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Starship Reykjavík – Domum Soli

Ah, of course. And if the Romanii elites are in on the plan it would certainly explain their sudden interest in acquiring large cargo vessles to evacuate certain "citizens". Sick sons-of-bitches, indeed. And, I can't help wondering whether whatever force brought this magnificant planet into existence migth not take exception to mere mortals tampering with or destroying its handiwork. :shifty:
 
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Fantastic writing! So glad I got a chance to catch up! :)

You always raise the bar on the action and I love how you innately know how to adjust the pacing of the prose to hold my interest. Eager to see more!
 
* * *

Helvia had returned to his family’s old agricultural estate, but this time he had come alone. He had neither asked for nor received permission to come, and yet had beamed down just the same.

He walked along a dirt road towards the villa, lost in his thoughts, his mind struggling with just how unchanged the property was despite the passage of time.

Helvia was clothed in a button up shirt and dark slacks with casually sturdy footwear, his outfit unremarkable for a nobleman touring his property. He caught a few lingering looks from those at work with various tasks, but no one stopped him or attempted to engage him in conversation.

He finally reached the great house and wandered around its perimeter to find the old tobacco drying barn, one of the most hallowed buildings on the entire estate. He entered and waited a moment for his eyes to adjust to the dim light within and then wandered through the structure, observing the equipment, the stacks of tobacco leaves drying and the heady, nearly overpowering scent of the leaves themselves.

That is where Helvia finally found the old man. He sat at a table, painstakingly hand rolling individual cigars from dried, aged tobacco leaves. His was a wizened countenance, with deep wrinkles and character lines creasing his face. Tufts of white hair ringed the sides and back of his otherwise bald head, the crown of which had grown cluttered with liver spots, moles and a few stubborn hairs which refused to surrender to the ravages of time.

He was dressed in a simple shirt and shorts under a thready, stained toga of questionable provenance.

“It was rumored you had returned,” the old man said after observing Helvia for a long moment.

The giant sank to his knees before the venerable octogenarian. Helvia began a litany in whispered Latin, his head bowed reverently.

The old man’s voice was a melodious rasp, the timbre of many decades and countless trials. “Rise, young man. I am no god. I am not even a disciple any longer. I am only a faint echo of that glory.”

Helvia rose, but only to one knee. “I yearn to share the blessings of the church, its wisdom, and its divine reckoning, but I can find no sign of our people. I have used the wondrous technology of my starship to search them out, but the buildings are gone or were repurposed, and even our secret shrines are abandoned.”

The ancient man laughed hoarsely in response; the sound devoid of humor. His fingers still molded the wrapper leaves as though moving without conscious thought. “The faith has fallen, and nothing remains. After your family and others fled, the government turned fully against our church. They told the people that all the quakes and volcanoes and tidal waves were the wrath of the old gods in the face of our heresy. After a time, the people were so desperate to forestall further calamity that they began to listen.”

Helvia’s head came up, his eyes disbelieving.

“They refurbished the Temples of Jupiter, Juno, Minerva, Mars and others, and used those gods to bless their new anti-volcano weapons. Most of our faith turned their backs, and those who still clung to their beliefs were hunted down and put to the sword.”

“And the secret?” Helvia pressed.

“The secret endures,” the old man answered. “The chain in that respect remains unbroken.”

“And so, she may yet return,” Helvia murmured.

“Return to what?” the old man asked, pausing to add a completed cigar to the pile and gesturing broadly to the surroundings. “There will be little to return to. Despite the interventions of the government’s alien friends, the mountains continue to shake, the oceans boil, and the air fills with ash. She will step onto a blighted world, bereft of life.”

Helvia’s eyes probed the old man’s. “Even you? You have abandoned the faith?”

“Never,” he said heavily. “She will return, as promised, but there will be no one left to greet her.”

Tears streamed down Helvia’s face as the religion to which he had devoted his life appeared to vanish like a mirage in summer heat. The faith which had kept him alive in the arena, which had steeled his heart as a refugee, and had helped strengthen his resolve in his most difficult moments at Starfleet Academy was no more.

A man ducked through the doorway from outside, shielding his eyes to better make out the figures in the darkened room. “Cethegus, the local constabulary has arrived. I believe they seek your friend.”

The aged figure rose from his stool and came around the long table to coax Helvia to his feet and embrace him with surprisingly strong arms. Cethegus wiped Helvia’s tears away with gnarled, tobacco-stained fingers. “You and your family will soon be the last of us, my son. Perhaps she will return to your other Earth and spread her message there.”

“Strength, charity, mercy,” Helvia intoned by rote. “Her blessings upon us.”

