility in case of the need for emergency beamout. The likelihood of that increased exponentially unless he could find and disable the system controlling the power buildup in the facility's reactor core. "I suppose I am, yes," he said, after she fixed him with a glare.
He stepped up onto the transporter pad, grateful that the only Kasui fighting on the facility would be the ones on his side. The Tristnor did not trust the "lower" races with a research project of this magnitude. There would only be Tristnor security forces to deal with, and even then, they would rather rely on their technology than brute strength. Maybe they'd make it out of there in one piece, after all.
Ariel slapped the side of her rifle and let it rest underneath her bosom as the strap went taught over her shoulder. "Fine, stick to me, then. You get me to where we need to be and Bertas' guys will handle the rest."
There was no way in hell he would ever leave her side. "I'll try."
Just before the transporter beam carried them off, she shot him a look. "Don't try. Do!"
The transporter room disappeared and the familiar Tristnor design of the research facility came into view through the blue, shimmering light of the transporter beam. Ariel had her rifle out and ready in a crouch while Saleb felt the fear coursing through every part of his body.
He brought out his phaser, watching at the tip of it seemed to tremble as he pointed it in any direction. He realized it was his grip that caused the phaser's aim to waver so quickly and he tried to steady it as much as he could. It was one thing to talk and think about the situation; quite another to actually be there.
They watched as many of the facility's crew seemed to be panicking. The reptilian-looking humanoids ran to their destinations.
Saleb recognized the multi-colored strip of Tristnor security upon one of them. "W-We need to move quickly!" he shouted to Ariel. "Down that corridor then to the right."
Ariel nodded. She gestured to the platoon leader that transported with them. "Bitras! We're going to need you to clear the corridor from here to the first intersection. Saleb's going to need a lot of breathing room."
Bitras growled, "Understood. First squad, with me. Second squad, bring up the rear. Third squad, guard Mister Saleb." The Kasui troops moved accordingly and they were left with six burly men with huge weapons out of the nineteen that transported with them.
"Lead the way, Saleb!" shouted Ariel. "Can we disable the destruct?"
They ran down the corridor as the Kasui fired clear ahead of them. "I don't know until I can gain access to a terminal," replied Saleb. He pointed as they turned the corner. "Third hatch on the left hand side will be the main testing laboratory!"
"Bitras!" Ariel called.
"I heard! First squad, kick in the door!"
The door was kicked in, Kasui-style. Meaning there was little to no door left when they opened fire. Saleb moved inside after the first squad cleared the room.
Several dead Tristnor lay around, and he shivered at the sight. He worked with nearly all of them, and recognized the Alpha device sitting within the cradle. "They never even tried to save it," he muttered.
"Is that a little odd?" asked Ariel, keeping her weapon pointed toward the exit, along with the rest of the Kasui.
"I'm checking it out."
"How much time do we have?"
Saleb immediately jumped onto an active terminal. The facility's self-destruct sequence was activated on a countdown of nearly eleven minutes, of which close to six were left. He accessed the main computer and requested a complete shutdown of the system, to no avail. "The command processor is not accepting my requests. I think the head scientist might have locked out the processor to prevent anyone from doing what we're trying to do. Do you want me to see if I can kill the main system?"
Ariel shook her head. "Let's grab the device and get the fuck out of here!"
With a nod, he whipped out his Starfleet tricorder and scanned the Alpha device. "Wait," he said.
"Wait, what?" Ariel moved behind him, peering down at the tricorder over his shoulder.
"This is strange. The device shouldn't be giving me..." He looked up at it and then turned to Ariel with an expression of shock. "It's a fake!"
She didn't miss a beat, instead moving closer to him. "Where the hell is it?"
Saleb moved back to the terminal and checked the logs of the research team running the experiment. He had to do a regular expression search on all of the text-based logs before he found the transfer order. "You're not going to believe this..."
"What?" Ariel replied, annoyed. "Cut the dramatics!"
"It's already installed on the test ship. The frigate I told you about," he explained. "They launched it earlier today, ahead of schedule. Probably before we got into sensor range."
"Don't care. Where is it?"
"I'm looking for it."
"Hurry up."
Saleb sighed. She was almost as bad as Belkis. "I have the transponder frequency." He entered in a few more commands. "I'm transmitting it to your ship."
Ariel slapped her commbadge. "Elannis to Farragut."
"Farragut, here. Go ahead, Commander," replied Leone over the channel.
"Captain, the frequency we just transmitted is the transponder of the frigate that presently has the Alpha device."
Like Ariel, she was all business. "Good to know. Status?"
"Do you want us to attempt to find the Beta device?"
