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Ancient Destroyer Thread, TOS-AU, G-PG13

Title : Thee Shall Be Tasked

Author : ‘Goji’ Rob Morris

Series : The TOS-based AU, The Ancient Destroyer Cycle

Type : Short AU post-ep piece; Follows ‘Amok Time’

Part : 1/1

Characters : T’Pau, T’Pring

Rating : PG

Summary : When the Lady T’Pau demands answers, best for thee that thou hast not an insolent tongue and mien, lest she open a can of that fabled substance on you...logically of course.

Thee Shall Be Tasked
by Rob Morris

Vulcan, 2267

T'Pau read her carefully chosen words.

"The human, James Kirk, has issued an apology for his untoward actions, fearing as he did that Spock was deceived by thee. Since this was the true case in this instance, his concern and his being Human both excuse his own deception. A month has passed, T'Pring Of Setekh. Where is thine own apology, so that this matter may be done and done with?"

T'Pring always managed to exceed mere Vulcan control and actually seem cold, at least to T'Pau's eyes, and hers were just discerning enough to see such distinctions.

"An apology, my Lady, is a defense of one's actions. Since those actions were all logically taken, I see that they require no such defense."

T'Pau felt a twinge of anger, but it was of course buried under multiple layers of hard-won discipline, and never surfaced for even a nanosecond.

"Thee, child, are not Human. And even to Kirk, I grant that excuse only once. Thee disrupted an event of sacred bent in a profane and devious manner. Thy Kalifee could have been issued in such a way that Spock's lands would have been thine, at least in part. You risked life, and you risked propriety, knowing full well all of our laws, and the reasons they were crafted."

T'Pring did not relent, even one iota.

"I judged the possible gain of all of your house's lands to be a desirable and logical extension of the interests of my house. Again, I see no conflict created by actions that, had they played out as I had hoped, would have had me in your place, seated where you are now."

T'Pau had perhaps anticipated something like this happening. She raised her arm.

"Then now accept Judgement. T'Pring, thee are of high birth, so I offer unto thee a choice : Either thee shall cede The Keevan Hills to James Kirk, as just payment, or else thee shall yield up 130,000 credits that a gift may be purchased in your name for James Kirk."

As Masters Of The Vulcan Order Of The Ancient Destroyer, T'Pring’s family had been manipulating T'Pau for years. Immigration to and alien residency on Vulcan was vastly restricted by stoking T’Pau’s fears of outside–mostly Terran-influence. Inwardly, T’Pring now smiled. Surely this choice meant the older woman was losing her mind. No filthy Human would touch the smallest part of her family's lands. While 130,000 credits would seem steep to some, T'Pring was wealthy enough that it would never be noticed.

"I choose the credits, Lady T'Pau. They are paid into the public account, by my command. What cheap trinket or gaudy bauble shall you purchase the human with such a sum?"

T'Pau would never openly smile, but her mouth was not down turned at all, a fact T'Pring instantly noticed.

"We purchase for James Kirk in thy name something of great worth and rare vintage. By thy generosity, T'Pring Of Setekh, Captain James T. Kirk and all of his heirs are given the hereditary honor and title True And Full Citizen Of Vulcan. He shall be informed of this, forthwith."

The back-and-forth between the Order-Mistress and The Mistress Of Order would continue for some time. But on that day, as T'Pring quietly withdrew, T'Pau ordered none of the doors closed. At last, straining her ancient hearing, The High Priestess of emotional control heard a sound that ill bespoke that control, for the sheer delight it caused her.

T'Pring, you see, was screaming.
 
Title : Species Zero

Author : ‘Goji’ Rob Morris

Series : The TOS-based AU, The Ancient Destroyer Cycle

Type : Backstory to an AU

Part : 1/1

Characters : The Borg, other DQ species

Rating : PG13, 1/1

Summary : One of the greatest threats ever seen in the Star Trek universe....meets an even greater threat. An evil, named and powerful, has the cybernetics in the crosshairs.

Species Zero
by Rob Morris

The Delta Quadrant, circa 2000 AD

There was a word in this sector of space that struck a vein of easy fear in all that lived. That word was Borg.

Its mere mention conjured up imagery of vast, indestructible cubes, figurative terror made literal . The dead were the lucky ones. The living never even had a chance to envy them. Vast scientific undertakings and holy works of divine wisdom were all turned to serve the rapacious Collective. When they left, there were no survivors. There was merely more Borg.

What was their origin? Some had a simple, or perhaps a simplistic, explanation. An elder society grew so dependent on machines, that the machines took over, as happened often in the fanciful speculative literature of many worlds. Some said that a civilization bent on perfection simply became even more bent as time went on. Virtually no one subscribed to the discredited legends of a shattered Quadrant, and the steps taken to prepare for the next Shattering. After all, in the modern day, no one believed in The Ancient Destroyer Of Worlds.

In airless space, things that, to the eyes, seemed like leathern bat-wings the size of mountain ranges should have provided no locomotion. They should not have moved anything at sub-light speeds. They certainly should not have been able to propel an organic through the Galactic Barrier. The Borg knew all this, and one other thing as well: That Species Zero had returned to the Last Galaxy. As with all things Borg, it was relayed with a simple message.

"The Collective records the re-emergence of Species 0-0-0-0, Codexes including King Death, ThreeMouth, ThreeSkull, Gh’Drh, others , sub-codex Ancient Destroyer. Believed to be of pre-Cosmic origin. Hive 9391 will move to assimilate. The distinctiveness and power of this most unique of all species will made to serve the Borg."

Other messages followed.

"For reasons unknown, Hives 9000-10030 do not respond. Other hives are responding to assimilation of Species Zero. A minor diversion of the resources of the Collective. Already, this future drone has driven the technology of the Borg to discoveries that will render us even more powerful."

------------------------------------------------------------------------

The Krenim never responded well to an invasion of their space. The presence of the Three Clock Hands only exaggerated that response.

"Set Chrono-Weapon to Grand Maximum. I want to see what this creature was 10 billion years ago!"

It was a weapon that had given the Krenim rule over a portion of space rivaling even the Borg's. Time was crunched in upon itself, and fates reversed, undone. It fired its awesome array dead-on to the approaching leviathan. All around them, species were reduced to protoplasm, and red stars to yellow.

The Krenim themselves were wiped away, save for those that were on the time-ship. All other species, save for the Borg, Occampa, and El-Aurians, now fleeing the Quadrant, were utterly gone. The Ancient Destroyer did indeed become what it was when time began. The problem for the doomed Krenim ship was that 10 billion years ago, it had already been what it always was. In this, the creature was quite consistent. As the ship fell, its energy was absorbed, and its crew's stupidity was not undone. The last sight the arrogant Krenim Commander ever saw was a snarling golden-scaled head called simply King bursting through his viewscreen.

The Borg had used Chroniton particles in their technology for years, and so were unaffected by the time-shift. At the cost of their own existence, the Caretaker Entities shielded their sheep-like charges, the Occampa. When their underground environmental systems failed, though, one day began to seem like nine years. For most Occampa, that's exactly how it was.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

At least one El-Aurian was not with those fleeing. He was hurriedly working on a device to turn the tide of battle.

"Recording: I, Soran, will call my people back in triumph. The Missile I now launch will be meaningless to the Ancient Destroyer. So will the series of stars that its launching will ignite. The lights in the sky are already winking out, at his coming. But what those stars bring towards me will attract him here, and provide his final doom. I hope to take a cell scraping as a...."

The sky overhead darkened, and Soran launched. A perfect launch, that hit one star and somehow ignited a dozen more as gravity in the sector shifted. Slowly, what the El-Aurians called the Red Backbone Of Night - the Nexus - approached Soran's position. He smiled as he saw the beast hovering mere kilometers away. The Nexus smashed the creature right in the back, enveloping it entirely.

"Recording: Having disposed of the Monster, I exit this planet to tell my people of the triumph of science and reason over...."

Seeing an energy field starting to form red, gold, and green spheres, Soran fired his specialized weapon, dispersing that energy, certainly for all time.

"Ahem...Having re-disposed of the Monster, exit the conquering hero, savior through science of an entire..."

Soran felt as though a blast furnace was on the back of his neck. He turned and saw the craggy, ashen-looking gray head called Death a mere 500 feet away. He retained his cool, as always.

"Recording: A Note To the Ancient Destroyer, from Soran : I Don't Like You."

Before he was done, Soran realized that his former target didn't care much for him, either.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

Finally, the Borg Wall was built. An entire sector of space was covered with the giant cubes. This was necessary, for the creature's gravity beams, fired by the gold head, were so powerful, no shield modulation was adequate against them. The green beam fired by the left head was the bane of all things organic, as was the head's mere touch.

“All stop.”

The Queen was determined to be the one who ended this. After all, the Borg were falling away rapidly, and she was The Borg.

“Reassemble me on the surface of the Leader Cube.”

As her parts, organic and otherwise, reshaped and reformed, her mind told her to seize control of the situation–by seizing control of the creature. With its power in thrall to the Borg, universal perfection would be decades, not millennia, away.

“Yes, Species Zero. You are noted. And you will be logged. Great thing, you are merely another resource to such as we. For as normally unreliable legends have said, your middle head, Makaa, is cybernetic in nature. You are done. In my presence, all tech is meat....”

A deathly green beam sliced out from the middle head, erasing the Queen, the Cube she was standing on while making contact, and her very consciousness. With her, went the Borg’s last hope of victory. Their fate belonged to the invader. Yet the analysis, even without a head to collate it, went on.

Of all its odd features, only the wings seemed to serve no function. The Collective reasoned that they must serve as a power-source and / or collector, since they obviously could not be used for locomotion. So it was, that in 2063, as Earth made First Contact with Vulcan, the Borg prepared for final battle with a power that reminded the assimilated of tales of their lost childhoods, the ones where the Wolf ate the little girl in Red, and where the forlorn fish-girl dissolved into foam. Again, a message was sent.

"All cubes depart to Lycosius Third Junction, Fifth Sector, Ninth Outpost. The Collective will there know its inevitable victory."

As the great enemy came at the Wall, a huge row of ships, each of which dwarfed even him in size, the attack began. Planet-killing beams shot out, shredding and eventually destroying the great wings. If the Borg could be shocked, they would have been then, for the thing stopped dead in space. Somehow, its wings were its source of movement.

Allowing the Ancient Destroyer no room to escape, the Cubes locked tightly together, and began to fire. The creature limped towards one of the ship blocks, which then redoubled their fire. That fire was having no noticeable effect on the heads, tail, or torso. Energy sparkled out from the wing-stumps. On one side, the shattered wing re-formed at normal size. On the side by the ship blocks, though, the other wing grew and grew further still, cutting through Cubes until it was caught in each and every one. 95% of the remaining Borg Fleet fell when it merely shrugged, and put its enlarged wing back to normal size. The wings that did indeed serve a function. Another series of messages went out.

"The Collective has learned much from this encounter with Species Zero."

One month later.......

"As with many other important assimilation efforts, the Collective has turned significant drone/resources to achieving our goals."

Two Months Later

"The Collective is conserving power as part of a long-term strategy in the war with Species Zero. Its recent foray into Fluidic space has bought us valuable time...Species Zero has returned, apparently having destroyed Fluidic space and its inhabitants."

Three Months Later

"Resistance to Species Zero has proven futile. Species Zero has rendered the Collective...Irrelevant. One Of One, ending all further tran....."

In another thirty-seven years, not a single star shone in the Delta Quadrant of the last remaining galaxy in the universe. The Enemy Of Life had wiped it clean.

EARTH, 2111

“Nah. Nothing crazy happened that day. Not even an Alliance attack. Lil and I launched, and the Vulcans said Howdy. Then I went and screwed up Vulcan-Human relations for the next two centuries. Hey, Hank? I’m talking to you.”

Doctor Henry Archer shook his head.

“Zef, you know that drone was not Iconian.”

Cochrane downed some prize-winning sake. After all, he could afford it.

“I know, Hank, that they are holding my godson Johnny, and that we both want your boy back in one piece. So–its Iconian, whether it is or not. So what if the tech signatures don’t remotely match any Iconian dig ever done? Those shadows from Intelligence made things pretty damned clear, didn’t they?”

Henry Archer merely nodded. Cochrane looked around, then whispered.

“So what did that thing say to you, right before you put the knife to it?”

“It said two things. One was a number : Zero. The other–was one of the many names of the Ancient Destroyer myth archetype. Scariest version, too.”

Cochrane was tired, of life and of living. Soon, the old man would seek deep space’s embrace. His days of having companions was drawing to a close. But even so, he would not leave until Archer said his piece.

“So what was the name?”

Archer said the word that every sane person hoped was merely a legend.

“Ghidorah.”

The assault of the creature with so many names had really just begun.
 
Title : The Battle Of Riverside

Author : ‘Goji’ Rob Morris

Series : The TOS-Based AU, The Ancient Destroyer Cycle

Type : Action/Backstory

Part : 1/1

Characters : Peter Kirk

Rating : PG13

Summary : The boy who does not yet know his place in cosmic history is going down for the count. But Peter Kirk knows he will not be unmourned, and he is determined to not go down alone.


The Battle Of Riverside
by Rob Morris

RIVERSIDE, IOWA, 2268

In a world full of many questions with many levels, Peter Kirk still knew several things to be true. That his legal parents, his little brother and indeed everyone else on Deneva were dead was one of them. In the case of little Marcus Kirk, aged one and a half and then not a single day more, that was perhaps a defining fact. Even a would-be hero knew he couldn’t save everyone. But why he could not have saved just that one was a question that literally haunted him.

That his heroes aboard the Enterprise cared about him was another. Would he ever be able to tell them how those two months, two months of being just an ordinary kid, had saved his sanity, and possibly his soul? Someday, he swore that he would. Two already knew. Legally and by private ceremony, respectively, James Kirk and Nyota Uhura had become his new parents. That he felt closer to them than he ever had to Sam and Aurelan was not his fault, he reasoned. They had broken the parent-child bond, not Peter.