“Upon us all,” Cethegus answered. “Go now, before they make an example of you.”

Helvia dug in his pocket and produced his communicator, flipping it open and requesting emergency beam-out. He held Cethegus’ gaze until he had grown insubstantial in the grip of the transporter beam.

Their church had crumbled, their faith fading into history like so many others before it, but their secret endured.

For decades the Romanii authorities had searched in vain for the man around which their faith had coalesced, blissfully unaware that this spiritual being, representative of a single, all-powerful deity, was actually a woman. The Children of the Son were in fact, the Children of the Mother.

* * *
 
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* * *

Trujillo stood impatiently outside the cabin door, conscious that she was due to begin the day’s negotiations with the Romanii in less than half an hour.

“Come!” Curzon called from inside, prompting the hatch to open.

Trujillo stepped through into the guest accommodations, a large cabin by Reykjavík’s standards, and well-appointed with tasteful yet intentionally species-neutral decoration.

Curzon was adjusting his robes, his tightly curled hair swept up into something approximating a pompadour and barely contained by the high collar of his sleeveless outer garment. He studied his reflection in a full-length mirror as he addressed Trujillo.

“Good morning, Commodore. I needed a few moments of your time in private before today’s proceedings begin.”

“I am at your disposal, Ambassador,” she replied, subsuming her irritation beneath a veneer of calm professionalism.

“I require that you be at your best today, Commodore, and of late your impatience with the Romanii has begun to affect our efforts here.”

She bit back a terse, knee-jerk response, and took a breath before replying. “In what way?”

“You’re taking their actions personally, Nandi,” he said, invoking their familiarity by using her given name. It was a time-honored diplomatic tactic, she knew, but an effective one.

“They’ve attacked and killed our people, lied to us repeatedly, and are actively working at cross-purposes to our goals,” Trujillo answered in a tightly controlled tone. “I tend to take such things personally.”

Curzon ran his fingers through his hair, turning his head to inspect his reflected visage before finally moving to face Trujillo. “We’re both Kronophiles, you and I, steeped in the culture and traditions of the Klingon people. I wonder, would you have taken such umbrage if we were facing a Klingon delegation down on the surface that had taken the same actions the Romanii have?”

Trujillo was caught flat-footed, the question igniting a long moment of introspection on her part.

A smile crept across Curzon’s features as he watched her struggle to formulate an answer. “Are you angered by their actions, or by the fact that humans are behaving as we might expect Klingons or Romulans to?”

Her confident expression crumbled, doubt flickering in her eyes. “I… don’t know,” she confessed.

“Yes, these people are human, but their culture is as alien to us as any other Starfleet has encountered. They have undergone significant social development and change in the past two millennia, making them profoundly different from the culture that was extinguished on your Earth with the fall of the Roman Empire and its successors.”

“You think that I’m judging them unfairly,” she assessed.

“Aren’t you?” Curzon countered. “Your single example of the Romanii thus far has been Lieutenant Helvia, a man who has adopted Federation culture and ethics after fleeing this world. Of course they’re going to fail to live up to his example, because his example is actually ours.”

Trujillo nodded reluctantly, feeling the anger and tension bubbling within her begin to fade. “I understand, and I appreciate your observations. I will endeavor to be more mindful of my prejudices in that respect.”

Curzon smiled. “Excellent. I am most gratified to hear that. It is important that you and I be in lockstep as we delve into this next stage of negotiations. Thanks to your science officer, we now know the true peril the Romanii face, and we have a better understanding of why they’re behaving so recklessly.”

Trujillo tilted her head, giving Curzon a curious look. “Why do I feel as if you don’t believe our having this knowledge is going to prompt them to accept our assistance?”

He nodded sagely in response. “Very good. You’re correct. In their minds, our knowing how vulnerable they truly are places them in an extremely dangerous position. This could prompt even more rash behavior on their part, most especially if their leadership represents a less unified front than it appears. Factionalism in such scenarios is a real and credible threat.”

She nodded slowly. “I’ll follow your lead.”

He gave her a broad, genuine smile. “This is one of the reasons I relish working with you, Nandi. Many people in such senior positions feel as though they already know all they need to in the art of diplomacy. A lesser leader might have balked at my earlier observations instead of engaging in true self-examination, leaving me with yet another problematic factor to worry about during the talks. In my experience, you have never been afraid to learn something new.”

“The day I stop learning is either the day I leave the service or the day they close my casket,” she said.

He gave his outer vest a tug to smooth the material. “Have you read this morning’s diplomatic brief?”

“Not yet,” she admitted. She had been too anxious this morning to focus on much of anything aside from making it to their appointment on time.