"Only if you have time. Wilson says you have less than five minutes to get the hell out of there."
"Indeed, we do, sir."
"Mister Saleb?"
He perked up. "Yes, Captain?"
"How far away is the Beta device from your present location?"
Saleb looked around. "Ordinarily, it would be in the lab, Captain. However, it seems my former colleagues may have absconded with it or secured it in a new location." He turned his attention back to the screen. "I'm attempting to locate it, now."
"The clock is ticking, Mister Saleb."
He sighed, shaking his head as he entered in the necessary commands to scan the new directory. "No one is more aware of that than I, sir."
"Three minutes, and then we're beaming the whole lot of you back," ordered Leone quickly. "Farragut, out."
Saleb opened his mouth to say something derogatory about the captain's impatience, but remembered the altercation in the corridor with Ariel and thought better of it. He placed a finger on his lip, trying to pass it off as a thoughtful look, instead. The scan against the computer's information ran in the background as he starting locking down the communications subsystem access.
Then, the information appeared. "It's three levels down. Straight down."
"Is anyone down there?"
He ran a quick lifeform scan. "It looks like half of the garrison is down there. It's a smaller lab, though. Two points of entrance."
Ariel shook her head. "Not to worry. It's why I brought extras of these," she said, pulling out another commbadge. She tapped it and called to the transporter room on the Farragut. "I need a site-to-site for this signal. Stand by to transport."
"Standing by, Commander."
She walked over to the large platoon leader and pulled two grenades from his belt. "I need to borrow these for a minute."
The Kasui eyed her. "You're giving them back?"
Ariel smirked and walked away. "Chief, lock onto the commbadge. Transport one weapon three levels below us, one meter to port. The other, one meter to starboard."
"Understood."
She activated both grenades, then set the commbadge upon them. "Chief, fire in the hole."
"Energizing."
Both grenades disappeared in a shimmering light. Shortly after, the facility rocked from an internal explosion. She pointed to him. "Scan again."
"No lifeforms, but then you might've destroyed the Beta device."
Ariel shrugged. "Better that they should be deprived of it." She looked up at the ceiling, "Chief, you still with this?"
"Yes, sir."
"Site-to-site, everyone in this room to the lab three levels down. Energize, when ready."
"I have you locked on, already, sir. Energizing."
Saleb's seated position fell out from under him when he rematerialized in the smoky lab. The fire alarm sounded off as he fell to the floor with his balance gone. He got to his feet, coughing through the acrid taste of the burning circuits and scarred flesh that hung within the secondary lab. His watering eyes searched around for the housing of the Beta device.
He found the signage for the device. "It should be right over there, within the reinforced storage..." The lid that secured it appeared to have been torn from its housing completely and the contents, whatever they might have been, were melted into unrecognizable pieces. "It's gone."
Ariel sniffed at it, peering into the box. "'Gone' as in it was taken?"
"'Gone' as in it was destroyed by your grenades."
"Huh." She looked at him. "And it was housed in this? You're sure?"
"Absolutely."
"That's too bad."
"I can only hope that Captain Leone agrees with your assessment."
She smiled sweetly at him. "No sense crying over spilt milk. Let's get back to the ship before this place goes up."
---- SCENE CHANGE ----
Within her ready room, Leone heaved a sigh immediately after listening to Ariel's report of the away mission. Farragut moved well beyond the range of the detonation blast, in pursuit of the transponder signal. "Well, it would have been nice to have that device, certainly... but I'm pleased that the Tristnor were deprived of it, instead."
Ariel turned to look at Saleb, giving him a smirk. "Told you."
Saleb rolled his eyes.
Leone ignored them both. "What about the research? Is it in any danger of being attempted again?"
"The protocol for destruct sequences is all aboard must perish, preventing the research from falling into the wrong hands," explained Saleb quickly. "The frigate was outside the protocol, but it's not likely they were able to communicate the problem to them. The frigate and the facility would have been observing radio silence with one another."
"Any vessels go along for observation?" asked Ariel.
"Maybe one or two shuttles..."
The captain leaned back in her chair. "What I wouldn't give for a cloaking device right now..."
Ariel nodded sympathetically.
"Fine. We're already on course for the transponder signal. If we approach them at high warp, we're going to tip our hand," said Leone, placing her right palm atop the armrest of the chair. "Mister Saleb, how long before they activate the device?"
"Thirty hours, give or take ten minutes," he replied.
Ariel wrinkled her nose. "Give or take?"
"We don't mark time the same way the Federation does."
"Ah."