Another fact was that Grandma Brianna Kirk had changed. Changed for good, in both senses of the word ‘good’. Peter had run away, when the hitting wouldn’t stop, and when she finally crossed the line and insulted Uhura. No one did that to his heroes. He slapped her, and ran off, first in the company of a former friend who badly misguided him, and then with Uncle Bill Kirk in Montana, where George Kirk’s older brother raised horses and sang painfully bad covers of ancient songs, including one by Elton John that was legendarily bad. Bill had asked him to stay. As a former lawyer, he could use Brianna’s violation of her rehab-parole restrictions to put her away for good.

Yet still he went back to Iowa, if for no other reason than to confront her, to call her out, and ask her why she couldn’t just be Grandma, and not an enemy. He returned to a woman who, he would swear, had been re-souled. He kept expecting her Janusian nature to assert itself, but in these last six months, the reversion to type had never come, and never would. In another time and place, Peter would learn that ‘re-souled’ had been a far more accurate description than he had known. For the present, he gloried in the fact that, at long last, it was all right. Everything was finally going to be alright.

Yet even that happiness was tempered and nearly negated by the dreams that wouldn’t stop. Dreams of the Three-Skull. Dreams Of The Ancient Destroyer Of Worlds. Dreams Of King Ghidorah. In the boy’s dreams, worlds and empires were chewed up, driven into dust and less than dust. Vast powers were called down to stop the menace, and to a one they all fell. The most heartbreaking dream involved a young couple sending their only child off from a doomed world, only to watch the beast target the escaping craft, as though the damned thing knew. Before the craft was destroyed, the infant looked into Peter’s eyes and said chilling words : “It Falls To You, Now.”

On this night, those particular types of dreams, and the other set wherein Peter saw cities crunched beneath his own feet, did not come about. No, this was a joyous, wonderful dream. He walked through a door into his own personal paradise. For Peter Kirk was back on board the Bridge of the USS Enterprise. He had dreams of this before, but the Bridge had looked different, the uniforms an odd shade of maroon, and his heroes older. In this case, it was just as he remembered. He raced right for the command chair, and for the man three steps removed from God himself, so far as Peter was concerned.

“Uncle Jim?”

James Kirk regarded his boy with eyes neither cold nor warm.

“We welcome our peer. The Rock, who is called Petrus Claudius, son of Jacobus Tiberius, walks among us. The Rock meets with us at The Temple. The Rock is The Rock Of Prophecy.”

Something was wrong, and not just with his uncle. Usually, Peter heard an odd ‘second track’ with people, words spoken under their words. Most times, these words supplemented their spoken words. Other times, especially with people like Sam and Aurelan, the second track contradicted the first. He was still some years away from finding out the simple truth, that he was hearing people’s thoughts. This was a moot point in this instance, for unlike waking life or other dreams, this second track was not present at all.

“Aunt Nyta?”

The very beautiful woman he called his mother was no more engaged by his presence than was her lover.

“The Rock will leave the sight of the living, but shall not die. Those who are The Rock may never die. He who is the Rock awaits The She, then shall both be free. The Three-Skull cried out when the Rock was made, and has done so again. Twice more again shall this be.”

A man known for his emotion leaned against the divider railing, speaking without the emotion that marked even Vulcan healers.

“The Rock opposes the Enemy, who is called by some as Ghidorah. Whole galaxies are gnashed between those awful teeth. Lives of unique quality lost. They are dead. They are dead.”

Peter would have almost called their tone stern, but when he saw the one that stood and walked as Hikaru Sulu, on whom stern ‘worked’, in his opinion, it was still too distant to even be called that.

“Yet it is upon that Rock that those mighty teeth shall shatter like glass. Then, even dread Ghidorah is mortal. The Rock must be patient, until this should come to pass. To the Rock alone is given the knowledge of the place called Meggido.”

Peter felt it. This place was not the Enterprise, nor even a dream of it. It felt timeless.
Now, the ones who looked like Scott and Chekov took their turns. Their accents seemed diminished to the point of non-existence.

“This violation must cease. The universe is beyond its limits. It can bear no more.”

“The Rock is the vessel for the power. The Rock is the egg. The Rock has a face, and this face is seen, as though over a hill. Craggy and scarred, this is yet the face of justice. And Justice, Like Lightning, Must Ever Appear, To Some As Hope, And To Others As Fear.”

The barely-teen Peter had felt very close to the barely-adult Chekov. He felt none of that closeness to the entity that wore his image. Without realizing it, he reached out with his mind. In the forms they wore, each being stopped and grabbed at their heads, briefly.

“You are of Bajor. I can feel it. What do you want with me? Your Kai visited me aboard Enterprise. I’ve never understood why. Tell me!”

Peter closed his eyes, and when he opened them again, they were replaced by twin golden lights.

“TELL ME NOW!!!”

The place that was no place at all shook with his fury.

“Listen up! I don’t worship you. I have a God, and I have his son. They’ve proven more than enough. I don’t need a bunch of preening popinjays who think they’re...”

Amidst the shouts of the confused, angry boy came a voice that finally sounded as it should. A man Peter had felt an odd kinship with, despite the distance he kept.

“Will You Fight The Enemy?”

“Mister Spock?”

“Will You Fight The Enemy? Will You Fight Ghidorah?”

Peter stood there, frozen, and the boy who had survived the madness of a world, its death, and the one-time wrath of a woman who should have always been the gentle creature she became, all without fear. But at the question posed by the Spock-alike, he became very, very afraid. As the vision ended, ‘Spock’ spoke once more.

“An answer is required.”

The boy awoke to a short but intense cry of pain.

“Grandma?”

He didn’t feel like he’d been asleep, but of course that whole weirdness had to be a dream, right? Clear or foggy, Peter raced to be by his grandmother’s side. The living room was dark, and before his vision could adjust, he tripped over something.

“No. Please, just no. You have Marc, you bastard.”

He felt what he had tripped over, already knowing what he would find. The bastard, Death, had one more notch carved into its infinite stick. One more time, the young hero learned the harshest truth : You can’t save everyone.

“Grandma, please. No. Things were good again. You were good. Please, don’t be...”

“How does it feel, Peter Kirk? To be made to fail your family?”

His vision now rapidly adjusted, much faster than he could account for, if he were paying attention. The red rage that was slowly seeping into his soul made certain that he was not.

“Madelyn?”

“This is it, you alien freak. Payback.”

Madelyn Moonachie had been the friend who had misled Peter Kirk, and by misled, he meant betrayed. Back when Grandma had still been hitting him, he fled, and sought the company of his friend’s family. She had snuggled against him, and made it clear that more could follow. More, Peter went with her family as their guest at a ‘retreat’.

“You want payback, you little bigot? Who lied to who?”

The retreat was a hate rally. Humans of low worth describing a coming ‘cleansing’ of the ‘alien infestation’. The Rock Of Prophecy had been tricked into entering the lair of the Human worshipers of the Beast. Peter, like everyone else, had heard whispers of The Order Of The Ancient Destroyer. At that rally, as he heard hateful lies and genocide spoken plainly and as just common sense, he knew why people only whispered. Peter had left, but not before telling them all what he thought of them. In an uncharacteristically grandiose moment, he even told them he would find a way to stop them. Them, and all their works.

“My father won’t even speak to me. So now your precious grandma doesn’t speak at all!”

Peter knew more. He knew why it was probably healthy for this girl not to be spoken to by her father, and how it would be even healthier for her to get out of his house entirely. But he was again past caring. Blood had to be repaid in kind.

“You join her.”

Peter had only meant to backhand Madelyn, despite what she had apparently done. It was indeed the back of his hand that met her face. The wet, crunching noise that followed had not been his intent. Madelyn Moonachie, junior space bigot and child of such massive abuse she no longer knew what right was, was flung against the Kirk living room’s opposite wall. The impact was bone-jarring, to be certain, but the already-dead girl felt nothing at all.

“Why would you do this? And–how did I just do that?”

The first answer would come soon enough. Part of the second, regarding his strength, owed partly to the fact that Aurelan Sorel Kirk’s father, Thomas Sorel, was once a high-ranking Romulan defector named Tasorel. But Peter knew nothing of that, and, to have it known, Peter had already been as strong as his full-grown grandfather when he was only three.

“Don’t move.”

There were weapons trained on the dazed boy, and he was surrounded by tall men in red shirts. Were his head clearer, he might have recognized them as Starfleet Security. But his head was not clear at all, and the red rage now ruled him entirely.

“Why did you kill my grandma?”

In a slicing motion, Peter brought his right hand up, breaking through the phaser rifle of the man who told him not to move. As the arc completed, Peter’s hand split the man’s chin, straight through his jaw, and sent him flying into the ceiling.

“You monster! The commander was a good....”

Peter grasped the neck of the one now speaking, and squeezed, intending to ask him questions about why they were there. But his lifeless eyes flopped upward in their sockets, and he fell as soon as he was released.
 
“Fire, you morons!”

The phaser rifles lashed out at him. Peter felt that he should have been surprised by his resistance to them, but somehow he wasn’t. As each burst of concentrated, amplified radiation struck true, he only felt stronger. Three crumpled from leg kicks meant only to push them away. A punch to the chest on one of them became a punch through the chest. Revolted, Peter stared at his bloodied hand.

“I’m–strong.”

Indeed he was, and he had to marvel at weak his attackers were, and how slowly they were moving, as though in tar or molasses.

*Someone sent assassins out after me, but they made them out of frozen glass?”*

But that suited him just fine. Once again, someone somewhere had decided that Peter Claudius Kirk had it too damned good, and that it was time to take it all away. So the angry young man would in turn do some taking of his own.

“Who are you? I have–I have powerful friends!”

Well, he had heroes who seemed to like him, or were able to put up with him, in any event.

*But they’re not here, are they? They would be, if they could. And they would expect me to keep myself alive long enough

Peter was still shocked by what he could do, but this took a firm back seat to both the thrill of battle and the struggle to deny these people, whoever they were and whatever their true target (He massively doubted it was him), what they were after.

*They’re after you, Jim, aren’t they. Well, monsters have taken everyone else I care about. But they’re not getting my uncle.*

He wasn’t thinking clearly, if he could be said to be thinking at all. Whether it was some hidden aspect of his physiology or just adrenalin, Peter was less caring than ever as he picked up the largest of the redshirts, and hurled him bodily through the living room window. The boy pointed at the shattered frame. He did not yet register that transparent aluminum should not have broken like that.

“You don’t deserve to wear that uniform! HEROES WEAR THAT UNIFORM!!!!”

Yes, he thought. There was no way these people were real Starfleet. Madelyn and her family had belonged to that hate-group, and gotten together a bunch of their friends. Neither Peter nor the murderous bigots had counted on his life turning into a Mary Sue Johnson novel, but if it kept him alive, he wasn’t complaining.

The boy at last had a chance to think. He was neither an engineer, nor a healer, and while his legal father had been a scientist (and his unknown half-brother, David, was a prodigy) science was not his game. He knew exactly where he was, and there was no one to lead but himself. So he turned to the hero whose gentleness had been a comfort to him for as long as he could remember.

“I have to get out a message. Alert the authorities.”

The wall-comm had been destroyed, probably first thing. That meant getting out. He looked down, and fought to keep from laying down with the dead woman.

“I’m sorry, Grandma.”

By then, there was a small pile of bodies. But he hadn’t meant to kill them–he wasn’t even certain just how he killed them. They were invaders, posing as heroes for cover. Peter saw that this cover included a communicator, and grabbed it off the remains of one of his attackers. The woman who adopted him had showed him her work, and one of the things she had shown him was the recessed button on communicators meant to alert local authorities on any Federation member world. He spoke concisely and clearly, the relief of eventual rescue calming him for the moment.

“This is Peter Kirk in Riverside, Iowa. I’m being attacked. Home invaders are here, and they have already killed my grandmother, Brianna. I need the police, right away. Please tell my Uncle, James Kirk, aboard the Starship Enterprise that I am....”

The communicator was beamed out of his hand, and the corpses were beamed away, as well. A wave of helmeted, armored invaders made their way in. Peter punched one of them in the head, and grinned when he saw the helmet go flying.

*Creep. I knocked your damn helmet clean off, I...no.*

The headless corpse fell on top of him, and Peter realized that the helmet he knocked off was not empty. And no amount of wishing would make this nor so.

*I’ve killed–again. How many did I kill tonight? My God, I killed a girl I once liked. But they were in the wrong, weren’t they? I didn’t know I was this strong. Or are they so weak? But they’re full-grown men, and I’m a boy, and I’m killing them with ease. Horrible ease.*

A second voice began to play inside his head. A voice very clearly not his own. Peter Kirk wondered about his sanity.

**Think of the dead on Deneva. Think of how they didn’t stay that way. Think of who put so many of them back down, once and for all. Peter Kirk, one of history’s most efficient killers. One day, billions will fall by your hand. One day, you will be like me.**

The last time Peter had heard that voice, his little brother had died. He didn’t know the name of that voice, but he knew that its owner knew nothing of light, or good.

“The wrong will fail, the right prevail...”

**You don’t believe that idiocy, do you? You want a song, boy? Here it is : Don’t you know little fool, you never can win?**

Peter said only a few words in response to the taunter before it faded.

“Wrong thing to say to a Kirk, asshole!”

His heroes would never surrender. Neither would he. That his simple, soul-deep mantra. The problem came that this mantra, while simple, was also simplistic. Almost anyone trained by Starfleet would have seen Peter’s situation as a deteriorating one. They would have asked where these attackers were coming from, and how they might escape. They might even ask if the attackers were regarded by their unknown sponsor as mere cannon fodder.