“The Romanii are piqued,” Curzon explained. “It appears someone beamed down to the surface from Reykjavík without permission, stayed briefly, and beamed back before the Romanii authorities could locate them.”

Trujillo frowned. “I wasn’t aware of this. What location?”

“Lieutenant Helvia’s former family holdings, where you escorted him previously.”

Her eyes narrowed. “I’ll have words with the lieutenant when we return. What kind of fallout can we expect from this?”

“They’ll use it for whatever leverage they can get by making it a bigger issue than it actually is. We should remain noncommittal, aside from promising to investigate the matter further.”

Finding himself presentable at last, Curzon turned for the door. “Shall we?”

* * *

The security team scheduled to accompany the diplomatic party was conducting last-minute equipment checks in the locker room adjacent to the transporter room.

Helvia slapped the energy magazine into the grip of his assault phaser pistol before re-checking its setting and holstering the weapon. He was still processing what he had learned on the surface, the revelation of the end of his faith and bitter news that he and a handful of family members, refugees within the Federation, might be the sum total of the religion’s remaining adherents.

“The reconnaissance sensors we left in the meeting room show no signs of any augmented humans at the meeting location, sir,” Ensign Elşad Ibragimova, a young human of Azerbaijani descent reported as he studied a data tablet.

“Thank you,” Helvia replied automatically as he tightened the fasteners on his armored security vest.

“Cethegus actually met the Mother, didn’t he?” Ibragimova asked.

Helvia’s thoughts had wandered so far afield that he found himself responding before his conscious mind could intervene.

“Yes, he is eldest among thos—” Helvia’s head snapped up and he stared daggers at the young man whose broad face radiated innocent interest. Despite his anger and confusion, Helvia was momentarily stunned into silence.

“I get nothing from him,” Ibragimova said, voice tinged with regret. “One would think that I could see her through his eyes, his memory, but no.” The youth shook his head sadly. “It is especially vexing.”

Helvia’s hand moved to grip the handle of his phaser, but he did not draw it from its holster. “What are you saying?”

Ibragimova tucked the data slate into a pouch slung over one shoulder by a strap. His expression was distant, as though mining his own memories. “Every time he was in her presence, every conversation… there is only a Mother-shaped hole there. Where her words should be, only silence remains. Cethegus still hears her voice, but I am denied such.”

Helvia glanced around quickly, realizing only the two of them remained in the locker room area. The larger man moved with startling speed, picking Ibragimova up and slamming him against a bank of lockers, the man’s feet dangling well above the floor.

“How do you know of Cethegus or the Mother?“ he seethed. To speak of the Mother instead of the Son was forbidden, a sacrilege punishable by death in his faith.

The younger security specialist seemed oddly unaffected by the danger he was in, with Helvia’s hands gripping the front of his security armor and pressing him firmly into the unyielding lockers. He answered conversationally, replying simply, “I tracked you to the old man so that I might finally see her. Truth be told it was my idea. You’d never have gone without permission on your own accord.”

Ibragimova raised a hand and Helvia found himself lowering the man to the floor without having meant to do so. He took an involuntary step back from him, no longer in control of his own limbs.

“I would give much to merely see this individual,” Ibragimova continued. “Do you have any idea how terribly, frighteningly marvelous it is to be denied a thing? I am as far beyond you as you are the single-celled organism that spawned your species. I am in nearly all respects a god by comparison, and yet this… this seemingly mortal being exists in some plane beyond my reckoning.”

“You cannot see her... the Mother?” Helvia asked, finding himself able to move again.

“I could pry Cethegus’ brain matter from his skull and turn it inside out in search of those memories, but it would be to no avail. I should be able to travel back to when she lived and study her, speak to her, even, but I cannot. It can't be possible, and yet it is.”

“Who are you?” Helvia asked, beginning to tremble.

“Call me a student of history,” Ibragimova said with a coy smile. “I have a consuming interest in all things Magna Roman, and your faith in particular. Would that I could spend but an instant in her presence, but it is impossible.” He stared at his raised hands in a gesture of helplessness, and then looked at Helvia with eyes that seemed far older than Ibragimova’s scant twenty-three years. “We once worshiped gods of our own. Perhaps this is what that felt like, eh?”

“Faith frees the spirit,” Helvia answered, “it does not bind it.”

“Sir?” Ibragimova said, looking confused.

Helvia examined the other man closely. “What gods did you worship?” he asked.

“I’m sorry, Lieutenant, I don’t understand,” Ibragimova pleaded. “Is this some kind of test?”

“And so it is,” Helvia confirmed, “and you have passed. Dismissed, Ensign.”

