Chapter Twelve -
Belay that phaser order! And a shuttle arrives.
Wow that was fast. Wormhole! Phasers! No, torpedoes! What? Boom!
“Wrong, Mr. Chekov; there are casualties. My wits!” This was from McCoy. “As in ‘frightened out of’!”
It's a
joke. I'm always amazed at how unfunny Roddenberry was given that light humor is (to me) one of the hallmarks of good Star Trek and in TOS was usually a sign that Gene Coon was around. But this line was actually funny.
Scotty’s voice showed some annoyed strain: “Aye, we understand that too, sir. We’re doing our best.”
I like GR's writing of Scotty in this book. In fact I like Doohan's performance in this film. But GR writes him as just so
competent. And of course Doohan in the 1970's was like the manliest man ever to manly man. The movies never let him be this steely again.
Kirk is surprised at Decker's answer for why he countermanded the phaser order. Yet his first thought when it happened was "Decker would not have countermanded Kirk’s order without some good reason."
This scene with Kirk and McCoy is not a bad scene in the movie. But it's got more teeth here. "And if you die in the attempt—incidentally taking all of us with you—so what the hell? You’d rather be dead than give this up again, wouldn’t you, Jim?” Ouch.
Kirk threatening to physically throw McCoy out of the cabin is a bit much. And not really knowing he had done it is alarming. Like, more than "We should be worried about Kirk" alarming and more like "Give the ship back to Decker" alarming.
Chekov says the shuttle has its "Non-belligerency confirmed." That's a neat trick.
There is more detail here about Kirk's struggles with Decker and vice versa. Both of them can't believe how the other one acted about the phaser design and yet they are absolutely on the same page. Time was at a premium in the film but I wish that this had been included.
We learn a bit more about Will Decker. Matt Decker's son but raised by his more free spirited mother.
GR introduces the
new humans (always italicized) in Kirk's intro as just how people are these days with Starfleet personnel being kind of throwbacks. Yet as they have come up in the course of the narrative they don't seem to be the mainstream majority either.
I wonder if the new human thing was an idea for Phase II and this was the introduction from Gene.
Not that I had ever heard.
Big ol' info dump about Decker and Ilia. Of course I'm still wondering: What is she doing here? Who is at the navigator station? Isn't that important right now?
It was, indeed, as foolish as calling the U.S.S. Enterprise a heavy cruiser, which it was most definitely not. It was the most powerful Federation vessel in existence, deserving at least the old naval description of battleship, although some admiral or statesman in the distant past had apparently seen the term cruiser as more civilized and less militaristic. Actually, most proper and accurate of all would have been to term the Enterprise an exploration and research vessel, which best described its principal use and functions.
Ahem. "Actually, most proper and accurate of all would have been to term the Enterprise an
exploration and research vessel, which best described its principal use and functions."
There it is. It's a funny switchback (I think) first calling the
Enterprise a battleship and claiming that this is a more accurate but less diplomatic phrase. But then saying that its principle use and function is exploration and research. While the
Enterprise's scientific capabilities have always been a key function and certainly always hailed as formidable, even just in this book (especially when discussing the Klingons) Kirk's concerns have always been with defense. GR seems a bit at odds with himself for some reason.
From the Making of Star Trek:
IN ADDITION TO THE TWELVE STARSHIPS,
THERE ARE LESSER CLASSES OF VESSELS, CA-
PABLE OF OPERATING OVER MUCH MORE
LIMITED DISTANCES. THEY ARE INVOLVED IN
COMMERCIAL VENTURES, SURVEY WORK, AR-
CHAEOLOGICAL EXPEDITIONS, MEDICAL RE-
SEARCH, AND SO ON. THE STARSHIPS ARE THE
HEAVY CRUISERS, THE ONES WHICH CAN BEST
DEFEND THEMSELVES AS THEY PROBE FAR-
THER AND FARTHER OUT, OPENING NEW
AREAS . . . AND THEN THE OTHERS FOLLOW.
Franz Joseph adopted this term for the Technical Manual and the Star Trek Blueprints. So fandom had come to be very familiar with "
Constitution Class Heavy Cruiser" by this time. "Starship Class" never stood a chance.
Anyway. The shuttle drops off whoever it drops off. We do not see Chekov meeting the passenger.
Decker came onto the bridge, crossing to where Kirk was standing near the science console. As Kirk turned toward him, Decker was startled at what he saw in Kirk’s face; there seemed to be a stranger looking out of Kirk’s eyes. He had almost the look of . . . Nogura!
This is interesting, and I'm not sure what Gene had in mind: "He had almost the look of... Nogura!" Is he saying there's a cold calculation there? Or something manipulative? Or what? I'm curious what folks think.
Yeah, this is weird. I mean, that doesn't seem to be a
positive development. But everything afterwards (I think) has Kirk behaving in a more
Kirk like fashion. We saw him face his
Enterprise shaped demons a few paragraphs ago and I think it sticks? Kirk takes it on the chin and then recovers appropriately. He stops being at odds with his crew. (He also stops having these kind of challenges thrown at him, I think.)
I love the exchange between Decker and Kirk over the commendation for Decker's actions. No time for it in the film, of course.
Spock!
After the photon torpedo breaks up the asteroid, parts are destroyed by the deflector shields and then other pieces that got through, "destroyed by friction against the vessel's forcefield screens." Does Enterprise have a forcefield in addition to the deflector? I thought everything was deflected by the deflector.
In the film it's a plot point that the wormhole has overloaded the navigational deflector. Even in TOS you had the deflector (the big dish at the front of the engineering section) that swept ahead for any particles that might give you a bad day and then the shields that would keep the bad guys from blowing you up.
I didn't remember if TOS had "screens and shields". I know it was used here as others have mentioned.
In TWOK (irrelevant here) they activated defense fields when they went to yellow alert.