“Yes. He was permitted to send out the cover distress message. As calculated, the target’s extremely regenerative physiology proved massively resistant to energy weapons. Duranium batons enhanced by gravimetric enhancement set at just over 9K Per Square Centimeter finally delivered enough punishment to bring him down. Suggest we get him back soon. This thing is a genuine monster, and monsters always get back up. At least in the old films. Again, confirming, target is acquired, squadron fatality of ninety-eight percent deemed acceptable. Clean-up squad has begun its work, neighbors all absent or co-opted, weather malfunction keeping local authorities at bay. Judas-Fish girl reported missing, will be found in basement of supposedly clean former pedophile. Moving out.”

Peter Kirk would live to become a great hero, and he would learn hard lessons from this night.
He would also not be seen by a friendly face for another ten years. When he awoke some hours later, he would be weak as a kitten, and think he was in Hell. In this, he would not be very far off at all.



------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Three Weeks Later...

Pavel Chekov was still a year away from taking over as Chief Of Security. But his grieving Captain trusted him, and he would not betray that trust by giving anything less than his best. Even when that was not remotely enough.

“Kyptin, all I can say definitively is that your mother did not commit suicide. Someone vwanted us to think so, but they left too many clues otherwise. So many, I think even the bungled attempt at making it look like a suicide vwas itself part of the cover-up, if such makes any sense at all.”

James Kirk could not even find the strength to nod.

“Thank you, Ens–no. Thank You, Pavel. You’ve given me more than Admiralty Hall has, this entire month. You and Sulu said you wanted to hit the bars. Do it. Get numb for me while you’re at it.”

Despite his CO’s high praise, Chekov felt like he had done nothing at all, either for the great man he so admired, or for the nice kid he now had to mourn. As he left, Uhura entered.

“Jim, Spock says that, while there are signs of an immense struggle, that whoever covered the tracks did so very thoroughly. If anyone of a lesser caliber than Spock were looking at this, they likely would not even have found what little he did.”
Kirk looked at a book, and was silent. Uhura tried to break him away, to get him out of Peter’s room, and even out of his childhood home, receptacle to so many bad memories.

“Jim, I just said that our boy put up a hell of a fight, before he went down. While the precise DNA was masked, Spock says the attackers must have numbered over thirty, all fallen attacking one young boy.”

Kirk still pored over the printed, bound pages, a gift to Peter from a biological father loving and proud, but as always, too damned far away to help.

“Jim, Tom Sorel doesn’t blame you, neither does Uncle Bill. Whoever killed Peter is to blame, not you!”

He responded to his lover, one of a few not afraid to kick a legend in the pants. In fact, he had never been ignoring her. His mouth, jaw and tongue all felt positively leaden.

“Nyta? He was reading ‘The War Of The Worlds’. He begged me for it. Said he’d been through every last holovid and reactive audiobook version, and wanted to see it on paper.”

She wanted to offer him hope. To say that the fictional enemies of that story had been wholly undone by a means they never accounted for. But then again, the boy–her boy–wasn’t going to be brought back to life by germs.

“What part was he up to?”

Kirk’s voice broke as he said two simple words.

“Thunder Child.”

They held each other through another long night, while funeral arrangements were made. For the boy they all mourned, the night would be a decade long.

None of the senior crew of the USS Enterprise would have believed, in the middle years of the twenty-third century, that their affairs were being watched from within Starfleet itself. Not one could yet dream that they were being scrutinized as though they were sworn enemies of the Federation. Only one of them even considered the possibility that Starfleet’s sovereign power was fundamentally corrupt. And yet, across the gulf of an ideology based purely on hate, minds immeasurably ruthless and fearful regarded the rise of this group of officers with envious eyes, and slowly and surely, they drew their plans against them. The first part of these plans had gone forward, and the day belonged to this enemy.
 
The same story, revised for errors and grammar :

Title : The Battle Of Riverside

Author : ‘Goji’ Rob Morris

Series : The TOS-Based AU, The Ancient Destroyer Cycle

Type : Action/Backstory

Part : 1/1

Characters : Peter Kirk

Rating : PG13

Summary : The boy who does not yet know his place in cosmic history is going down for the count. But Peter Kirk knows he will not be unmourned, and he is determined that he will not go down without plenty of company.


The Battle Of Riverside
by Rob Morris

RIVERSIDE, IOWA, 2268

In a world full of many questions with many levels, Peter Kirk still knew several things to be true. That his legal parents, his little brother and indeed everyone else on Deneva was dead was one of them, and in the case of little Marcus Kirk, aged one and a half and then not a single day more, this was perhaps a defining fact of his existence. Even a would-be hero knew he couldn’t save everyone. But why he could not have saved just that one was a question that literally haunted him.

That his heroes aboard the starship Enterprise cared about him was another. Would he ever be able to tell them how those two months, two months of being just an ordinary kid, had saved his sanity, and possibly his soul? Someday, he swore that he would. Two already knew. Legally and by private ceremony, respectively, James Kirk and Nyota Uhura had become his new parents. That he felt closer to them than he ever had to Sam and Aurelan was not his fault, he reasoned. They had broken the parent-child bond, not Peter.

Another fact was that Grandma Brianna Kirk had changed, this time for good, and in both senses of the word ‘good’. Peter had run away, when the hitting wouldn’t stop, and when she finally crossed the line and insulted Uhura. No one did that to his heroes. He slapped her, and ran off, first in the company of a former friend who badly misguided him, and then with Uncle Bill Kirk in Montana, where George Kirk’s older brother raised horses and sang painfully bad covers of ancient songs, including one by Elton John that was legendarily bad. Bill had asked him to stay. As a former lawyer, he could use Brianna’s violation of her rehab-parole restrictions to put her away for good.

Yet still he went back to Iowa, if for no other reason than to confront her, to call her out, and then ask her why she couldn’t just be Grandma, and not an enemy. He returned to a woman who, he would swear, had been re-souled. He kept expecting her Janusian nature to assert itself, but in these last six months, the reversion to type had never come, and never would. In another time and place, Peter would learn that ‘re-souled’ had been a far more accurate description than he had known. For the present, he gloried in the fact that, at long last, it was all right. Everything was finally going to be all right.

Yet even that happiness was tempered and nearly negated by the dreams that wouldn’t stop. He would have horrific dreams of the Three-Skull, of The Ancient Destroyer Of Worlds, of King Ghidorah. In the boy’s dreams, worlds and empires were chewed up, driven into dust and less than dust. Vast powers were called down to stop the menace, and to a one they all fell. The most heartbreaking dream involved a young couple sending their only child off from a doomed world, only for the beast target the escaping craft, as though the vile thing knew. Before the craft was destroyed, the infant looked into Peter’s eyes and said chilling words: “It Falls to You, Now.”

On this night, those particular types of dreams, and the other set wherein Peter saw cities crunched beneath his own feet, did not come about. No, this was a joyous, wonderful dream. He walked through a door into his own personal paradise. For Peter Kirk was back on board the Bridge of the USS Enterprise. He had dreams of this before, but the Bridge had looked different. His heroes were older, and their uniforms were an odd shade of maroon. In this case, it was just as he remembered. He raced right for the command chair, and for the man three steps removed from God himself, so far as Peter was concerned.

“Uncle Jim?”

James Kirk looked his boy over, his usually expressive eyes neither cold nor warm.

“We welcome our peer. The Rock, who is called Petrus Claudius, son of Jacobus Tiberius, walks among us. The Rock meets with us at The Temple. The Rock is The Rock Of Prophecy.”

Something was wrong, and not just with his uncle. Usually, Peter heard an odd ‘second track’ with people, words spoken under their words. Most times, these words supplemented their spoken words. Other times, especially with people like Sam and Aurelan, the second track contradicted the first. He was still some years away from finding out the simple truth that he was hearing people’s thoughts. This was a moot point in this instance, for unlike waking life or other dreams, this second track was not present at all.

“Aunt Nyta?”

The very beautiful woman he called his mother was no more engaged by his presence than was her lover.

“The Rock will leave the sight of the living, but shall not die. Those who are The Rock may never die. He who is the Rock awaits The She, then shall both be free. The Three-Skull cried out when the Rock was made, and has done so again. Twice more again shall this be.”

A man known for his emotion leaned against the divider railing, speaking without the emotion that marked even Vulcan healers.

“The Rock opposes the Enemy, who is called by some as Ghidorah. Whole galaxies are gnashed between those awful teeth. Lives of unique quality lost. They are dead. They are dead.”

Peter would have almost called their tone stern, but when he saw the one that stood and walked as Hikaru Sulu, on whom stern ‘worked’, in his opinion, it was still too distant to even be called that.

“Yet it is upon that Rock that those mighty teeth shall shatter like glass. Then, even dread Ghidorah is mortal. The Rock must be patient, until this should come to pass. To the Rock alone is given the knowledge of the place called Meggido.”

Peter felt it. This place was not the Enterprise, nor even a dream of it. It felt timeless.
Now, the ones who looked like Scott and Chekov took their turns. Their accents seemed diminished to the point of nonexistence.

“This violation must cease. The universe is beyond its limits. It can bear no more.”

“The Rock is the vessel for the power. The Rock is the egg. The Rock has a face, and this face is seen, as though over a hill. Craggy and scarred, this is yet the face of justice. And Justice, Like Lightning, Must Ever Appear, To Some As Hope, And To Others As Fear.”

The barely-teen Peter had felt very close to the barely-adult Chekov. He felt none of that closeness to the entity that wore his image. Without realizing it, he reached out with his mind. In the forms they wore, each being stopped and grabbed at their heads, briefly.

“You are of Bajor. I can feel it. What do you want with me? Your Kai visited me aboard Enterprise. I’ve never understood why. Tell me!”

Peter closed his eyes, and when he opened them again, they were replaced by twin golden lights.

“TELL ME NOW!!!”

The place that was no place at all shook with his fury.

“Listen up! I don’t worship you. I have my God, and I have his son. They’ve proven more than enough. I don’t need a bunch of preening popinjays who think they’re...”

Amidst the shouts of the confused, angry boy came a voice that finally sounded as it should. A man Peter had felt an odd kinship with, despite the distance he kept.

“Will You Fight The Enemy?”

“Mister Spock?”

“Will You Fight The Enemy? Will You Fight Ghidorah?”

Peter stood there, frozen. He was a boy who had survived the madness of a world, its nightmarish death, and the one-time wrath of a woman who should have always been the gentle creature she became, all without fear. But at the question posed by the Spock-alike, he became very afraid. As the vision ended, ‘Spock’ spoke once more.

“An answer is required.”

The boy awoke to a short but intense cry of pain.

“Grandma?”

He didn’t feel like he’d been asleep, but of course that whole weirdness had to be a dream, right? Clear or foggy, Peter raced to be by his grandmother’s side. The living room was dark, and before his vision could adjust, he tripped over something.

“No. Please, just no. You have Marc, you bastard.”

He felt what he had tripped over, already knowing what he would find. The bastard, Death, had one more notch carved into its infinite stick. One more time, the young hero learned the harshest truth: You can’t save everyone.

“Grandma, please. No. Things were good again. You were good. Please, don’t be...”

“How does it feel, Peter Kirk? How does it feel to be made to fail your family?”

His vision now rapidly adjusted, much faster than he could account for, if he were paying attention. The red rage that was slowly seeping into his soul made certain that he was not.

“Madelyn?”

“This is it, you alien freak. Payback.”

Madelyn Moonachie had been the friend who had misled Peter Kirk, and by misled, he meant betrayed. Back when Grandma had still been hitting him, he fled, and sought the company of his friend’s family. She had snuggled against him, and made it clear that more could follow. More, Peter went with her family as their guest at a ‘retreat’.

“You want payback, you little bigot? Who lied to who?”

The retreat was a hate rally. Humans of low worth describing a coming ‘cleansing’ of the ‘alien infestation’. The Rock Of Prophecy had been tricked into entering the lair of the Human worshipers of the Beast. Peter, like everyone else, had heard whispers of The Order Of The Ancient Destroyer. At that rally, as he heard hateful lies and genocide spoken plainly and as just common sense, he knew why people only whispered. Peter had left, but not before telling them all what he thought of them. In an uncharacteristically grandiose moment, he even told them he would find a way to stop them. Them, and all their works.

“My father won’t even speak to me. So now your precious grandma doesn’t speak at all!”

Peter knew more. He knew why it was probably healthy for this girl not to be spoken to by her father, and how it would be even healthier for her to get out of his house entirely. But he was again past caring. Blood had to be repaid in kind.

“You join her.”

Peter had only meant to backhand Madelyn, despite what she had apparently done. It was indeed the back of his hand that met her face. The wet, crunching noise that followed had not been his intent. Madelyn Moonachie, junior space bigot, a child of such massive abuse, she no longer knew what right even looked like, was flung against the living room’s opposite wall. The impact was bone-jarring, to be certain, but the already-dead girl felt nothing at all.

“Why would you do this? And–how did I just do that?”

The first answer would come soon enough. Part of the second, regarding his strength, owed partly to the fact that Aurelan Sorel Kirk’s father, Thomas Sorel, was once a high-ranking Romulan defector named Tasorel. But Peter knew nothing of that, and, to have it known, Peter had already been as strong as his full-grown grandfather when he was only three.

“Don’t move.”

There were weapons trained on the dazed boy, and he was surrounded by tall men in red shirts. If his head had been clearer, he might have more quickly recognized them as Starfleet Security. But his head was not clear at all, and the red rage now ruled him entirely.

“Why did you kill my grandma?”

In a slicing motion, Peter brought his right hand up, breaking through the phaser rifle of the man who told him not to move. As the arc completed, Peter’s hand split the man’s chin, straight through his jaw, and sent him flying into the ceiling.

“You monster! The commander was a good....”

Peter grasped the neck of the shouter, and squeezed, intending to ask questions about why they were there. But his lifeless eyes flopped upward in their sockets, and he fell as soon as he was released.

“Fire, you morons!”