Ibragimova gathered his gear and beat a hasty exit into the transporter room, leaving a confused and unsettled Helvia behind.

* * *
 
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Well, that's quite unsettling... Some demi-devine consciousness is brain surfing Trujillo's crew. Not the first such critter I've encountered in your stories.

Finally, a moment with Curzon - one of the things I've really been waiting for in this story. Your depiction of the young K'mpec remains one of my favorite bits of ST fanfic and I've been really looking forward to see what you do with Curzon. Very nice mentor moment.

Thanks!! rbs
 
The scene between Curzon and Trujillo was beautifully written, and wonderfully developed and advanced both characters' personalities, and their relationship. If I may ask a process question, did you always intend Nandi to have this bias, or is it something you recognized had developed as you wrote the story? I ask because I think it was a brilliant character development, and I often find when I'm writing I am surprised where the characters take me.

And, of course, I loved the tantalizing peek at the entity who may have created this cruious world.
 
I have to add my praise to the chorus. The scene with Nandi and Curzon was incredibly well done. I appreciate how their dynamic contrasts with Curzon's eventual relationship with Sisko, especially given the mission's stakes. You've captured his younger, playful side brilliantly, offering a glimpse of the wise and cunning character we know from DS9. I always enjoy seeing canonically minor yet impactful characters in fanfic, and you've done a fantastic job here.
 
The scene between Curzon and Trujillo was beautifully written, and wonderfully developed and advanced both characters' personalities, and their relationship. If I may ask a process question, did you always intend Nandi to have this bias, or is it something you recognized had developed as you wrote the story?
It's funny you should ask. I kept crafting negotiations scenes where Trujillo was becoming increasingly hostile towards the Romanii and she really didn't want to cooperate with the direction I was taking the story in. I decided to explore that more, and ended up with the Curzon scene.
 
* * *

Commander Davula was waiting for Trujillo as the diplomatic team and their security escort exited the transporter room.

The XO immediately registered the tired eyes and fatigued expression Trujillo had allowed to settle onto her features now that they were no longer in the presence of the Romanii.

Davula fell into step behind Trujillo and Ambassador Dax as the rest of their entourage filed into the corridor behind them.

Curzon patted Trujillo on the shoulder and gave her an encouraging smile as he prepared to part ways down the adjoining corridor leading to his guest quarters. “Excellent work today, Commodore. We’re finally making real progress. I’ll see you for prep at oh-seven-hundred sharp.”

The security team split off heading for the armory to check in their weapons as the diplomatic team broke off toward their staterooms, leaving Trujillo and Davula standing in the turbolift alcove.

“Better day today, sir?” Davula inquired.

“Significantly,” Trujillo answered. “We finally broke the logjam with the Romanii. They acknowledged their Augment program and divulged that their augmented soldiers have basically gone rogue and aren’t responding to their military command.”

The turbolift arrived and the pair stepped aboard. Trujillo selected Deck Five and the ‘lift car set in motion.

Trujillo smiled wanly. “The ambassador took me to task this morning for being so prickly around the Romanii lately.”

Davula quirked a curious eyebrow. “He did? May I inquire how that conversation went?”

“Against my nature, I shut up and listened.” She issued a resigned sigh. “He was right.” The commodore shook her head, moving to unclasp her dress uniform tunic at the shoulder. “I’ve been a soldier for so damn long that only now I’ve risen to the admiralty am I having to learn the art of diplomacy. It’s… humbling.”

Davula appeared nonplussed, unprepared for the naked admission. “I’m unsure how to respond to that, sir.”

“You’ve had good role models on the diplomatic front until now, XO. Captain Sanjrani was one of the best. Stuck out there in deep space in a crippled ship, he moved heaven and earth to make friends and secure resources for repairs without giving up the one thing everyone seemed to want most, Federation weapons tech.”

A wistful smile alighted on Davula’s face. “I can’t dispute that, sir. It was a master’s level course in negotiation on an almost daily basis.”

The doors opened onto the requested deck and the pair stepped out.

“I’m having to take that course a little late in my career, but I’m doing my level best to keep up.”

“They didn’t teach courses on that at the academy when you attended, sir?” Davula asked, half in jest.

“Oh, they did, but I was on the Tactical track. Negotiations were something you engaged in just long enough to slip up behind someone and conk them on the head.”

Trujillo stepped into her quarters, gesturing for Davula to follow. “What’s the latest from orbit? Has Lieutenant Garrett discovered any more bizarre or horrific new facts about the planet or system?”

Davula smirked. “Not today, no.”

Trujillo mock grunted in dissatisfaction as she unbelted her uniform jacket, slipped out of it and draped it across the back of a chair. “Woman’s losing her touch,” she joked.

