“The Seventh Day”
A Star Trek story of the Mirror Universe
By Alex Matthews
===========================================
For over two hundred years, the Terran Empire cast a dark and foreboding shadow over the Alpha and Beta Quadrants. Their iron grip stretched out from Earth Prime to encompass all that fell within their path to glory and conquest. Billions were indoctrinated and made client-citizens, millions were resettled to make way for their masters, and thousands were enslaved or killed on a whim.
Because Terrans, born of fire and fight, had clawed their way back from the brink of extinction and were determined to prove they would bow down to no one.
This all changed in 2257, with the disappearance and suspected death of Emperor Phillippa, Mother of the Fatherland, Overlord of Vulcan, Dominus of Qo'noS, and Regina Andor. Her sudden loss, along with the majority of her Imperial Council lead to a power vacuum within the Royal Court. Many undeserving low-ranking members of the nobility were determined to make their mark and secure their legacy by taking her place.
The Imperial Starfleet marched on, claiming more planets in the name of the Empire, as in-fighting among the Lords and Viscounts grew bloodier. For two decades, the Throne remained largely empty, with no one individual proving their strength for longer than several weeks before a usurper would take their place.
Until Spock, Grand Admiral and Commander-in-Chief of the Imperial Starfleet, the first alien to ever hold such rank and position, took the throne for himself. No longer would the power and might of the Empire lay in the hands of a chosen, nepotistic few. Now, the Empire would be led by one who had served on the front lines, who had led troops into battle and emerged victorious time and again.
It should have been the beginning of a golden new age for the Terran Empire.
But Emperor Spock had other plans…
Under his rule, change began to happen within the Empire as a whole. No longer would they seek out new worlds and new civilizations to conquer them. Instead, they would focus on the worlds already under their banner, renouncing the old ways of the Empire to make way for the Terran Republic. Freedom and self-determination would be the key principles in this new way forward, as hundreds of formerly-subjugated worlds found themselves out from under the heel of their oppressors.
Words of peace and hope became the death knell of the Terran rule.
In 2295, the Republic, weakened due to the unilateral disarmament implemented by Spock’s government, faced the wrath of the newly-ratified Klingon-Cardassian Alliance. With the cloaking technology of the Klingon Empire combined with the growing might and accelerated ship-building of the Cardassian Union, the Terran Republic’s influence drastically waned as their forces were beaten back.
Terra Nova, Deneva, and the Vega Colonies were blasted to ruins, decimating the populations, damaging ecospheres, and leaving burning rubble behind for the survivors to claw their way out of. The human settlements in the Rigel and Alpha Centauri systems were wiped out, allowing the native races within to reclaim their territory, under the watchful eyes of their new Alliance Intendants. Finally, in the early part of the 24th century, Mars and Earth, the last holdouts of a desperate Imperial remnant, fell to the Alliance onslaught
The beginning of an ever darker chapter for the Alpha and Beta Quadrant commenced.
Planets gifted a brief glimpse of hope and independence had that reality dashed before it even had a chance to grow. Worlds like Vulcan, Andor, Tellar, Betazed, and Delta IV, which had enjoyed at least some autonomy from Terran rule, now bowed in servitude to the might of the Alliance. Others, victimized and brutalized such as Bajor and Alpha Centauri, celebrated as their former masters became something less than second-class citizens in their former dominion, taking every opportunity that presented itself to inflict vengeance.
Some races, such as the Ferengi and Orions, managed to come out of the Collapse relatively unscathed and free to continue to operate as they had been. But the wary eyes of the Alliance were on them at all times, curtailing certain lucrative business operations.
As for the Terrans that survived the Great Purge, they were broken and beaten. Defeated so thoroughly that they became the laughingstock of two quadrants. Something to be pitied. Ignored. Useful only as property. The ‘alien trash of the Galaxy’, as one Cardassian legate once said.
But even in the darkest moments, hope can still come from within. Because Terrans just don’t know when to quit. Those who could, banded together, offering resistance, and causing strife and chaos where they could. Others worked to help their enslaved brothers and sisters to find freedom and relative safety. Working in the shadows and staying out of sight…
This wasn’t always successful.
===========================================
The nightmare started with fire.