The phaser rifles lashed out at him. Peter felt that he should have been surprised by his resistance to them, but somehow he wasn’t. As each burst of concentrated, amplified radiation struck true, he only felt stronger. Three crumpled from leg kicks meant only to push them away. A punch to the chest on one of them became a punch through the chest. Revolted, Peter stared at his bloodied hand.

“I’m–strong.”

Indeed he was, and he had to marvel at weak his attackers were, and how slowly they were moving, as though in tar or molasses.

*Or did Sam and Aurelan lie to me, about how all people could do the things I can do? Was all that warning about ‘showing off’ just another control mechanism? I wanted you two to be my parents. What did I care about sterility, and donations, and all that? Why couldn’t you have stepped up–for me?*

The attackers kept on, and Peter knew full well the Kirks of Deneva 3 were in no position to answer his question, if they even would have. So he asked another, more current one.

*Someone sent assassins out after me, but they made them out of frozen glass?”*

But that suited him just fine. Once again, someone somewhere had decided that Peter Claudius Kirk had it too damned good, and that it was time to take it all away. So the angry young man would in turn do some taking of his own.

“Who are you? I have–I have powerful friends!”

Well, he had heroes who seemed to like him, or were able to put up with him, in any event.

*But they’re not here, are they? They would be, if they could. And they would expect me to keep myself alive long enough to tell them about it, in any event. So stop whining, Mister Kirk. Because Marc would want you to live, too.*

Peter was still shocked by what he could do, but this took a firm back seat to both the thrill of battle and the struggle to deny these people. Whoever they were, and whatever their true target (He massively doubted it was him), was, they weren’t going to get it.

*They’re after you, Jim, aren’t they? Well, monsters have taken everyone else I care about. But they’re not getting my uncle. I’ve been a sla–an indentured servant. I won’t be bait. Make book on that.*

He wasn’t thinking clearly, if he could be said to be thinking at all. Whether it was some hidden aspect of his physiology or just adrenalin, Peter was less caring than ever as he picked up the largest of the redshirts, and hurled him bodily through the living room window. The boy pointed at the shattered frame. He did not yet register that transparent aluminum should not have broken like that.

“You don’t deserve to wear that uniform! HEROES WEAR THAT UNIFORM!!!!”

Yes, he thought. There was no way these people were real Starfleet. Madelyn and her family had belonged to that hate-group, and gotten together a bunch of their friends. Neither Peter nor the murderous bigots had counted on his life turning into a Mary Sue Johnson novel, but if it kept him alive, he wasn’t complaining.
 
The boy at last had a chance to think. He was neither an engineer, nor a healer, and while his legal father had been a scientist (and his unknown half-brother, David, was a prodigy) science was not his game. He knew exactly where he was, and there was no one to lead but himself. So he turned to the hero whose gentleness had been a comfort to him for as long as he could remember.

“I have to get out a message. Alert the authorities.”

The wall-comm had been destroyed, probably first thing. That meant getting out. He looked down, and fought to keep from laying down with the dead woman.

“I’m sorry, Grandma.”

By then, there was a small pile of bodies. But he hadn’t meant to kill them–he wasn’t even certain just how he killed them. They were invaders, posing as heroes for cover. Peter saw that this cover included a communicator, and grabbed it off the remains of one of his attackers. The woman who adopted him had shown him her work, and one of the things she had shown him was the recessed button on communicators meant to alert local authorities on any Federation member world. He spoke concisely and clearly, the relief of eventual rescue calming him for the moment.

“This is Peter Kirk in Riverside, Iowa. I’m being attacked. Home invaders are here, and they have already killed my grandmother, Brianna. I need the police, right away. Please tell my Uncle, James Kirk, aboard the starship Enterprise that I am....”

The communicator was beamed out of his hand, and the corpses were beamed away, as well. A wave of helmeted, armored invaders made their way in. Peter punched one of them in the head, and grinned when he saw the helmet go flying.

*Creep. I knocked your damn helmet clean off, I...no.*

The headless corpse fell on top of him, and Peter realized that the helmet he knocked off was not empty. No amount of wishing could change this. He brushed off his fallen enemy, but not the thoughts that assaulted him more ably than any of his physical opponents.

*I’ve killed–again. How many did I kill tonight? My God, I killed a girl I once liked. But they were in the wrong, weren’t they? I didn’t know I was this strong. Or are they so weak? But they’re full-grown men, and I’m a boy, and I’m killing them with ease. Horrible ease.*

A second voice began to play inside his head. A voice very clearly not his own. Peter Kirk wondered about his sanity.

**Think of the dead on Deneva. Think of how they didn’t stay that way. Think of who put so many of them back down, once and for all. Peter Kirk, one of history’s most efficient killers. One day, billions will fall by your hand. One day, you will be like me.**

The last time Peter had heard that voice was when his little brother had died, not from the nerve-grabbing monsters, but from neglect while his family lay comatose. He didn’t know the name of that voice, but he knew that its owner knew nothing of light, or good.

“The wrong will fail, the right prevail...”

**You don’t believe that idiocy, do you? You want a song, boy? Here it is: Don’t you know little fool, you never can win?**

Peter said only a few words in response to the taunter before it faded.

“Wrong thing to say to a Kirk, asshole!”

His heroes would never surrender. Neither would he. That his simple, soul-deep mantra. The problem came that this mantra, while simple, was also simplistic. Almost anyone trained by Starfleet would have seen Peter’s situation as a deteriorating one. They would have asked where these attackers were coming from, and how they might escape. They might even ask if the attackers were regarded by their unknown sponsor as mere cannon fodder.

“Yes. He was permitted to send out the cover distress message. As calculated, the target’s extremely regenerative physiology proved massively resistant to energy weapons. Duranium batons enhanced by gravimetric enhancement set at just over 9K Per Square Centimeter finally delivered enough punishment to bring him down. Suggest we get him back soon. This thing is a genuine monster, and monsters always get back up. At least in the old films. Again, confirming, target is acquired, squadron fatality of ninety-eight percent deemed acceptable. Clean-up squad has begun its work, neighbors all absent or co-opted, weather malfunction keeping local authorities at bay. Judas-Fish girl reported missing, will be found in basement of supposedly clean former pedophile. Moving out.”

Peter Kirk would live to become a great hero, and he would learn hard lessons from this night.
He would also not be seen by a friendly face for another ten years. When he awoke some hours later, he would be weak as a kitten, and think he was in Hell. In this, he would not be very far off at all.



------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Three Weeks Later...

Pavel Chekov was still a year away from taking over as Chief Of Security. But his grieving Captain trusted him, and he would not betray that trust by giving anything less than his best. Even when that was not remotely enough.

“Kyptin, all I can say definitively is that your mother did not commit suicide. Someone vwanted us to think so, but they left too many clues otherwise. So many, I think even the bungled attempt at making it look like a suicide vwas itself part of the cover-up, if such makes any sense at all.”

James Kirk could not even find the strength to nod.

“Thank you, Ens–no. Thank You, Pavel. You’ve given me more than Admiralty Hall has, this entire month. You and Sulu said you wanted to hit the bars. Do it. Get numb for me while you’re at it.”

Despite his CO’s high praise, Chekov felt like he had done nothing at all, either for the great man he so admired, or for the nice kid he now had to mourn. As he left, Uhura entered.

“Jim, Spock says that, while there are signs of an immense struggle, that whoever covered the tracks did so very thoroughly. I say, if anyone of a lesser caliber than Spock was looking at this, they likely would not even have found what little he did. That still doesn’t excuse the Hall’s foot-dragging...”

Kirk looked at a book, and was silent. Uhura tried to break him away, to get him out of Peter’s room, and even out of James Kirk’s childhood home entirely, receptacle as it was to so many bad memories.

“Jim, I just said that our boy put up a hell of a fight, before he went down. While the precise DNA was masked, Spock says the attackers must have numbered well over thirty, all fallen attacking one young boy. It could even have been more, but Spock refuses to speculate past the evidence.”

Kirk still pored over the printed, bound pages, a gift to Peter from a biological father loving and proud, but as always, too damned far away to help.

“Jim, Tom Sorel doesn’t blame you, neither does Uncle Bill. Whoever killed Peter is to blame, not you!”

He responded to his lover, one of a few not afraid to kick a legend in the pants. In fact, he had never been ignoring her. His mouth, jaw and tongue all felt positively leaden.

“Nyta? He was reading ‘The War Of The Worlds’. He begged me for it. Said he’d been through every last holovid and reactive audiobook version, and wanted to see it on paper.”

She wanted to offer him hope. To say that the fictional enemies of that story had been wholly undone by a means they never accounted for. But then again, the boy–her boy–wasn’t going to be brought back to life by germs.

“What part was he up to?”

Kirk’s voice broke as he said two simple words.

“Thunder Child.”

They held each other through another long night, while funeral arrangements were made. For the boy they all mourned, the night would be a decade long.

None of the senior crew of the USS Enterprise would have believed, in the middle years of the twenty-third century, that their affairs were being watched from within Starfleet itself. Not one could yet dream that they were being scrutinized as though they were sworn enemies of the Federation. Only one of them even considered the possibility that Starfleet’s sovereign power was fundamentally corrupt. And yet, across the gulf of an ideology based purely on hate, minds immeasurably ruthless and fearful regarded the rise of this group of officers with envious eyes, and slowly and surely, they drew their plans against them. The first part of these plans had gone forward, and the day belonged to this enemy.
 
I plan to post new pieces soon. The next part of Peter Kirk's story, 'High Water' will not be one of them, at least here. It will be Rated R. Not a heavy R, but with enough content that I prefer not to test the mods' goodwill. When ready, I will post its story header info and let anyone interested know where to find it. Thanks.
 
Title : Down Through The Circles

Author : ‘Goji’ Rob Morris

Series : The TOS-based AU, The Ancient Destroyer Cycle

Type : Character/Flashback/Infiltration

Characters : Sarek, Saavik, others

Part : 4/5

Rating : PG13 - This one earns it

Summary : In 2268, Captain Kirk’s nephew and adopted son Peter
vanished from his home in Iowa and was presumed killed. In 2278,
Captain Kirk’s adopted daughter Saavik undertakes to recover Peter,
who may or may not be a figure of prophecy, and who is held by the
corrupt upper echelon of Starfleet Command itself. As she enters a
hell on Earth, Saavik recalls her past and how it may not be her
brother who truly needs saving. In the meantime, Sarek is keeping
several things secret. Is one of them a concern about his health?

Note : Folks, I’ll be frank. This part is long, and it goes ‘there’.
If this isn’t the darkest part of Saavik’s journey, I’m hard pressed
to say what would be. Fair warning

“The Powers That Be; That Force Us To Live Like We Do; Bring Me To My Knees; When I See What They’ve Done To You.” - The Pretenders, Back On The Chain Gang

Down Through The Circles
by Rob Morris

--------------------------------------------------

THE PAST, 2273

Solon had an innate sweetness about him. He would address me without
redress, and he honestly always seemed glad to see me. I suppose that
part of this was the pressure his parents put him under to always
achieve the very highest grades, including all possible extra
projects. I was a relief to him in this regard. He was a relief to me
because in his eyes, I was not an outcast thing to be scorned or
pitied. The one I had done the greatest wrong to was my greatest ally.
I can not say that he was my joy, though being around him made me look
forward to the day my lessons in control would be done, and our pre-
bonding carried out. For then and there, walking home with him after
school was a great joy, perhaps one of the greatest I had ever known.

In retrospect, one such as I should really have known better.

“Your recent test scores were excellent.”

He always blushed a bit when I paid him a compliment. He thought this
unseemly on his part. I thought it–cute. Yet still, he did not blush
on this day.

“Father and Mother have never thought so highly of me as you, Saavik.
Scores that break no records seemed not worth noting, in their eyes.
The Ambassador’s son, Spock, still holds so many records, I fear they
are beyond anyone’s ability to touch.”

Thoughts of Spock, like talk of Spock, were not and are not my subject
of choice. So I changed the subject to one I thought safer.

“I once had a brother. His name was Peter. Uncle Jim says, that, much
like you, his parents asked far too much of him. But like you, he
always kept trying.”

He began to scowl, but not at me. The scope of his baleful gaze seemed
to take in all of creation.

“I know well about your brother. I envy him. For his struggle is
done.”

I had seen a slow downward shift from the optimistic boy I had known.
But nothing could have prepared me for his words.

“His struggle is done because he is dead, Solon. How can you stand
there and tell me you envy the dead?”

In fact, I would come to envy my fallen brother as well, through the
days that followed. Solon’s words alone were prompting that.

“Think upon it. His place in legend is secured. The only survivor of
Deneva. A mere boy permitted for two months to ride aboard the
Federation’s flagship—“

“That was only to make certain he carried no trace of the parasites
that caused the Denevans----“

“—and to make certain of his legend, he disappeared and perhaps died
in the night, a killing no one can explain, right in the heart of the
capitol planet. Governments across the quadrant rushed to offer aid
for the investigation, and to deny responsibility. Songs are sung of
him, and sightings have been made of him by those who need to see such
things. Conspirators regularly flood the galactic networks with ideas
about how it happened, ranging from time travel to his being the
legendary Rock Of----“

I placed my hand over his heart.

“Solon, I do not care about such things. My concern is for you.”

He took that hand off of him, and smiled a smile not deep, but wide.
Even Humans don’t smile that wide, unless their arch-foe is a
vigilante detective clad in black body armor.

“You need not be concerned for me, Saavik-kam. I am past enduring.
See, they are here already.”

Security forces approached us, and bid me stand back. Solon, they held
at phaser-point.

“Solon Of House Srepam–you are under arrest for crimes unimaginable.”

The smile, that mad smile, still affixed upon his face, Solon
shrugged.

“I did leave their bodies recognizable, didn’t I?”

As shock filtered through my entire being, the words of the officers
barely reached my ears.

“We shall offer you the very best care, to address your affliction.”