Trujillo moved to a cabinet, withdrawing a bottle and glanced over her shoulder. “Care for a splash, Commander?”

“I’m off duty as of fifteen minutes ago, sir, so yes. Thank you.”

Trujillo withdrew two glasses, pouring measures of Saurian brandy for both. “I’d warn you that it’s got a bite to it…”

Davula laughed good naturedly, knowing full well with her cartilaginous tongue and esophageal lining she could down a shot of hydrochloric acid without much more than a mild stomach ache.

They touched glasses with a soft clinking. “Salud,” Trujillo offered, followed by the customary Bolian expression from Davula’s home region, “Es’jen.”

They sipped at their drinks and Trujillo moved to slide behind her work desk, taking a seat and activating her computer terminal. Davula spotted two pieces of desktop decoration, one was a small holographic cube displaying a pair of what appeared to be Starfleet issued boots, one upright and the other tipped on its side. Next to this was a small sphere bracketed by twin blades atop a cube, the unmistakable Grankite Order of Tactics, Class of Excellence.

“Is that new, sir?” Davula asked, pointing to the small trophy.

“It is, yes,” Trujillo replied, clearly not wishing to discuss it further.

Trujillo continued skimming the ship’s log for the day. “What’s this about a Klingon ship approaching the planet?”

“It was a confirmed Klingon imperial vessel, K’tinga-class. It was cleared by Romanii Orbital Control and took up a geosynchronous orbit above their North America.”

“Purpose?”

“Trade, apparently.” Davula took another appreciative sip of her brandy. “The Klingons have a trade and cultural exchange relationship with the Comanche tribes of the New Lands.”

Trujillo looked at her for a long moment, her tired brain attempting to process that. “Really?”

“Yes, sir. Lieutenant Helvia confirmed it for me. Neither the Middle Kingdom, what the Romanii call the Chinese here, nor the Roman Empire were able to conquer the Comanche prior to the advent of modern weaponry. Both the Middle Kingdom and later the Romanii were so impressed by this that they left millions of hectares of central North America untouched, and the Comanche have remained a sovereign nation since.”

“But Klingons?”

“The Klingons send their young warriors to train with them.”

Trujillo blinked, then finished her glass in a single swallow. “This planet just gets weirder the longer we’re here.”

Davula eyed Trujillo mischievously over the rim of her glass. “I’m all for it, sir. I like my planets the way I like my drinks and my ex’s, Commodore.”

“Strange and inscrutable?” Trujillo asked, flummoxed.

“Bitter, sir. Bitter.”

* * *
 
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* * *

Helvia entered the ready room at Trujillo’s beckoning, coming to attention just inside the doors as they swooshed closed behind him. Two phaser-equipped security personnel stood on the other side of the sliders. Both were Helvia’s subordinates in the Security Division, now tasked with escorting him under arms.

Trujillo looked up from behind her desk. “Lieutenant Helvia, stand at ease and take a seat.”

Helvia did as instructed, lowering his sizeable frame into a chair just barely large enough to accommodate him.

She deactivated her computer terminal, giving Helvia her full attention. She sat back in her chair, regarding him for a moment. “You transported to the surface.”

“I did, sir,” he confirmed.

“Without authorization from the planetary government or from me.”

“It… appears so, sir.”

“It appears so?” her voice dropped a full octave, her expression hardening. “Mister Helvia, I am unaccustomed to officers under my commanding violating standing orders, most especially when I have already gone out of my way to arrange special dispensation for them, as I did for you earlier.”

“Yes, sir.” Helvia was having difficulty meeting her eyes.

“I await a satisfactory explanation, Lieutenant.”

A pregnant pause was ended when Helvia finally deigned to raise his head, his deeply set eyes an icy blue. “Have you ever had a profound religious experience, Commodore?”

She hesitated briefly, then replied, “No, not as such. Revelations of fact… profound surprises, certainly, but nothing that I would ascribe religious or spiritual significance to.”

“I have,” he said simply. “I was not in control of my body when I transported down to the surface, sir. I cannot expect you to believe such a claim, but it is true, nonetheless. Once on the surface I found myself… whole again, able to command my limbs. I met briefly with a man on the property who is… was… an acolyte of our messiah. He informed me that our faith is no more. Following his death and perhaps a handful of others, our religion will be observed by only myself and my immediate family.”

Trujillo listened, not interrupting. Helvia’s tale was ridiculously implausible, and yet she believed that he believed it with every fiber of his being. There was no hint of deception in the man, an individual she knew to be one of the purest, most deliberately scrupulous individuals she had ever met.