Leone leaned forward, placing her elbows upon the desk. "We have around ten hours to track them down and get what we need, then get the hell-"
"Bridge to Captain," interrupted Wilson. "Sir, incoming transmission from the Kasui aboard the cruiser."
She touched the panel on the desk. "Patch them through in here, please, Wilson. Thank you."
The desktop terminal's small screen blinked once and the stern visage of Troopleader Bertas appeared. "Captain."
"Troopleader. How can we help you?"
"It is we who can help you, Captain." Bertas swung the visual input wildly until it settled upon a device connected to some sort of massive system.
Saleb nearly squealed. "It's the Alpha device!"
"We thought so, based on the description you provided us," said Bertas. "The frigate must have been a decoy."
"They must've thought we would destroy the ship... or they would destroy us," reasoned Saleb, his tone lessening under the startled looks of Leone and Ariel. "Either way, we wouldn't get the device."
Bertas grunted, "It is foolish thing to underestimate your opponent."
Saleb grinned. "In this case, I think it's more like they had a rather inflated sense of their strength."
"Be that as it may," interrupted Leone pointedly. She addressed the screen once more, "Troopleader, might we trade a tow back to the fortress for that handy little device of yours?"
"Agreed, Captain. After all, you've provided us with a first-hand look at Tristnor ship construction," boomed Bertas with a toothy smile. "This will bolster our side of the war handily."
"Of course." Leone's eyes looked to Ariel.
Ariel nodded, lifting herself out of her seat. "I'll alter course, sir." With that, she disappeared behind the ready room doors to take the conn.
"Creepy, how you two do that," noted Saleb, under his breath.
Leone smirked. "Troopleader, we should be en route to you now."
"Excellent. We await your arrival. Out." The screen cleared to show the Starfleet insignia before shutting down completely. The stars outside the deck-to-ceiling window moved as the ship made its turn back toward
Saleb asked, "Captain, now that you have the Alpha device, will you be returning to your Federation?"
"Of course."
"Might I appeal to you to delay your return?"
Leone tilted her head. "Why?"
He rose from his seat, placing his hands behind his back. "I know this isn't your war, Captain, but we could really use your assistance." She opened her mouth, but he raised a hand, "Now, please, let me finish."
Perturbed at being cut off, Leone pressed her lips together. "Very well."
"Thank you. As I said, your assistance would come during a time when our resources have run very low. Prior to the capture of the Tristnor vessel, the Kasui have been fending off the Tristnor advances through acts of sabotage and terrorism. Now that you're here, you've been able to provide them with the means of a frontal assault. You have successfully elevated the level of warfare against them. I'm sure that's beyond what your 'Prime Directive' entails, does it not?"
"The actions that I've taken, Mister Saleb, were in the best interests of my ship and crew. It was in our best interests to defend ourselves against an attacking ship," she replied, keeping her tone even. "It is not in the best interests to put this ship, with less than a quarter of its total crew, into a war we have nothing to do with."
Saleb's voice raised slowly with each word he spoke, "You have everything to do with it, Captain. Don't you see that, now? You're here. You've destroyed five of their ships! You're in the fight, with us."
"No," she said, shaking her head. "I've bent the Prime Directive enough... to last me more than a lifetime, I'm sure. I don't agree with your logic."
"Captain, I brought you here-"
"Against our will," interjected Leone, her tone making it clear that the conversation was beginning to wear her patience thin.
"Nevertheless-"
"Oh, look at that," she said, looking down at her wrist. "Time's up."
Saleb blinked. "I'm sorry?"
"No, I'm sorry. Look, I appreciate your... position. Under other circumstances, I might even agree with you. I have a duty to Starfleet and the Federation, but my first duty is to my ship," said the captain, rising to meet his gaze. "I realize that we might've blown a few doors open for you guys in the past few days, but at no time did I ever make an agreement that we would provide... quid pro quo."
"Quid pro what?"
"It's a Latin phrase; an old Earth language. It means, 'something-for-something.' In this case, the expectation that simply because we're here, doesn't mean we'll provide you with anything." Leone moved from behind her desk to look out her window. "Needless to say, if anything, I think you owe us for the inconvenience, but since we're going home, I think we'll call it even. You're dismissed."
Saleb approached her. In a pleading tone, he tried again, "But, Captain..."
She fixed him with an angry glare. "I've already extended you the courtesy of discussing my decision. Do not make me regret it."
Defeated, Saleb nodded silently. "I... apologize for pressing the matter without thinking."
Leone's expression softened slightly. "I appreciate that you had to try."
"Thank you, Captain."
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So, obviously, they're going home

But, again, I feel like this could've been better. Oh, well... that's what revisions are for!
-- ZC