“Then you are cowards. I am a mad sehlat, and should be put down as
such. You can’t save everyone. Look at the wondrous being who was to
have been my bondmate. A mere political pawn to Lady T’Pring and my
late parents. Scorned and held in contempt by almost all the rest of
Vulcan. She is wondrous, and I grew mad from watching this wonder
dismissed out of hand. Of course, having hovercraft parents was a fair
aid to that process as well, I must admit.”

As he was led away and I was left alone, the shock and horror took a
surprising back-seat to logic. There had been no signs of this
breakdown, I told myself. Certainly not any sort of mental aberration
that would cause a young Vulcan to murder his parents. He was just a
boy. A boy under pressure, to be sure. But while I had not melded with
him, and while one being can never truly know another, I would have
made book on Solon’s nature as easily as I would the skills of the
Enterprise crew, or Sarek’s mastery of diplomacy. Yet in this
instance, that bet would have not paid off, and the how of that
actually exceeded every other question, at least for the moment.

----------------------------------

Out of Saavik’s sight and hearing, the sinister reasons for the
absurd break in Solon’s behavior and character were spelled out.

“It seems so simple a device.”

“It is, my lady. Its creator, a Doctor Mohiro Kitoh, designed it for
simplicity. He said that, all too often, such techniques tend to be
complicated to the point of almost handing the target the ability to
resist.”

“A Human?!”

“Part of Cartwright’s exchange with us, for our aid in acquiring the
Kirk boy. He thought of the device as a cast-off, a means of honoring
his debt without truly doing so. The good Doctor delivered it himself,
insistent on explaining its true potential, especially to Vulcans. He
feels that we, being more versed in telepathy, could exploit the
device past its current limits.”

“A useful Human. Well, as they say with stopped clocks, such things
are statistically inevitable. The results are obvious on the boy
Solon, our greatest success since Sybok. The methodology, I will
concede, eludes me.”

“Again, the Doctor sought elegant simplicity. Unsurprisingly, he
originally designed it for use against the Kirk boy. It bypasses all
such efforts as implanted voices in favor of erasing simple tolerance.
Instead of oversized lies such as ‘all who know you hate you’, which
require time and isolation to work, it makes one overly aware of such
trivialities as the creaky opening of a door, or the eating habits of
a family member. Annoyances normally dismissed as a matter of course
are now unable to be shut out. By the end of one day, the mind of one
once sane and stable can be as mulch in its consistency. Reason is not
shut down–it is quite voluntarily shunted aside.”

“In other words, little things mean a lot.”

“Lady T’Pring is nothing if not incisive.”

“Did our expatriate Doctor give his device a name beyond the
technical?”

“He did, although he allowed that it was not truly correct to its
literary source. He calls it ‘The Unforgiving Minute’. I found it most
appropriate.”

“As do I. Tell me, what was its success against Peter Kirk?”

“Its lack of success against him led to its creator’s essential
banishment. Against a telepath of his raw power, or against those well-
versed in mental defenses, it encounters problems. While our
scientists chafe at the thought of working with a Human, they are in
awe of his efforts to improve past these problems. Within five years,
even House Surak itself could be undone by the device. Doctor Kitoh
asks only that he live long enough to review the results of that
effort.”

“Hmph. A very wise Human indeed. His request is to be fully honored,
conditions allowing.”

“Lady? Shall I target the girl Saavik next?”

“Akab! Her power likely equals that of the other one, and she cannot
so easily be made a captive.”

T’Belia winced. *Akab* was a pejorative reserved for a clumsy thing
that dropped a plate, not a major-domo.

“Relax your stance, T’Belia. Even one so favored as you must be shown
your place. No, dear Saavik of House Surak requires my personal touch.
The lessons I learned against both her fathers will serve well here, I
think. She would be an angel? Then I shall sacrifice demons to rid
myself of her.”

T’Belia now looked stunned and confused. T’Pring shrugged.

“Why do you think I told my brother to produce so many children, after
all?”

---------------------------------------------

In an utter daze, I answered questions posed by Security Force
personnel until they were satisfied that I could offer no insight on
Solon’s sudden insanity. As Sri Sarek showed them the door, I was
still in a daze as Sra Amanda offered me words that could be no
comfort. As it was brought home how utterly alone I was, I forced
myself to meditate, for I too was beginning to envy the brother I had
never met and never would, outside of ShaKaRee..

If there was a dark force behind this insanity, it would be exposed
and punished.

But what if there wasn’t? I knew that House Surak had an unspoken
member, a man dead by Vulcan law. He too, had gone insane, and
committed crimes even greater than Solon’s. What if that was that, and
madness was just madness? Was a race that posed as philosopher over-
beings doomed to occasionally fall that much harder and further, Pon
Farr and Plak Tow be damned? What if that breakdown became more than
merely occasional?

I fell asleep that night, but it was in spite of, not because of,
these thoughts. My dreams were fitful, including one where I attended
Peter Kirk’s funeral with Uncle Jim. There was a sealed casket, though
he left no body behind, and the coffin would shake every so often, as
though someone were trying to get out.

“Saavik of No-House. Do Not Ignore Me!”

But ignore her I did. That next morning, I was exhausted, a bondmate I
had never really known and a brother I had never known at all weighing
on my mind. The Enterprise had taken ‘point patrol’ on the so-called
‘Dead Zone’, where the common borders of Orion, Kzin, Klingon and
Romulan territories all met, owing to the vagueness of treaties. In
short, Uncle Jim and Aunt Nyta, and even Spock, were beyond my ability
to contact. I had been alone most of my life, but never had I felt so
alone.

“I said you will not ignore me, damnable Rihannsi Witch!”

Her punch was full force. Had it connected, even I would have felt it,
and I have a high threshold of pain. But I have always also been
faster and stronger than most, even on Hellguard. When ‘drilled’, it
would take three to hold me down while the fourth did his work. Even
then, it did not always help them. The thuggish T’Hryka could not have
known this.

“I am of a mood to ignore you. Thank the One Of ShaKaRee that this is
so.”

Her second, seventh, and tenth blows connected no better, and her fury
began to grow. I felt nothing. One who I had contemplated giving
myself to, katra and all, was now in permanent custody, alternately
sobbing and laughing hysterically. What could a clumsy effort like
this hope to do to one so numb inside?

“You mean the God who the Terrans say watches over sheep? There are no
sheep on Vulcan, No-House Refuse!”

I seized her fist at this casual blasphemy, and tossed her aside.

“You say there are no sheep. Yet I must endure your bleatings.”

My thoughts that day were converted into words. I was done with
restraint, as regarded these animals.

“Tell me why, daughter of House Setekh. Tell me why a gentle, loving
creature like T’Shura had her head vaporized before she was yet five,
and yet such as you endure. It is a crime against nature, and one I am
sorely tempted to correct.”

Her sneer was practiced, as was her probable response.

“My heart bleeds for your precious mudbaby...”

A kick to the chest shut her up. I grinned..

“The bleeding of your heart can be arranged.”

Two hands met the juncture of my neck, in precisely that region, the
one that produces sudden, certain unconsciousness. I was as surprised
as anyone when this tried and true technique failed.

“What is she?”

“Remember, don’t use energy weapons. She may be just like the other
one!”

I recalled an adventure novel of Uncle Jim’s. The protagonist had
wandered into the wrong neighborhood. The writer showed signs of
strain in working out this scene, as his hero openly wondered if every
single person in that neighborhood belonged to the gang attacking him.
I always empathized with a writer who made his limits so plain to a
sophisticated audience. I now also empathized with that hero.

“Each one of you, grab a section of each limb on her, then four more
for torso and shoulders. Do not allow this thing the slightest amount
of leverage!”

It was T’Akih, the oldest and worst of T’Pring’s nieces. I understood
T’Pring all too well, at this point. Even my mother had joyed in
creating new life, to some extent. T’Pring was only a destroyer, much
like the beast she worshipped. T’Akih thought herself heir to this
false strength, but the young would-be queen was just another pawn.
Oh, but how she strutted inside her delusion.

“This one on the ground before us is as an animal. Lower than Sehlat
or Lemataya. Animals do not go clothed among people.”

Twelve held me down, strategically placed. Beyond them were more under
T’Akih’s sway, keeping those who might report what was happening away
or warning them to silence. As my clothes were torn off me, I gave in
and cried. This was my dignity. I was in a civilized place, with
civilized rules, and this should not be occurring.

“Saavik of No-House? You expressed a desire to have children one day?
Yet how do you intend to feed them, when some of the boys here exceed
you in chest size?”

I told myself that the spears she cast into me would only penetrate
her own heart. I told myself that her foolish hate and complete lack
of self-control, which made mine look mountainous by comparison, would
be her undoing. I told myself that if Spock had survived his bullies,
I would survive ones ten times worse, and have that stick in his
neglectful craw. In utter shame, I would be more Vulcan than any of
them.
“I am not developed in that area, as you say. I am naked, and taken
aback by this. I have no House, as you often taunt. Even your fallen
comrade spoke true, for I do dwell on that little one’s death too
much. Yet I possess something you cannot rob me of. The true and
unconditional love of those I call family. Though I am brought low
this day–and your puny efforts are as nothing compared to those of the
Tal Shiar–I still stand as though on Seleya’s very summit.”

Those holding me revealed their thoughts to me by way of skin contact,
and I swear that I could almost see beyond them to the crowd. Its mob
mentality was fading. I knew this. So did T’Akih.

“Listen, then, to the skinned animal that talks! Listen then, to the
little princess of Vulcan!”

“I AM A PRINCESS! As are all girls who are held in affection by their
families. My true father told me that, when I was born. My Uncle Jim
told me the same, when he gave me his name. As did Sra Amanda and Sri
Sarek, when I came to dwell with them. Your Sry T’Pring is a Master
Planner, T’Akih. But in her plans, has she ever told you or any of
those she sets against me, her own blood, that they are princesses?
Has she indeed told you anything other than ‘Do Not Fail Me’? Well,
has she?”

To me, T’Akih was as a cold machine, programmed only for my
destruction. Yet how many stories of my adoptive father end with ‘and
he tricked the computer into destroying itself’? My only mistake lay
in underestimating T’Pring’s total hold on this poor fool.

“Poor Solon is not here, is he? I think that this length of test tube
will be your first lover, instead.”

“Does my deluded tormentor think herself more capable than hardened
Romulan soldiers? Were I Human, I would laugh.”

I laughed anyway. Assaults and threats of assault could not break me.
The thoughts of those who held me down, though, were a different
story.

*This must be*

*We will be next, if it is not this one*

*She has no House. Is this truly a crime?*

*She walks too proud, for one who is nothing.*

I was betrayed by classmates, and kept my control. I was held down and
stripped, my dignity robbed for the sake of egos petty and malicious.
I was taunted and threatened with violation. None of that broke me
inside. The cowardice and prejudice of the minor players in all this
did all that in a heartbeat. For a time, I could not recall how it was
that so many of my attackers were cast away, as though by a great
wind. Those that came at me met their fate at the feet whose sandals
they had stolen.

“Because you are not worth soiling my hands on!”

One by one, I threw T’Pring’s nieces over the nearby hill. Then, I
seized T’Akih. I squeezed her hand inside mine, the hand that was
holding the test tube. Green began to flow from it. I was naked, but
it was they who ran in shame as their leader screamed in agony.

“It seems my would-be lover is a broken man.”

Her right knee gave a satisfying pop, but I did not relent. Having
taken above enough, I kicked that leg off at the knee. Its flight from
her body seemed almost comical.

“Tell me, T’Akih. How powerful do you feel now?”

I had violated every lesson a student of Surak could. But I had not
yet given up on walking back into the light.

“Please, let there be no one else. I am as repulsed by what was done
here as you. So if you may not befriend me, at least abide me. This
will be the last attack on my person. If this is not an example of why
war is pointless, then I know not of any such example that is capable
of showing this.”

Those who had never needed to be my enemies lay broken around me, some
in pieces. I dared feel superior to them, because I wanted to care,
although I could not manage it. Was it perhaps this hubris that
brought about the first question asked of me by the arriving Security
Forces?

“Child, what have you done?”
 
-------------------------

It was called a hearing. To me, it felt largely like a trial. Sri
Sarek played my defense in a manner I had not seen from him before.

“This child is Vulcan’s Neediest Heart. She has been spurned and
deliberately targeted. Shall we compound her sorrows? If so, those
sorrows rest upon the hearts of all present, and indeed on all
Vulcans, everywhere.”

He had invoked one of the most dread and obscure prophecies concerning
the final words of Surak. That, when Vulcan’s Neediest Heart was
turned away, then soon after, Vulcan itself would quit the sight of
T’Kuht, its dead sister world.

“Ambassador Sarek raises such a hoary old legume in the presence of
his fellow Vulcans. I say then, let her sorrows be upon us, and on all
our children, in perpetuity, for her actions mark her as a threat to
all we would give those children.”

Later, I would learn that T’Pring, her anti-Human biases aside, had
chosen in this instance to paraphrase a Terran Biblical passage often
used as a pretext for hate against the Jewish people. I learned of
this while preparing a school paper on the so-called Dreyfus Affair.
The parallels have lost none of their ability to chill me. But if Sri
had chosen to combat emotion with emotion, his wife, my loving Sra
Amanda, chose logic.

“I direct my questions to Lady T’Pring. Lady, are the actions taken in
planning this effort against Saavik Kirk by the daughters of House
Setekh in dispute?”

“They are not, Lady Amanda. Although, the girl Saavik’s emotionalism
caused my nieces to become themselves unbalanced...”

T’Pring thought herself untouchable, especially by a lowly Human
‘cow’. But in fact, gender aside, she faced a bull.

“Then the actions in planning this effort are not in dispute. Is the
carrying out of this effort against Saavik Kirk by the daughters of
House Setekh in dispute?”

“I was not permitted to explain my position!”