“Later, I was addressed by… something. Some being used Ensign Ibragimova as its mouthpiece and questioned me about the nature of our deliverer.”

She leaned forward, rapt with the tale. “Used? As in speaking through him?”

“Yes, sir. Ibragimova appeared to have no memory of our conversation upon the entity’s releasing him. This being inferred that it had done something similar to me in order to compel me to the surface without permission.”

“Can you tell me what this… whatever it was… wanted to know about your religion’s founder?” Trujillo knew she might be stepping into sacrosanct territory and did so with the utmost delicacy.

Helvia relayed the interaction in broad strokes, careful to omit anything that would violate the strictures of his faith.

Trujillo asked a handful of follow-up questions and then thanked Helvia for his candor. “I know it cannot have been easy for your to divulge this to me, especially with as… unusual a scenario as you’ve described. You are relieved of duty for the time being and restricted to quarters until such time as I have come to a decision regarding this matter.”

“I understand, sir.”

“You are dismissed, Lieutenant.”

Helvia departed, and Trujillo was well into entering several priority command codes into the ship’s internal data recorders before the doors to the ready room had closed. Using the approximate time and location stamps provided by Helvia, Trujillo was able to quickly locate the conversation in the locker room. The near-AI subroutines in the monitoring program would pixilate out any nudity from the images, and all crew areas with the exception of personal quarters were so monitored. CO or XO command codes were required to access the data.

It was all there, and Trujillo felt a swell of relief despite the shocking nature of the exchange. Ensign Ibragimova was clearly speaking about matters which he should have no knowledge, his voice clearly being manipulated by someone or something else. The commodore was dismayed to see Helvia so unsettled that he had manhandled the ensign, holding himself in check, though only just. She shuddered to think of the kind of damage he might do if justifiably provoked.

It occurred to Trujillo that a being advanced enough to have carried out such an act of humanoid puppetry, hacking Reykjavík’s data systems and altering the recordings should have been child’s play. Whoever this was, they clearly didn’t care enough to do so, and appeared to have no interest in trying to discredit Helvia. That suggested a level of apathy that spoke of unfathomable power. Only gods and madmen eschewed covering their tracks.

She tapped her combadge three times, signaling her recipient that the message was for their ears only. “Trujillo to Commander Davula, discrete.”

It took a moment for the XO to find a secluded area. “Davula here.”

“I’ve met with Mister Helvia. He has a wild story, but it checks out. There’s definitely a higher order of weird shit happening here than we knew. I’m sending you the footage and I’ll be interested in hearing your thoughts and those of Lieutenant Garrett when I return.

“Please let Helvia know he’s reinstated, pending clearance from Dr. Bennett. Also have the doctor screen Ensign Ibragimova, but be gentle, the kid won’t have any idea what its about. We’re looking for any residual signs of alien mental patterns or memory engrams overwriting those of our personnel.”

Davula, a veteran of one of Starfleet’s most notable deep-space missions in recent history, took that news in admirable stride. “Understood, sir. I’ll see to it.”

“I’m five minutes overdue for negotiations prep with Ambassador Dax.”

“Hurry, sir,” Davula chided in jest, “you don’t want another spanking from the ambassador.”

“Can you imagine!” Trujillo hooted. “Dirty old codger would enjoy that far too much. Trujillo, out.”

* * *
 
That last interaction makes me wonder what kinds of stories Trujillo had heard about Curzon. I like how quickly she and Davula adjusted to the reality of the situation with Halva and the disembodied puppeteer. The plot has thickened like chilled oatmeal.

Thanks!! rbs
 
I liked both of these scenes very much. The revelations from the Romanii must have been hard-won. And I also like the idea of Klingons sending their young warriors to train with modern day Comanche. A very clever and original concept. I was happy to see Helvia get the chance to explain himself and, again, I appreciated your unexpected - but entirely logical - method for Trujillo to confirm his account. And I'm really enjoying seeing the development of Davula's personality and relationship with her commanding officer.
 
* * *

The Lenthal-class destroyer USS Koh Yor raced towards its destination at emergency speed, privy to information that the ship’s captain felt could be of significant value.

Lt. Commander Aronas Žukauskas fought the urge to lean forward in his command chair, conscious that that doing so would not force the ship ahead any faster despite the fact that it felt as though it could.

A passing Barzan freighter had hailed them to make notification that they had seen what appeared to be a battle between two vessels at extreme sensor range, one of the two ships appearing to be Orion. They had thought it unusual that the Orions had not issued a distress signal, despite being on the losing end of the contest. The other vessel had appeared to be an aged but well-armed Klingon craft.

