Seventh Hour
USS Kittiwake NCC-4460
Captain’s Ready Room
Quinn Elena Destrehan, C.O. of the Kittiwake and the youngest cutter commander in the 7th Squadron, stared at the image of Admiral Morgan Bateson with an expression of shock on her face.
“Admiral? Are you sure?”
Bateson’s grim visage nodded. “It’s Bluefin’s disaster buoy alright. There’s no doubt. We can’t raise them, either because of the ion storm or . . .” He left the other possibilities unsaid.
“We . . . we’ll head that way immediately, sir. Maximum warp.”
The Admiral nodded. “As I was about to order. Unfortunately, we have few assets in the sector, especially with Scamp laid up for repairs. I’ve notified Starfleet Command and they are dispatching the light cruiser, USS Guanabara, to assist in search and rescue efforts. I’ve ordered the buoy tender, Pamlico, and one of our Aerie-class boats to search for the SS Forty-niner, the ship in distress to which Bluefin was headed. But , , ,”
His voice trailed off and Destrehan understood. The Aerie-class boats were small and lacked the speed or durability of the Albacore-class cutters. And USS Pamlico was an ancient converted Oberth-class ship, slower still and ill-suited for rescue work in an ion storm.
Bateson seemed to read her thoughts. “Quinn, if I thought either Pamlico or Egret could help with Bluefin, I would have sent them. But you are closest to Bluefin by at least a couple of hours. Godspeed, Captain. Bateson, out.”
Destrehan had difficulty processing the news. Joseph Akinola was a legend, one of the most experienced ship’s commander in the Border Service. To think that Akinola, his crew, the Bluefin, all might be lost . . .
She took a calming breath then toggled the communicator on her desk. The image of her Executive Officer, Lt. Commander Dee Dee Townsend appeared.
“X.O., immediate course change to,” she glanced at the coordinates that Bateson sent, “244 mark 18. Maximum warp.”
Townsend looked surprised, but relayed the order to the helm officer. “What’s up, Skipper?” She queried.
Destrehan hesitated. She knew Lt. Commander Townsend had served on the Bluefin as Second Officer before becoming X.O. of Kittiwake. Townsend had many friends on their sister ship.
“Come see me in my ready room and I’ll fill you in.”
Something in Destrehan’s voice gave Townsend pause. “Right away. . . Lt. Xyvek, you have the conn.”
* * *
USS Bluefin
Auxiliary Control
A wave of relief washed over Delta Simms when Commander Strauss and Lt. Bane entered Auxiliary control, both adorned in Emergency Environmental Suits.
“Am I glad to see you!” said Simms. “How are things on the bridge?”
“A mess,” admitted Strauss, removing her helmet. “Sarnek is hurt but stable. Ensign Vashtee is holding down the conn . . . not that there’s anything working up there.”
“And the Skipper?”
Strauss shook her head. “He was in his quarters when things went to hell. No comms, no turbolifts, some of the ladder alcoves are blocked with debris . . . My guess is he will try to get to the bridge, but it will probably take him a while.”
Simms nodded. “Any idea what happened? It felt like we hit something.”
Bane looked morose. “More like something hit us . . . a cosmic filament, to be precise.”
Delta’s eyes widened. “My God! I guess we’re lucky the ship wasn’t completely destroyed.”
He shook his head. “If I had spotted it a couple of seconds earlier, we might have avoided . . .”
“Belay that, Nigel,” Strauss said, not unkindly. “You warned Sarnek and that likely kept us from turning into sub-atomic particles.”
“Yeah, maybe,” he muttered, unconvinced.
Strauss turned her attention to the Master Systems Display. She frowned. “That’s a lot of red on the MSD.”
Simms nodded. “Almost all primary systems are down, so what’s left are mostly backup and tertiary systems, but even there some have failed and are failing. Artificial gravity is hit and miss, and it’s a miracle that the shields for the primary hull are still up. If not, well . . .”
They all knew if the shields failed, either the storm would tear them apart or the ionic radiation would cook them.
Strauss gazed at the auburn-haired second officer. “How bad?”