On a subliminal, lucid, and aware level, Sara Frost knew she was safe. That she was asleep in her cot, in the private confines of her cabin. But that didn’t stop her from feeling the flames against her skin. The hairs on her arm were scorched off, her skin blistering green from the sheer heat, thanks to her mother’s Vulcan blood.
The sense-memory of this day was something that would haunt her every day until she died, Sara knew. The day she lost everything that mattered. Her home. Her livelihood. Her husband.
As if conjured by the thought, her beloved Leo crawled towards her through the flames. Savage burns marred his lined face, his bright eyes watering from the fumes as their home on Coridan Prime went up in smoke. An architectural antique from bygone years that they’d spent seven years restoring, burning around them.
“We have to go,” he told her, just as he had on the fateful day, as he helped her stand on unsteady legs. “We don’t have much time before we lose power.”
As he pulled her by the hand, dodging the flames that ate through the dining room and led her into their private study, Sara knew what was coming. What she desperately didn’t want to witness again. But try as she might, she couldn’t force words out of her mouth, couldn’t catch her breath thanks to the smoke, couldn’t hear Leo’s words as a shrill beeping grew louder and louder–
–until it pulled Sara from the grip of her tumultuous slumber, and she opened bleary eyes with confusion as she awoke.
It took a moment for the brain to catch up with the body, as she blinked in momentary confusion. Where..? Her quarters, that’s where she was, on her ship, the Kyi’i. Just another day on the calendar. Four long years since she’d fled the Alliance attack on her home, surviving by the skin of her teeth.
The source of the ever-increasing volume of the noise that had woke her was the antiquated desktop computer across from the room. Shaking off the last vestiges of the cobwebs in her brain, Sara rolled off the bed, crossing the small compartment in a single stride to activate it. Doing her damnedest to dispel the latent feelings of heartache and despair that the nightmare of the worst day of her life left her with.
The old monitor, a scavenged remnant of Imperial tech long outdated but still functional and useful, slowly routed the incoming transmission to her. Sara took that time to repeat her favorite mantra from ‘The Teachings of Surak’, the forbidden lore that her mother had taught her. Not just to help embrace her Vulcan heritage, but to also acknowledge and work with the fraught emotions that came from both her human and Vulcan biology. To not just purge them as it was believed Surak had taught, but to control them, to understand them. Accept them.
Something that was oh-so-much easier in theory than it was in practice.
As she finished, the square screen finally came to life with a series of encrypted pictograms displayed. Their appearance immediately made Sara sit straighter. This comms channel was coming to her directly, through a private subspace frequency, which meant only one thing - someone had a job for her and her crew.
Decrypting the pictograms was an easy task, as was pinging the sender of the message once Sara had made sure to double-secure her side of the transmission. After a few more moments of each of their systems confirming and re-checking their status, the screen image shifted to a familiar and only slightly-unwelcome sight.
Jaicyn Norvin smiled in that smarmy, arrogant way that Sara loathed, [Catch you at a bad time, Sara?]
Sara kept her expression cool and collected, as she replied “No more than usual.” She ignored his characteristic leer as he enjoyed the sight of her in nothing but her undergarments. Refusing to allow him to get a rise out of her.
Dealing with the lecherous El-Aurian was one of the many arduous tasks she’d learned to tolerate as part of everyday life, as much as she seethed privately that she needed to stay in his good books. As the most preeminent black market broker across six sectors, dealing with him was a necessary evil, if someone wanted to keep the latinum coming.
Knowing that he wouldn’t have contacted her with the coded message without good reason, Sara got straight to the point, “What’s the job?”
As Norvin began outlining things, Sara began taking notes, calling up intel on the area of space he was sending them to, and putting a call up to Bhrash in the cockpit to alter course. Multi-tasking was simple enough, and it felt good to have something else to focus on besides the nightmare.
In the first few months after she’d fled Coridan, as she dealt with the survivors’ guilt and was plagued by the ‘what-ifs’, the nightmare had been a constant companion. Even a delta-wave inducer wouldn’t free her from its grip. Only with contemplative and self-guided therapeutic meditation had she been able to move past those feelings. Putting them to rest, knowing that they would always be with her, but with time, would ease. Slowly, she had returned to a semblance of a normal sleep pattern, not having had a nightmare for over 2 years.
So… why had it come back now?