“Lady T’Pau, my questions are concise and coherent. They are phrased
respectfully. I ask only of what is in dispute, and what is not. May I
continue, and expect concise, coherent and respectful answers of the
Lady T’Pring?”

The chamber hall was silent. Sra Amanda had never even raised her
voice.

“We direct that the questions given by Amanda of Surak be answered in
such a manner by T’Pring Of Setekh. Thy further explanations and
positions will wait til this is done.”

“I...the carrying out of this effort is not in dispute.”

“To clarify, Lady T’Pring : Are the parts of this effort that included
an overpowering by means of sheer numbers, a stripping of Saavik
Kirk’s clothes, and an indication of unwanted sexual intrusion in
dispute? That is to say, do you dispute that these things make up the
components of this effort against Saavik Kirk by the daughters of
House Setekh ?”

“They are not in dispute. Nor is it in dispute that members of my
house were maimed by that walking atavism!”

Sra Amanda nodded.

“While we object to the emotionally-based labeling of Saavik Kirk, we
do not dispute her actions after freeing herself from those who
restrained and stripped her. Lady T’Pring, do you dispute that these
actions of hers came only after the enacting of the undisputed effort
against Saavik Kirk by the daughters of House Setekh?”

Sra Amanda was no Vulcan. But she knew Vulcans, and knew how to play
by their rules. There was bile in T’Pring’s response, the only
response she could give.

“The timeline presented as such is not in dispute.”

At this, the chamber began to buzz with whispers. Not all of them were
friendly towards me. But they all spoke of my beating the charges. My
actions were wrong, but they would not have taken place without
equally disturbing provocations. Stonn shot Sra Amanda a glare, and it
was a glare that was met and turned back. The huge man was honestly
afraid of the tiny woman, and it felt delicious.

“We must needs retire to chambers, and seek the answers to these
questions.”

T’Pau withdrew, but it seemed decided. I had, I reasoned, faced my own
Kobayshi Maru and beaten the no-win scenario, as befit the daughter of
James Kirk.

“Didn’t I tell you this thing could be beaten, young lady?”

“You did, Sra. I should have listened.”

“This thing is still not yet decided, my wife. Saavik, you must
express remorse for your actions, and do so contritely.”

“I will, Sri. The only thing I will not do is apologize to House
Setekh.”

“I doubt, Saavik, that such will be required of you, and that it would
be accepted, should T’Pau ask it. A simple agreement of avoidance
should suffice, and so will end a foolish effort to broker peace on my
part. I have never said such before, and hope to never again. But
there are, it seems, some beyond Surak’s wisdom to help.”

“Oh, c’mon, you two. We beat the little witch–again. We’ve proven
better than her best. The way you two are acting, you’d think somebody
had just fallen off a cliff. This dear, sweet, lovely little girl who
is adored by her gr–guardians has gotten some justice for a horrendous
wrong. We Won!”

My sense of dread would not pass so easily. It was sadly fulfilled
when I saw Lady T’Pau emerge from chambers–and a not-unhappy T’Pring
following closely behind her.

“Child, Thy Unfortunate Condition Of Birth And Initial Upbringing Has
Worked To The Detriment Of Thee and Of All Our People. Thee Awakens,
Through No Fault Of Thine Own, The Worst Of Our Nature. We Who Are
Vulcan Must Ask That Thee Be Put Out From The Sight Of T’Kuht, This In
Perpetuity. Thine Efforts To Become Vulcan Are Called For Commendable.
We Hope That Thee Will Continue Their Pursuit Elsewhere. But In This,
We Obey The Oldest Rule Of Law; That The Needs Of The Many Must
Outweigh The Needs Of The Few.”

Her words, all in Vulcan High Speech, were enough of a challenge to
follow. Their concept had Sra close to fainting. The hammer struck
full with T’Pau’s closing words.

“The Needs Of The Few—Or The One. It Is With Sorrow We Do This
Neccesary Thing, Saavik Kirk. Thee Are To Quit Vulcan Ere A Fortnight
Has Passed. It Is Done.”
The medics came for Sra Amanda. Sri Sarek looked horribly torn. I
could not bear to see them so reduced.

“Ambassador, attend your wife. I will address this gathering myself.”

“Saavik-kam, I cannot....”

I allowed a tear to show, only to this great man.

“Father, please take care of Mother. For me?”

“I will resign my post in protest.”

“You would complete her victory? No. Logic dictates that how we face
defeat is at least as important as how we handle winning.”

Where I was finding these words, this appearance of strength, I could
not say. But I was determined to keep it up as long as I could.

“We will arrange that you stay with Amanda’s relatives in Minnesota.”

I could have told him not to say that in earshot of the hateful one
who had taken this day.

“Lady T’Pau–is not House Grayson on Earth also part of House Surak? Is
this not the law, which you have sworn to uphold?”

T’Pau now looked hesitant, but gave in yet again.

“This arrangement Sarek speaks of is unlawful. House Grayson is known
under T’Kuht’s sight. One taken from that sight may not lawfully abide
there.”

I seized control myself. I had nothing left to lose.

“My father, James Kirk, while a Vulcan citizen, is of no House,
despite connections to House Surak. He has an uncle in Montana, on
Earth, a William S. Kirk. I will stay with him, as per standing
invitation. In this, I accept the judgment of Lady T’Pau, and express
my concern for Lady T’Pring.”

Her response was deliciously predictable.

“We need none of your concern, outworlder.”

Gotcha.

“My concern is for Lady T’Pring’s artificial right eye. Its
calibration seems off to me. It should be adjusted forthwith.”
Her hand began to move towards said eye. I do not know how I guessed
this of her, but it seems it was true. More, I could tell she had not
lost that eye in a mere accident. Someone had taken it from her.
Shaking, she withdrew. It was then T’Akih stood up, her new leg as
artificial as her aunt’s eye.

“Beast!”

I regarded her with that worst of all emotions used against the
corrupt–pity.

“Ironic, T’Akih, that your Sry was more concerned with my destruction
than your preservation. A pity also that the wild sehlats found your
leg before the medics could. A last word to you : Should I see you on
Earth, you will find yourself quickly equipped with many more such
replacements. To the gathered people of Vulcan, I say this : “

They all waited for the meltdown. I chose to disappoint them. I held
up my hand, and arrayed my fingers in the appropriate manner.

“Live Long, And Prosper. That is all.”

I strode out of there, asking only to be taken to the hospital where
Amanda was attended to, and recovering. I had been given two weeks to
get off of Vulcan.

I did so in two days, before Sri and Sra could return from seeing to
her swooning, and try to appeal what I knew to be a lost cause. As I
departed, word came that Solon had been found in his cell. He no
longer needed to envy the dead. I fought hard not to do so as well. I
would not give T’Pring’s spies the pleasure.

----------------------------------------------------------

Again, outside of Saavik’s hearing, words were exchanged.

“With this, we end our alliance with House Setekh. To target the girl
so was vile, and unworthy of the lowest of Houses, let alone one of
the great ones.”

T’Pring, who now had control over her twitchy eye, seemed not
displeased.

“Our alliance has crafted the tight immigration laws that keep Vulcan
for Vulcans. Indeed, my House has aided you in keeping even those few
who did immigrate here from staying. That will not change anytime
soon, indeed, likely, ever. This alliance, dating back to your
accession and your oh-so easily manipulated fear of Human influence,
has done its work brilliantly, and never more so than today.”

The younger woman shrugged at the much older one.

“You end our alliance, but it is you who are irreparably damaged. For
I have caused you, under threat of allowing the immigration flow to
start again, to banish your own heir. Lady T’Pau was forced to turn
away her own great-great granddaughter–a relation that is from both of her
parents, if I recall correctly. She is my enemy, in all her houses. I
may take any action I see fit, and hold no regrets. But she is your
blood, your kin. Yet still she is gone. You end our alliance, Lady?
No, I end it. For House Setekh does not ally–with losers.”

A very old woman felt all of her two-hundred-forty years at this dark
moment.
 
-----------------------------

THE PRESENT, 2278

Saavik emerged into a room much larger than any save Admiralty Hall’s
upper entry lobby. Two hundred armed guards awaited her, though only a
few indicated that they noticed her presence.

“Let me guess–first patrol?”

“Y-Yes. They told me to go as far down as I could. Please tell me I
haven’t screwed it up, first time out.”

Her Human persona was as much a cover as the alterations provided by
Sarek’s nanoprobes. But it was working, or at least it seemed too, so
far.

“No. You’ve done exactly what they told you. Are you really ready for
this?”

“My patrol? I am ready to keep safe the center of the Human resistance
to the alien infestation, sir!”

The guard waved his hand.

“Kid, don’t do propaganda in front of me. It buys you nothing, here.
We’ve already been vetted, even you, within a centimeter of our lives.
You do realize by now that there is no patrol, right?”

Saavik thought fast, and used what she had overheard when sent below
by the other guards.

“The upstairs guys said something about feeding Bunson? She’s an
Admiral, right? So I fetch her sandwiches?”

He tugged at her tunic, then let it snap back.

“You feed her you. She likes them young, and she likes to hurt them–or
think she is, anyway. So exaggerate whatever she does. If you can fake
agony and really sell it, you might even become one of her favorites.
Then–you’re really in trouble.”

“Thanks for the advice.”

“She’s a terrific administrator, and a great public spokesperson. She
is the mask this Hall uses to keep the United Force of alien-loving
Perverts off our backs, til the big day arrives. But all that said, I
never had a happier day than when she lost interest in me. I stopped
rising through the ranks as quickly, but I could sleep nights again.”

Saavik made a show of forcing a smile.

“I can take pain–plus I’m a good actress!”

*I really hope*, she thought.

“Well, whether you’re just tonight’s meal or her regular, she’ll grab
you when she emerges from her time in the floors below.”

“Umm–errr–sir? I was told not to ask about or listen to talk about
anything down this far. So please don’t get me in trouble for hearing
that?”

The lead guard again shook his head, and laughed.

“Geez, you are a stiff. What are you, one of those new kids who took
the soul-oath without even being here a week?”

“Sorry for being a stiff, sir. But no—they wouldn’t even tell me what
the words were to the oath. Said I wasn’t ready or worthy to hear
them, for a while.”

The guard looked incredulous.

“That is sad. Those jamoaks just send you right on down to feed
Bunson, but no pomp? Well, with Sudenz and his ilk running things in
the easy sector, laziness and slackerdom is to be expected. You know
what I didn’t expect?”

Every guard in the room raised their weapons, and aimed them at
Saavik.

“I didn’t expect a Vulcan spy to be so stupid as to use nanoprobes to
try and sneak in. Amapola! EMP her to deactivate them.”

As the electromagnetic pulse struck her, Saavik thought little about
her rapid reversion to her true form. She had never understood how the
probes worked in the first place, or where Sarek had obtained them.
Her concern now was for her mission, and for her life.

“I can’t believe T’Pring would send something so clumsy. She knows we
can detect and purge those little buggers.”

Saavik kept silent as the one called Amapola spoke to their leader.

“Maybe this is another one of her nieces, sent to be killed for her
failure? Remember the last one–threw her bionic leg at us before
breaking down.”

If she died here, Saavik decided, she would neither implicate Sarek
nor be listed as one of T’Pring’s pawns.

“I am no servant of T’Pring. I came here to fulfill the wish of my
adoptive grandfather, George Kirk, who sought this place’s demolition.
Captain Kirk knows nothing of my activities, and if you try to
implicate him, my history of mental instability will be pointed out.
He will survive in any event, so kill me now.”

The lead guard chuckled.

“I don’t believe this. An imitation Human, an Imitation Kirk, and even
an Imitation Vulcan. Killing you is almost pointless. You’re nothing
but a long list of imitations to start off with. You’re not even worth
raping.”

The beam-rifles’ discharges all converged on her. Saavik shook her
head.

“Idiots. Energy weapons do not work on one cursed never to die!”

That horrible day, Saavik had learned two even more horrible facts.
T’Akih’s thugs had kicked, punched, and even stabbed her repeatedly as
she was held fast. Yet not only was she alive afterwards, but no sign
of these brutalities remained. Shaking from the incident, Saavik had
gotten hold of a phaser when she was told about the kangaroo-hearing
being called. Several attempts and an overload later, she gave in and
saw Healer T’Nia. Terms like ‘transwarp regeneration’, ‘hyper-pro-
active immune response’ and worst of all, ‘cellular and functional
immortality’ had been tossed around. Sarek’s concern for her life had
been for capture and study, not death.

“You have called me an Imitation This and an Imitation That. I say to
you all, better an imitation than a parody.”

That night after seeing T’Nia, Saavik had wept openly and prayed to
the God of Shakaree, asking why he had created one to suffer and yet
never die. She did not wish to become a monster, yet this seemed
inevitable. From hell she had come, and it was to hell she would find
her way back.

“Keep shooting! She has to fall sometime!”

As her memories of the incident cleared, she looked back in horror at
the things she had done, whatever the provocation. She also remembered
and learned the second horrible fact. Her attackers, the ones who held
her and stripped her, had not merely been tossed away by adrenalin-
fueled strength of arm. To do what she did that day required more than
mere muscle.

“And now, for my next imitation...”

She closed her eyes, and when she opened them, those eyes glowed
silver. Her voice echoed unto itself.

“....my impression of Commander Gary Mitchell!”

The air pressure in the room was perfectly regulated. Yet now, a
hurricane emerged within it. Men and women, corrupt and cold, were
hurled at hard walls at top speed. Two hundred stood, all prepared to
face what lay below them, should it ever awake. But the one who took
them apart, one and all, was going in the opposite direction.
Telekinetically piling the bodies at the passageway access she had
entered through, she staggered as she shifted her abilities downward.
Blood rushed from her nose and ears, and tears from her eyes at having
to kill yet again. She only wished that the blood loss could truly end
things for her.