Simms swallowed. “Starboard nacelle was sheared off. Most of the engineering hull and flight deck are gone. We, um, likely lost a lot of . . .well, anyone down there, including the flight deck and the armory.”
That jarred the XO. She knew casualties were a given. Still . . .
“What about sickbay?”
A pained expression crossed Delta’s face. “I was able to get through with our old communicators. They keep some there. It’s bad, Inga . . . mass casualties . . . burns, broken bones, you name it. O.C., that is, Dr. Castille is doing his best with a couple of corpsmen and able-bodied crew performing triage and basic first aid. I was able to get the EMH rebooted from here, so that helps some.” She paused. “Gralt is barely hanging on.”
“He survived?” Strauss was surprised but glad the curmudgeonly Tellarite was alive.
Stimms nodded. “Best I could understand is that he was ejected into space when the emergency shields failed. By some miracle, Ensign Vargas beamed him aboard a Stallion and managed to get him on board. But Inga, Gralt is critical and O.C. isn’t sure he’ll survive unless we can get him to Echo Station.”
The ship suddenly shuddered violently, reminding them that an ion storm still raged around them. Simms turned her attention to the MSD and cursed.
“Structural integrity is down to 25%. We’re gonna start coming apart at the seams if it drops any more.”
“Any chance of getting subspace comms back up?” asked Bane.
“Slim and none,” replied Delta. “Hopefully, our disaster beacon deployed and broadcast our location.”
“Yeah, but even if it did, rescue is a long way away,” replied Strauss. She turned to Lt. Bane. “Nigel, take a couple of communicators to the bridge. I’m going below decks to see if there are survivors or anyone trapped.”
“Good plan,” he replied, “but you head to the bridge. No offense, but I’m better suited to carry someone up a ladder than you.”
Inga opened her mouth to argue and pull rank, but she stopped. Nigel was right.
“Very well.” She took one of the old communicators and connected it to his chest panel. “But keep in touch. Check in every five minutes, understood?”
Nigel grinned for the first time since the onset of the disaster. “Aye, ma’am.” He pulled down his visor and gave a jaunty salute before departing Auxiliary Control.
* * *
SS Forty-Niner
Tyna Miller awoke from a fitful sleep. Her broken arm throbbed painfully and her mouth was dry. She moaned, trying to sit up from the hard engineering deck.
Thurn was unconscious or . . . well . . . maybe he already departed this mortal coil a few minutes early. Lucky him.
Her head was muzzy, thinking was hard. What was it she wanted to do?
Oh yes. See how much longer until the warp core imploded and they turned into a new sun.
Her vision blurred and standing up proved to be more of a challenge than she anticipated. Scooting her back to the back bulkhead, she was able to shimmy up to a standing position.
Miller’s head swam and she began to rethink her life choices. She could have stayed in Starfleet, but the regimen had begun to wear on her. If she’s stayed in, she might be a lieutenant commander by now, maybe a full commander?
She chuckled. No chance of that now. She would die as Chief Engineer of this miserable bucket of . . .
A movement within the warp core containment chamber caught her eye. She squinted and wiped tendrils of sweat soaked hair from her eyes.
“What the frak?”
Dmitri Stavros was inside the containment chamber, wearing a hard suit. Not that it would do him any good, the intense radiation would leach through that hard suit like water through tissue.
Dmitri was attempting to climb on top of the warp core. The core was wedged at an angle following the failed ejection attempt.
She staggered to the control panel. Comms were down, so she beat on the transparent partition, trying to gain his attention.
The crazy Russian glanced down at her, his face wearing a feral grin. No doubt he was drunk out of his mind, but this was sheer suicide! He wouldn’t last five minutes while he . . .
He managed to get on top of the core. Then, grabbing the metal overhead braces, he began to jump up and down.
Miller was transfixed. What the hell did he think . . .?
But he jumped. And jumped. Bringing down his considerable weight on the wedged warp core, even as the radiation was killing him. He maintained the mad grin, even as blood began to seep from his nose and eyes, and . . .
Then the warp core disappeared. So did Dmitri. Whatever caused the core to jam in place gave way.
She stared, mouth agape, at the empty chamber. Had that drunk son of a bitch saved the ship?
Then the warp core detonated.