* * *
A Star Trek story of the Mirror Universe
By Alex Matthews
===========================================
For over two hundred years, the Terran Empire cast a dark and foreboding shadow over the Alpha and Beta Quadrants. Their iron grip stretched out from Earth Prime to encompass all that fell within their path to glory and conquest. Billions were indoctrinated and made client-citizens, millions were resettled to make way for their masters, and thousands were enslaved or killed on a whim.
Because Terrans, born of fire and fight, had clawed their way back from the brink of extinction and were determined to prove they would bow down to no one.
This all changed in 2257, with the disappearance and suspected death of Emperor Phillippa, Mother of the Fatherland, Overlord of Vulcan, Dominus of Qo'noS, and Regina Andor. Her sudden loss, along with the majority of her Imperial Council lead to a power vacuum within the Royal Court. Many undeserving low-ranking members of the nobility were determined to make their mark and secure their legacy by taking her place.
The Imperial Starfleet marched on, claiming more planets in the name of the Empire, as in-fighting among the Lords and Viscounts grew bloodier. For two decades, the Throne remained largely empty, with no one individual proving their strength for longer than several weeks before a usurper would take their place.
Until Spock, Grand Admiral and Commander-in-Chief of the Imperial Starfleet, the first alien to ever hold such rank and position, took the throne for himself. No longer would the power and might of the Empire lay in the hands of a chosen, nepotistic few. Now, the Empire would be led by one who had served on the front lines, who had led troops into battle and emerged victorious time and again.
It should have been the beginning of a golden new age for the Terran Empire.
But Emperor Spock had other plans…
Under his rule, change began to happen within the Empire as a whole. No longer would they seek out new worlds and new civilizations to conquer them. Instead, they would focus on the worlds already under their banner, renouncing the old ways of the Empire to make way for the Terran Republic. Freedom and self-determination would be the key principles in this new way forward, as hundreds of formerly-subjugated worlds found themselves out from under the heel of their oppressors.
Words of peace and hope became the death knell of the Terran rule.
In 2295, the Republic, weakened due to the unilateral disarmament implemented by Spock’s government, faced the wrath of the newly-ratified Klingon-Cardassian Alliance. With the cloaking technology of the Klingon Empire combined with the growing might and accelerated ship-building of the Cardassian Union, the Terran Republic’s influence drastically waned as their forces were beaten back.
Terra Nova, Deneva, and the Vega Colonies were blasted to ruins, decimating the populations, damaging ecospheres, and leaving burning rubble behind for the survivors to claw their way out of. The human settlements in the Rigel and Alpha Centauri systems were wiped out, allowing the native races within to reclaim their territory, under the watchful eyes of their new Alliance Intendants. Finally, in the early part of the 24th century, Mars and Earth, the last holdouts of a desperate Imperial remnant, fell to the Alliance onslaught
The beginning of an ever darker chapter for the Alpha and Beta Quadrant commenced.
Planets gifted a brief glimpse of hope and independence had that reality dashed before it even had a chance to grow. Worlds like Vulcan, Andor, Tellar, Betazed, and Delta IV, which had enjoyed at least some autonomy from Terran rule, now bowed in servitude to the might of the Alliance. Others, victimized and brutalized such as Bajor and Alpha Centauri, celebrated as their former masters became something less than second-class citizens in their former dominion, taking every opportunity that presented itself to inflict vengeance.
Some races, such as the Ferengi and Orions, managed to come out of the Collapse relatively unscathed and free to continue to operate as they had been. But the wary eyes of the Alliance were on them at all times, curtailing certain lucrative business operations.
As for the Terrans that survived the Great Purge, they were broken and beaten. Defeated so thoroughly that they became the laughingstock of two quadrants. Something to be pitied. Ignored. Useful only as property. The ‘alien trash of the Galaxy’, as one Cardassian legate once said.
But even in the darkest moments, hope can still come from within. Because Terrans just don’t know when to quit. Those who could, banded together, offering resistance, and causing strife and chaos where they could. Others worked to help their enslaved brothers and sisters to find freedom and relative safety. Working in the shadows and staying out of sight…
This wasn’t always successful.
===========================================
The nightmare started with fire.