Žukauskas had alerted Reykjavík of the incident and set off at maximum warp to try and confirm the sighting. He was aware that he might be taking his ship and crew into an ambush, but waiting for additional ships would cost him more than a day in a situation where every minute might count.

His XO, a tall and willowy female Andorian, Lieutenant Sivih Sh'vaakrot, touched a hand to her earpiece at her station which doubled as the Communications post. “Now picking up a garbled transmission on a Syndicate favored frequency, fairly low in the subspace bands, sir.”

The compact Greek CO turned fractionally in his chair, giving her about three-quarters of his full attention. “Coded transmission?”

“Yes, sir, encrypted but very weak. It’s likely a highly focused transmission and we just happen to be within its bleed-over cone.”

“Can you triangulate its origin, Number One?”

She nodded, having already done so, and moved to display a rough position fix on one of her monitors. “Yes, sir. It’s very near to where the Barzans said it would be.”

“Well,” Žukauskas thought aloud, “that at least checks out.”

Sh'vaakrot gave him a cautious look. “This certainly seems to fit the parameters of the ambush Gol ran into, sir.”

He nodded soberly. “I know, but we’re obliged to check it out regardless. We’ll use maximum caution and utilize probes and long-range sensors wherever possible.”

“Commodore’s orders, sir?”

“Her XO’s orders, actually. The commodore was in active negotiations on the surface when I called.”

Sh'vaakrot’s expression soured, but before she could comment, Žukauskas said, “Commander Davula still outranks me, and besides, I’d have moved to check it out in any case.”

She smirked. “Better to ask forgiveness rather than permission, sir?”

“Few people get the job done being timid, Number One.”

“One officer’s timidity is another’s prudence, Skipper,” she countered, her antennae waving in short, spasmodic bursts, a sure sign of her anxiety and dark humor.

“Now reading one Orion Zephyrus-class corsair on long range sensors, Captain,” Ops reported.

“Red alert,” Žukauskas announced, advancing the ship’s readiness from condition yellow. “All hands to battle-stations.”

* * *

The day’s negotiation session had broken up an hour earlier, with the majority of the participants going home or, for the Federation contingent, beaming back to the ship for the night.

Today’s session had been far less constructive than the previous day’s, with the Romanii throwing up numerous roadblocks to sidetrack the talks. Various minor issues had suddenly required sidebars and ancillary conversations erupted at regular intervals, clearly some kind of conscious stalling tactic on their part.

It seemed that the First Consul and the Senate leadership were unwilling to address certain sensitive topics in full session, and so Trujillo and Curzon had been invited to a small gathering to follow later that evening. The pair had remained behind, escorted by a smaller-than-usual security contingent. Curzon’s diplomatic team and aides had beamed back to Reykjavík.

Wine was poured liberally and had been declared safe from poisons or additives by Trujillo’s concealed scanner. She surrendered to the ages-old truism, courtesy of Pliny the Elder (a notable apparently shared by both Magna Roma and Earth) in vino veritas.

“Now that the others are gone, let us talk plainly,” Macer invited, seating himself across from Trujillo and Curzon. “So much of what we must discuss has been withheld from so many of the junior senators and our military that it is impossible to convey the full weight of our plight with them present.”

Curzon was about to speak when Trujillo said, “Thanks to our probes, we know about the Orion’s deep core equipment. It’s only accelerating your planet’s condition. We estimate in a little over a decade your world will be another asteroid field orbiting your star.”

Macer swished a mouthful of wine around, nodding slowly before replying. “It was done at our request. Desperate though it was, those machines cut the planet’s volcanic activity in half. We were dropping dozens of cold-fusion weapons across the globe every year, and we’d have extinguished all life on the planet with those long before Magna Roma’s core fractured.”

“You should have started evacuating this planet decades ago,” Trujillo assessed. “Now, even with all of Starfleet’s resources, we could not conduct a planetary evacuation in time to save even half your population.”

“We know this,” Macer replied in a strangely emotionless voice. “I have lived with that knowledge for over a decade, and I have come to terms with the horror of it.”

“What can we do to help, First Consul?” Curzon asked. “What resources can we reasonably offer at this late hour to assist your people?”

“Evacuation of some small number,” he answered. “Drawn by lot from among the leadership.”

Trujillo snorted, shaking her head ruefully before taking a long draught of wine from her cup. “Once again you don’t miss an opportunity to disappoint.”

Macer studied her, his eyes narrowing. “Who else would you suggest we evacuate, Commodore? The slave classes? Those Eastern peoples who still rise up against us every few decades?”

“An entire world is imperiled, and you can only think to rescue your wealthy and landed elites,” she shot back. “Leaving everyone else behind to perish.”