*I am close to my goal. No alarms, no rushing of new soldiers. They
truly were isolated in this place where they die—where I killed them.*

The rooms beyond had a usable computer. Seating herself, the exhausted
Saavik used skills more mundane to hack the files. Though better
protected in their sense than the passageways, she still found them
largely unprotected, relatively speaking. A man with a moustache and
an eagle-like aspect to his face appeared onscreen. He was smiling.

“If you’re seeing this, then you are either myself,. someone with
massive clearance, or a spy more unstoppable than the bastard
grandchild of Bond, Blaise, Croft and Jones. If you are that spy, I
salute you. This is really quite a feat. So what do you wish to know?
Colonel Rene Endicott West at your disposal.”

The man seemed to have a sense of humor, but Saavik inputted only the
questions she needed to have answered.

“Peter Kirk? I helped oversee that sorry affair, I’m afraid to say,
and I aided with the cover-up. Not my proudest moment, delivering a 12-
year old boy into the hands of his rapists. I tried to warn them. Put
him into cryo right away, I said. Peter Kirk was a survivor from Day
1, and his power limits had never been tested. I had no desire to
conduct those tests. But Admiral Cartwright wanted generational
vengeance on George and James Kirk. Also, the boy had committed some
personal slight against our Brock Cartwright. While he himself did not
participate in the sexual assault that followed, he made sure to taunt
and pulverize the boy.”

Saavik accessed some of the files for footage of this horror. She
forced herself to watch, though tears made that difficult. She saw
what she needed to : her brother had been gang-violated repeatedly and
care had been taken to enhance his pain as they went. The looks of
shame and horror on Peter Kirk’s face was soon all she could see.

“He took it, and took it. Blood loss was staggering. There were thirty
admirals joinng in that so-called ‘Bachannalia’. Our esteemed Vulcan
visitor, who should be credited as telling us who Peter Kirk really
is, made sure to take her turns as well. How one supreme bigot ever
persuaded another to allow this is beyond me, but then, I’m not a
member of their Order. I do what I do for Earth. The damned thing is
coming, and I need to protect my world. If that means common cause
with the darkest powers, so be it”

Saavik slowed the footage, and caught the ‘esteemed Vulcan’ on still.
She already knew who it would be.

*T’Pring! One day, I will make it all right. On that day, neither
Sarek nor Surak himself will keep me from making you pay.*

West kept talking.

“As I said, thirty of them, each taking about ten or so ‘turns’
apiece. Finally, one of them muttered an insult against James Kirk.”

*Does it hurt, punk? Well, if we could–we’d get you pregnant! What’s
more–I only wish it were your xenophile uncle on the ground in front
of me. You take it pretty well, but him I’d make
squeal......aaaaaaaaggggghhhhhh!!!....he tore off my....*

“The boy rose with a fury. For himself, he cared nothing. For his
heroes, he cared everything. Fifteen of those admirals present fell
almost instantly. One thousand of our best security men also went
down, as wave upon wave were sent to their deaths by Cartwright,
Bunson and Komack as they shrieked for help. Three days of hell were
to prove the boy’s high-water mark. But the top three he let live. In
Bunson’s case, this was particularly hard to figure. She had stripped
him, and made every effort to further humiliate him, and if anyone
knows how to do that, she does. Oh--The Vulcans got their Lady out–
almost in time. The eye was a lost cause.”

The footage ceased as Peter Kirk rose up. Apparently, the Hall didn’t
like the part where the sheared and butchered lamb took its revenge.

“At last, it came to me. Those three are the worst sort of
opportunistic cowards. Yet without them, this Hall would not function,
and the field crazies would rise up at last, the radicals who want an
anti-alien pogrom here and now, not then and there. Peter Kirk knew
somehow. He knew that ripping out half the Admirals that night, and
killing so many of the elite guards meant to carry out and oversee the
coup would delay that coup for years. As of the ninth anniversary of
his kidnaping, it was still on hold with no date certain even under
discussion. Only Nogura’s death and Cartwright’s accession to the
Grand Admiral’s position can be called victories for them. Yet they
are sated monsters. They’ve taken their vengeance on the Kirks and the
Enterprise crew in the form of that boy. So that is why a boy with the
power to escape at any time only made a seemingly futile last stand.
The pain and shame he endured and has endured all these years served a
purpose. A little boy was Kirk enough to figure out just how to best
sacrifice himself to save those he loved. I must keep and hold you
here, Peter. Its part of my oath, odious though it all can be. But I
will salute your sacrifice, soldier. And I will give my highest praise
of all : Well Played.”

Saavik appreciated the thoughtful man’s conflict, but switched now to
a scientific readout, based on scans and efforts to control Peter
Kirk. Her recovery was complete, and she would soon enter the very
deepest chambers. Yet Sarek would surely want these files, so she was
thorough, while keeping watch on all positions. The synopsis was
telling, and to Saavik, quite shocking.

*Subject is functionally immortal. Subject is a radiovoric being,
feeding off of energy, even down to background radiation. Subject is a
level-twelve psionic, possessing vast psychokinesis and telepathy
exceeding Betazoids or Vulcans. Subject has speed and strength
surpassing either the 20th Century’s Over-Men or the 22nd Century’s
augments. Terra Multiplier Twenty-Five has been speculated at, placing
subject far above Vulcans or Klingons. Subject may be the most
powerful bipedal sentient in existence. Physiology demands may cause
bouts of mental instability. Advise keeping in cryo at all times.*

More followed, but Saavik paid it no mind. As she left to perhaps
finally retrieve Peter Kirk from his captivity, and perhaps deal with
the hateful Bunson, as well, she allowed herself to say words out
loud, words that were either spoken in abject despair or the greatest
hope. She could no longer tell.

“My brother. He is—he is like–like—me. There is another like me.”

TO BE CONCLUDED...
 
Title : The Slaughter Of Innocence

Author : ‘Goji’ Rob Morris

Series : The TOS-based AU, The Ancient Destroyer Cycle

Type : Flashback; AU version of canon events spoken of in ‘The Conscience Of The King’

Part : 1/1

Characters : Young Kirk/Uhura, Kevin Riley, circa 2249

Rating : PG13, for described violence and adult implications

Summary : Jimmy Kirk and Nyta Uhura start their campaign of harassment against Kodos’ forces in earnest, with the aid of the even younger Kevin Riley. But even in a war where you dodge every patrol sent, every shot fired and bloody the bully so he really feels it, have no doubt, there will be casualties.

The Slaughter Of Innocence
by Rob Morris

TARSUS FOUR, 2249

Kevin Riley ran for his life, feeling rather than seeing the phaser bolts just inches above his head.

“Just kill him!”

“No. Where’s there one, there could be more. He couldn’t survive out here without older sibs. Guys in the barracks have been getting a little antsy. A nice collection of teens could go a long way to relieving that tension.”

The soldiers kept after the boy, boredom and depraved hunger spurring them on, and making them not really look where they were going. The soft ground at the top of a rise hid stones placed there by Kevin’s allies, Jimmy and Nyta. The incline was just steep enough to send them hurtling to the ground. Their armor, weighted against blows and light weapons fire, proved their undoing as they struck hard at the bottom. Jimmy Kirk checked their necks, and their pulses. He shrugged.

“Well, they won’t be telling us anything. Not that they really would have said much.”

Nyta Uhura checked their equipment.

“Jimmy, maybe they still can tell us something. Maybe a lot of somethings. Their comm-gear is still active. We could use it to call for help.”

“Who to, Nyta? No way that thing has offworld range.”

He hadn’t meant to hurt her feelings, she knew, and so took her frustration and turned it to their problem.

“Well, then we could use it to listen in on them. Hear their reports. I’d–have to pop out the locator chips, but usually, they’re no trouble to remove. Installing them is a pain, but that’s not our problem right now.”

Kirk looked intrigued.

“You can do that?”

She nodded.

“Last summer, when I wasn’t the center of attention, and early bloomer was just one of several pipe dreams. I took console operations and repair at camp, to surprise my Dad for his home office equipment, when it went down.”

Kirk began to remove everything of value from the fallen guards. He then picked up one phaser, and handed the other to Uhura.. He pointed at Riley.

“Kevin, stand back. We can’t let these bodies be found, and I don’t want you to see this.”

The little boy did as he was told, but turned his head back when Kirk fired. Neither of the older children saw the little smile that formed on his face, or heard him mutter one chilling word.

“Burn.”

When the ugly work was all done, the older boy and girl played at games of war, among others.

“Can you use their comm equipment to get the official newsfeed?”

Uhura smiled.

“I can use it to get Amos and Andy, if you give me a minute.”

Kirk quickly gained a very puzzled look. She had expected this.

“My father always says that history should be remembered both in all its glory, and all its stupidity, as well. Those names I just mentioned? Part of a major stupidity–well, except for the name of the taxi company. I thought that was amusing. Jimmy? I can go you one better than a newsfeed. This thing has a listing for fugitive sightings. I can mess with the return feed while we run a check. Minus the locator chips, they can’t give us away. At least directly.”

Kirk swallowed hard, then said a name.

“Thomas Leighton.”

Uhura inputted the name. When her eyes closed shut after a second, Kirk knew.

“They’re sure?”

“Yes. Tossed directly into a disintegration chamber–while still alive. Oh, Jimmy, I’m so sorry.”

Kirk shook his head.

‘We were supposed to hook up, us and a bunch of other kids that got away. I pray to God he wasn’t waiting for me when they found him.”

Kirk fought the urge to look up any other friendly names, right then and there.

“Us.”

Uhura winced.

“You were right. They are after all of us. They...”

She threw it down, and fumed.

“It lists some of my favorite foods, on the chance I might try to steal them. *Info provided by intimate*. Damn you, Sophie. You just can’t stop selling me out, can you?”

Kirk took her shaking hand and held it. As they began to look into each other’s eyes, both sensed the moment and pulled away. Uhura picked up the comm unit.

“Jimmy, they want us all very badly. But for some reason, they really want Kevin back. Alive. Severe penalties are listed if he is killed or harmed beyond repair. Why don’t I like that?”

Kirk looked at the boy in the near distance.

“Because it’s a non-sequitur. They’re killing. They’re raping. Whenever and whoever they want. They’re getting–creative about it. I doubt your cousin is enjoying herself very much right now, whatever her mind set. So why take pains in such an environment to keep one little boy alive? Do they know we’re traveling together?”

A moment later, Uhura shook her head.

“You and me, its assumed. But they have no idea where Kevin is. Our friends failed to ID him or report their pursuit, apparently.”
Kirk sighed.

“One of the hazards of empowering the bullies. Brains are in short supply. Nyta, is it me, or are these comm units fairly advanced equipment?”

“Now that you mention it. They seem to have functions usually reserved for tricorders. Where would Governor Kodos get tech better than Starfleet’s, and enough of it to outfit even the lowliest thug with it?”

Kirk took the comm unit with her approval, erasing the request for their entries, to hide their tracks. He then kicked himself mentally, for not looking over Nyta’s entry.

“Hey, what’s this? ‘Transport’? Now is that a call for transportation, a transport full of soldiers, or...”

Nyta’s heart jumped as he vanished, only to appear a second later by the other comm-unit. The two looked at each other in purest disbelief.

“No way in hell those things have built-in transporters? Jimmy?”

Kirk sat down.

“No. Nyta, shut them down immediately. Disconnect their power. I may have just done something really stupid.”

She did as he asked, then sat down on the ground next to him.

“So what just happened?”

“They are more advanced than we thought. But they don’t have teleport function. I think they tie in to a central transporter hub. Even with the locator chips removed, my little stunt could have called down an army on us.”

She put her head on his shoulder.

“Mister Kirk, you are much too much too hard on yourself. You’ve made good calls at each and every turn in this crisis. You’re man enough to let me know you’re interested, and gentleman enough to not try anything on me at night, even laying next to you. If you’re not impressed with yourself, I am.”

He put his arm around her, and squeezed.

“People tell me I’m plenty impressed with myself, thanks. And as for not pulling anything, I’m not the gentleman you suppose. I just keep worrying that if we start in, that’s exactly when Kevin will finally start lying next to us.”
She stood up when he said that, and at first he feared having said the wrong thing. But while what he had said was a trigger, it was not out of hurt or disgust that she did this.

“Jimmy, why hasn’t he started laying down with us? He’s a hurt little boy who’s lost his parents, and he’s warmed to us, but not in that way. I just thought that after a week, he’d be edging towards our sleeping area.”

Kirk got up. She could see on his face that he’d been dreading just this question.

“Well, its time we found out, isn’t it?”

“How will you get Kevin to open up?”

Kirk managed a very weak smile.

“I guess you could say–I have a plan.”

Even this forced smile quickly faded as he sat down next to Kevin. Kirk knew where this conversation was headed.

“Kevin, can we play a game?”

“Sure, Jimmy. I like games. I mean, I used to like them a lot more. But what are the rules?”

Jimmy Kirk wished to God he really knew the answer to that very valid question.

“I’ll tell you a story. You have to listen to it. Then, after I’m all done, if you have a story like it, you have to tell it to me. Okay?”

“Okay.”

The boy’s eyes showed absolute trust and faith. To him, the teenagers were giants, god-heroes come to make his time of suffering bearable. Jimmy now felt himself compelled to push that trust to the limit. He began his tale.

“My Mom and I don’t always get along, Kevin. So I had to go away, and stay at her parents’ place, here on Tarsus. The soldiers came in, and made my Grandma and Granpa go away forever.”

Kevin’s face showed that he didn’t want to hear the rest, but he kept to their agreement as Jimmy kept on.

“The burning smell cut through me. One of the soldiers joked that I was smoked meat. Another said that, while I wasn’t on his usual side of the menu, he’d make do.”

Jimmy had wanted to edit out the crude jokes. But he also knew that if he held back, Kevin would do so twice again.

“As they tried to hold me down, I kicked out. Have you ever been hit down there, where it really hurts, Kevin?”