On a subliminal, lucid, and aware level, Sara Frost knew she was safe. That she was asleep in her cot, in the private confines of her cabin. But that didn’t stop her from feeling the flames against her skin. The hairs on her arm were scorched off, her skin blistering green from the sheer heat, thanks to her mother’s Vulcan blood.
The sense-memory of this day was something that would haunt her every day until she died, Sara knew. The day she lost everything that mattered. Her home. Her livelihood. Her husband.
As if conjured by the thought, her beloved Leo crawled towards her through the flames. Savage burns marred his lined face, his bright eyes watering from the fumes as their home on Coridan Prime went up in smoke. An architectural antique from bygone years that they’d spent seven years restoring, burning around them.
“We have to go,” he told her, just as he had on the fateful day, as he helped her stand on unsteady legs. “We don’t have much time before we lose power.”
As he pulled her by the hand, dodging the flames that ate through the dining room and led her into their private study, Sara knew what was coming. What she desperately didn’t want to witness again. But try as she might, she couldn’t force words out of her mouth, couldn’t catch her breath thanks to the smoke, couldn’t hear Leo’s words as a shrill beeping grew louder and louder–
–until it pulled Sara from the grip of her tumultuous slumber, and she opened bleary eyes with confusion as she awoke.
It took a moment for the brain to catch up with the body, as she blinked in momentary confusion. Where..? Her quarters, that’s where she was, on her ship, the Kyi’i. Just another day on the calendar. Four long years since she’d fled the Alliance attack on her home, surviving by the skin of her teeth.
The source of the ever-increasing volume of the noise that had woke her was the antiquated desktop computer across from the room. Shaking off the last vestiges of the cobwebs in her brain, Sara rolled off the bed, crossing the small compartment in a single stride to activate it. Doing her damnedest to dispel the latent feelings of heartache and despair that the nightmare of the worst day of her life left her with.
The old monitor, a scavenged remnant of Imperial tech long outdated but still functional and useful, slowly routed the incoming transmission to her. Sara took that time to repeat her favorite mantra from ‘The Teachings of Surak’, the forbidden lore that her mother had taught her. Not just to help embrace her Vulcan heritage, but to also acknowledge and work with the fraught emotions that came from both her human and Vulcan biology. To not just purge them as it was believed Surak had taught, but to control them, to understand them. Accept them.
Something that was oh-so-much easier in theory than it was in practice.
As she finished, the square screen finally came to life with a series of encrypted pictograms displayed. Their appearance immediately made Sara sit straighter. This comms channel was coming to her directly, through a private subspace frequency, which meant only one thing - someone had a job for her and her crew.
Decrypting the pictograms was an easy task, as was pinging the sender of the message once Sara had made sure to double-secure her side of the transmission. After a few more moments of each of their systems confirming and re-checking their status, the screen image shifted to a familiar and only slightly-unwelcome sight.
Jaicyn Norvin smiled in that smarmy, arrogant way that Sara loathed, [Catch you at a bad time, Sara?]
Sara kept her expression cool and collected, as she replied “No more than usual.” She ignored his characteristic leer as he enjoyed the sight of her in nothing but her undergarments. Refusing to allow him to get a rise out of her.
Dealing with the lecherous El-Aurian was one of the many arduous tasks she’d learned to tolerate as part of everyday life, as much as she seethed privately that she needed to stay in his good books. As the most preeminent black market broker across six sectors, dealing with him was a necessary evil, if someone wanted to keep the latinum coming.
Knowing that he wouldn’t have contacted her with the coded message without good reason, Sara got straight to the point, “What’s the job?”
As Norvin began outlining things, Sara began taking notes, calling up intel on the area of space he was sending them to, and putting a call up to Bhrash in the cockpit to alter course. Multi-tasking was simple enough, and it felt good to have something else to focus on besides the nightmare.
In the first few months after she’d fled Coridan, as she dealt with the survivors’ guilt and was plagued by the ‘what-ifs’, the nightmare had been a constant companion. Even a delta-wave inducer wouldn’t free her from its grip. Only with contemplative and self-guided therapeutic meditation had she been able to move past those feelings. Putting them to rest, knowing that they would always be with her, but with time, would ease. Slowly, she had returned to a semblance of a normal sleep pattern, not having had a nightmare for over 2 years.
So… why had it come back now?
* * *