The First Consul’s eyes seemed to harden, something in the man crystalizing from the combined pressures of pain and loss, anxiety and regret. “And there it is, finally… the judgement of our betters.”

Curzon raised a hand, trying to interject, but Macer silenced him by throwing his goblet the length of the table to clatter off the nearest wall.

“You have no idea!” he raged. “No concept of what it’s like to live in Earth’s shadow.”

Trujillo cast a sidelong glance at Curzon while replying to Macer. “Obviously not. By all means, explain it to us.”

Macer glared across the table at her, his fury rivaling his indignation. “No matter what our people accomplish, no matter how grandiose our achievements, your Earth did it first… did it better. We have conquered and united our world, but Earth? Earth is the capital of an enormous interstellar coalition. Yours is a world so rich you no longer have need of currency! Your technology produces food and water from thin air.”

A servant scurried forward to hand Macer another full cup of wine, which he drank from before continuing.

“We have learned from the Orions that your Starfleet has encountered multiple worlds which appear to be copies of your Earth, all echoing different periods of your planet’s history.”

Trujillo conceded the point with a bob of her head. “This is true. We have no more credible explanations for the existence of those worlds than we do for yours.”

“Is that what we are, then? Someone’s failed experiment? A pale imitation of Earth’s magnificence, a defective copy of the original?”

“Now, First Consul, I hardly think—” Curzon began.

“Yes,” Trujillo interjected, causing Curzon’s head to snap around in her direction, his expression struggling to remain neutral.

“Why sugar-coat this?” Trujillo posited to her colleague before turning back to Macer. “That is indeed what we believe. Someone or something was enamored of Earth’s Roman culture and created a facsimile here some three thousand years ago. It’s why your star system is such a jumble; they just tossed your planet into an existing system without any concern for the havoc that would cause on a celestial scale.”

The anger drained from Macer’s face, only to be replaced with something approximating resignation. He collapsed back into his chair, throwing up his hands. “You see? Everything we’ve accomplished here, all our history, our conquests, our saving Rome from certain disaster… it’s all for nothing! We’ll be snuffed out like someone switching off the lights in a laboratory at the end of the day.”

Trujillo finished her wine and stood, an uncertain Curzon following her to her feet.

“It’s all out in the open now, First Consul,” Trujillo said. “You and your people need to figure out what it is that you want from us, what you really need in the short time Magna Roma has left. Until that’s decided we’re just wasting our time here.”

“And send the senate and our populace into a panic? Learning the truth will cause utter chaos, our society will fracture!”

Trujillo’s expression was somber, and her tone acknowledged the tragedy of their situation. “Your world is dying, First Consul. You have my sympathy; despite the crimes you have perpetrated against my people in your desperation. We may still be able to assist you to some modest extent, but your own fear and indecision has cost you valuable decades and potential allies. This was your doing, not ours.”

He said nothing in reply, his eyes glistening as the heady wine brought his emotions closer to the surface that he would normally have allowed.

Curzon looked to Trujillo for a moment before turning to address Macer. “First Consul, I can add nothing to what the commodore has said, except to underscore her point that it is imperative that your leadership decides on a realistic course of action, and soon.”

They took their leave, transporting back with their security contingent.

As they exited the transporter room, Curzon gestured for Trujillo to hang back.

“Not precisely how I would have voiced our position,” he said with a wry grin, “but essentially the same message. I think he actually heard us tonight.”

She dropped her chin, staring at the deck-plates before replying. “I’m tired, Ambassador. Tired of this world, tired of the Romanii, their lies, and their pretense.” She looked up to meet his eyes. “It’s only fair of me to advise you that I will be recommending to Starfleet Command that if we participate in evacuating any of their population to Class-M worlds in Federation space, they will have to be integrated into existing Federation colonies. This society cannot continue as they have without intervention. There will be no more slavery among Romanii refugees, not on my watch.”

He nodded his assent. “I wouldn’t have it any other way, Commodore.”

* * *
 
That last interaction makes me wonder what kinds of stories Trujillo had heard about Curzon. I like how quickly she and Davula adjusted to the reality of the situation with Halva and the disembodied puppeteer. The plot has thickened like chilled oatmeal.

Thanks!! rbs
Curzon's reputation has preceeded him, and Trujillo has seen him flirting with multiple crew members on his previous mission aboard, as well as this one.

He's a dirty old man with a lecherous disposition, and he'd be the first to agree with that characterization. :lol:
 
So, now the cards are on the table. Will be interesting to see how the Romanii decide to proceed. I hadn't considered how the Romanii might be re-settled, or where. Trujillo make an interesting point. And, I'll be interested to see how Koh Yor fares, knowing they are likely flying into a trap.
 
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