“Once. In gym class, a soccer ball hit me there. I had trouble peeing for the rest of that day.”

“My first time was with Parisses Squares. So I knew it would hurt them. I grabbed their phasers. Some other ones were waiting outside, shouting at me, and I just kept firing, grabbing new phasers as the old ones gave out. I wasn’t a hero, Kevin. Its said that sometimes a hero is just someone who’s too tired and too hungry to care anymore. I didn’t care anymore. I wanted the smell out of my nose, and their hands off my body. They still aren’t gone away. Not entirely.”

Jimmy then did one of the hardest things he would ever do.

“Its your turn now, Kevin.”

Just ten minutes later, Kirk returned to Uhura. He sat down by a tree, and looked at her with haunted eyes.

“Nyta, please hold me.”

She did, and if a moment existed in their hormonal tension in which that evaporated to a more sibling-like stance, it was then and there.

“Jimmy?”

“His tale was a lot like ours.”

He looked her directly in the eyes.

“But he couldn’t fight them off–and there was no rescue.”

The little boy’s words echoed in the older boy’s head.

*I’ll be a corpse soon, Jimmy! I can’t play with my Dad, or see my Mom, ever again. They thought I already was a corpse. That’s how I snuck away–I think. Maybe its like I’m already dead, and I’m still walking around. He pulled on my arms, said he was gonna drink the blood from them. Don’t let me be a corpse, Jimmy! Please don’t let me be a corpse!*

Uhura held him, but not without speaking.

“Is this just an army of pedophiles?”

“No. That is, I doubt all of them are that. They’re likely directed to hurt kids, to show their loyalty. Someone who would hurt a kid would do anything. Plus, it makes accomplices of every last soldier. Hard to break ranks when you’re in it just as deep as the man running the show.”

“Jimmy? Did you get the name of his attackers?”

“One of them. Why?”

“Because now–I have a plan.”

While Kevin slept, likely due to confession-based catharsis, Uhura put the name Kirk provided to good use.

“Here it is. Jerrold Inmen. Hmpf. Used to be a conductor on shuttle-tram cars. Fired for joking to a bunch of kids that an ancient train tunnel they were entering was actually the mouth of a living being–a giant snapping turtle. One little girl almost literally died of fright. Nice fella. Sorry to joke, but I’m that revolted.”

Kirk recalled that the only legend he knew of a giant turtle was a positive if sad one. Evil entered the Earth in this legend in the form of the Ancient Destroyer when it defeated and feasted upon the hearts of the Great Fire Turtle, Guardian Of The Young, the Great Rainbow Moth, Guardian Of The Living, and the Great Dark Moth, harsh Guardian Of The Planet itself. The once-quadrupedal beast had paid for his victory with the loss of its rear two legs, and had been forced to leave without destroying the Earth, though one day, this was assured.

“So we know he’s a real sweetheart. What does that get us?”

Uhura held up the comm unit.

“It gets us his barracks assignment. One of five major barracks on this planet. It gets us him, and every person in that barracks. Armed to the teeth, if that’s how we want them. The central transporter hub can equip them as directed.”

Kirk got up, shook off his funk and shook his head.

“Nyta, why would we want them armed to the teeth? I’d want them with as few weapons as possible. Totally unarmed, if we can manage it. Better yet, totally...”

He saw her smile, made the connection, and then did the only logical thing. He kissed her tonsils out.

“Lady, I think I love you! You are the most brilliant...”

Before he could go on, she pulled him right back over and kept kissing.

*Men talk too damned much*.

*Geez, what if she’s not sixteen? What if–what if she only just turned fifteen? Is that a line I want to...hell yes it is.*

True to Jimmy’s earlier prediction, they heard a yawn behind them, and saw Kevin Riley.

“Geez, its about time. I thought all you two knew how to do was look at each other.”

The teens who felt all too young teased and hugged and mussed the hair of the little boy who felt far too old for his own good. A half-Romulan-half-Vulcan adopted daughter Kirk would not even meet for another twenty years could have told him that so happy a moment was not to be entirely trusted.

----------------------

The trap was set, and this time it didn’t even need to be baited. The valley far below them, while not cut off entirely, would serve their purposes very well indeed. Uhura looked at Riley.

“Kevin, when I activate this comm unit—“

“I know! I’m not dumb, Nyta. High into the air, high as it’ll go.”

The how was Uhura’s. The where and when was Kirk’s. Riley decided on something else for himself.

“Jimmy, they’ve just been warned to suit up for a crisis. Its not even trying to block me out.”

Kirk nodded.

“Serves them right for leaving Aladdin’s lamp lying around.”

*Please God. Let her be no younger than fifteen and a half.*

“Kevin, toss it out! Nyta–equip them just like we discussed.”

“Should I leave one gender more cover?”

“No. That’d be sexist.”

She did not disagree. The women in the group could talk to the murdered dead about anything that followed these actions.

*Harsh? Maybe. But they made their beds.*

At Kevin’s toss, Nyta caused the entire barracks’ complement to appear, ready for action, minus any ground beneath them, or for that matter, any sort of weapons or clothing. The teens gawked and the little boy giggled as the denuded soldiers plunged into the waters of the lake beneath them. Kirk waved down to the furious disarmed and disrobed killers.

“Don’t mind us folks–we’re with the Band!”

Nyta nodded.

“So listen to The Band–especially the guys with cute behinds.”

One woman, good-looking enough that forcible coupling should have in theory never entered into her equations, stood up, glistening and glaring.

“You punks are so going to pay for...”

“Nyta, again!”

Reactivating the circuit, the soldiers found themselves again in the air. Kirk saw the once-bold lady’s face crumple in terror. He shrugged.

“Well, at least they’ll act as a flotation device.”

Nyta chimed in.

“And if they don’t, well, the men have lots of balls to float!”

Kirk stopped joking, and pointed down.

“You were beaten by a bunch of punk kids. And when Starfleet retakes this world, its you who’ll have to live in fear.”

“Jimmy!”

Kirk heard noise from one of Nyta’s comm units. He knew that was bad.

“Throw it on the ground!”

He disintegrated it, hating to lose it, but having no choice. He looked harshly at the girl he had kissed so recently.

“You didn’t turn it off right after?”

Just for a moment, her pretty face looked not high school but middle school. Kirk’s mind refused to process this.

“Its okay. Just give me a break when its my turn to screw up, alright? Kevin, let’s go rest up.”

The two walked away and sat down together, the would-be couple awaiting their would-be son as they cuddled in victory. A substantial portion of Kodos pet killers now wandered nude in a remote valley where plants very much like poison ivy abounded. They at last gave up the ghost and slept the sleep of the just. But as they were to learn, this was also the sleep of reason. The whine of phaser fire shocked them awake.

“Jimmy? Where’s Kevin?!”

They ran like lightning, Kirk still haunted by the sight of Kevin’s crying face as he told of how he was taken, from his parents, and from all feelings of safety. Kevin Riley was alive, they would find as they made it back to the overlook. But he was not well. The phaser rifle he held told part of the story. The bodies, craters and ashen outlines in the valley below told the rest.

“The men touched me, hurt me, and killed my Mom and Dad! The ladies thought it was FUNNY! But they’re not laughing now, are they? ARE THEY?!!!”

Jimmy Kirk talked the weapon away from the boy they should have been watching like a hawk. Nyta Uhura held him as he shook, not in horror at what he’d done, but in exultation. When he was again asleep, and this time under the constant watch of teens whose hormones had abated rapidly, Nyta looked over at the older boy she increasingly saw as her man.

“Jimmy? This is still a win, right?”

Kirk touched the top of Riley’s head.

“Like the man once said : Another such victory, and I think we poor stupid things are undone.”

-----------------------

Three days passed, and there were now flyovers. There hadn’t been before. Kodos knew that his rapid-transporter system had been used against him, or someone on his staff did.

But even the fugitive status of ‘The Band’ concerned two of its members less than the fate of the third. They had found a home, and people willing to take Kevin in. He liked this idea not at all.

“Just go away.”

They had raided the emptied barracks when they found it, and brought with them food to offer the family for their help. Feeling betrayed, the boy made for his small room, rejection trumping a roof and clean sheets in his mind. The pair left, Nyta having left a timed jammer to outgoing calls that would give them two hours head start, should the family get nervous.

“Jimmy...”
“Not a word, Nyta. Please. Because I have nothing.”

“We had to get him away from the killing!”

“I know that. I know all that is true. True, beyond any shadow of any doubt. So why do I still feel so low?”

Three hours later, back in the small home, Godfrey Nagain defended a choice.

“Stop complaining. Those two were too dangerous to try and take. But the boy gets us ten days rations, when the governor’s people arrive!”

Michelle ‘Miki’ Nagain rather doubted the agents would bring anything but death with them. But with rations running low, it had to be over soon–and wasn’t a quick death better than eyeing their own children–and then choosing?

When Kevin Riley next woke, the Nagains were beyond all such worries, and he was in the hands of Tarsus Four Colonial Governor Thanatos Kodos.

----------------------------------------

“The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere, The ceremony of innocence is drowned; “ - William Butler Yeats, The Second Coming
 
Title : Come The High Water

Author : ‘Goji’ Rob Morris

Series : The TOS-based AU, The Ancient Destroyer Cycle

Type : Backstory for AU, character history

Part : 1/1

Characters : Colonel West Of Starfleet Intelligence (Played by Rene Auberjenois in ST6), many others

Rating : PG13, for violence, implied and semi-explicit, including child abuse

Note : This story, while focusing on an obscure character, hopefully explains a lot about the Ancient Destroyer Universe; It also contains an appearance by a non-ST but well known character—there’s a reason he’s in there, that’ll come in later stories.

Summary : A man makes his choice, then lives with it. But will he have cause to regret it, and if so, what then?


Come The High Water
by Rob Morris

PRIVATE JOURNAL

My name is Rene’ Endicott West, and I am a Colonel in Starfleet Intelligence. I have been loyal to the United Federation Of Planets, and most especially to my native planet, The Earth. This is not out of a belief in its special or superior nature. I am loyal to it because it is mine. One must eventually choose what one is loyal to, and this is what I have chosen. I have no intention of seeing the Federation Flag fly over other sovereign powers, but I am doubly fierce in my resolve that none of the other powers shall ever hoist their banners upon the Eiffel Tower. There shall be no bloodwine drunk upon its summit; no Romulan will consider transporting it away as a trophy of conquest; no heads freed by Orion blades will adorn it, and for good measure, no Kzin Pridor will roar from it over the City Of Lights, unlikely as that might be. This is the oath I took as a young agent, entering into the silent service, the thing never even whispered of. Even when a simple invocation of its name was needed in the direst emergencies, we still used a euphemism : Prime Eleven. The eleventh prime number, is of course, Thirty-One.

I bear the other species I mentioned no ill will. They do as their heritage and culture demands.
Klingons need to break things, including, it seems, their own gods, when those gods wanted to pay tribute to the Ancient Destroyer, Khiterah, also called King Death. The Romulans have a mania for order, and that mania means that the only way to protect Romulus from being someone else’s province is to reduce the entire universe to being theirs. I fear at some point their planning and scheming will ensnare and strangle all the cosmos. As for the Orions, their desire for conquest is small–until awoken. When that happens, the opportunistic slavers become pirates of old, with all the worst that name conjures up. But there is no effective way to move against them, with punitive strikes needing to pass through Klingon and Romulan space. It keeps them in check, but it also gives them cover. The Kzinti are encircled in the Dead Zone, but live to replay that long-ago cosmic historical blip when they ruled over what the Iconians pulled back from.

I have dwelled my entire life in an ambiguous world to support the unambiguous goal of the preservation of my way of life. I consider myself a patriot, rather than a nationalist. I support my state whether right or wrong, but never do I delude myself with the notion that our doing something makes it right. I had always believed that I could walk that fine line of dark actions taken to preserve the light without either falling into the abyss or becoming that lowest of pawns, the intelligence man who works to provide cover for the blatantly political. I might have been able to pull it off. Then came word that the USS Constitution had been lost while searching for evidence of the lost Vulcania Colony. Its captain, Robert April, had been my own first commanding officer. I saw him as too indicative of the soft-hearted nature of good men, while he saw me as far too hawkish on defense matters. But we each knew that the other was vital to the existence of democracy, and so I became his Chief Of Security during the shakedown of his first ship, the Enterprise. I yelled at Bob April about his presence on landing parties, and he yelled at me about firing into the air to disperse angry planetary natives. It was December 8th, 2255, and I determined to find out what had become of my fractious mentor and friend. I dedicated this task to two people : Bob’s niece Robin, and the grandson of the ship’s first officer, the man who took pains as the ship lost contact to send telemetry, my best and only evidence. That man had been George Samuel Kirk, Senior, and that grandson, born on Deneva 3 likely just as the ship fell, was named Peter. I imagined I might meet this boy one day. I had no more idea how that would come about than I did what that final latent telemetry would reveal.

The universe, you see, was being murdered, and the being meant to stop that murderer in its tracks had just entered the cosmic stage. I had a hand in enabling them both.


-----------------------------------------

December 31st, 2255

West showed his expert guest what George Kirk had sent, moments before the presumed end.

“The timing between strikes indicates an attack, rather than an encounter with a cosmic storm or other phenomenon. The message about the crew losses indicates an enemy of immense power and the ability to deliver that power to a target’s most vulnerable spots in almost the precise way to break that target at warp speed. In short, we face an enemy capable of wiping away a Constitution-Class starship in relative moments. George Kirk must have been just as invulnerable and/or lucky as they say, even to have survived as long as he did.”

The expert nodded.

“He was a tough man to kill. His boy Jimmy is cut from the same stripe. Incredibly inquisitive mind. Tactically brilliant. Are you aware of what he wrought on Tarsus, a mere six years ago? He and his young lady, a Nyota Uhura....”

“Doctor Gill, we are discussing the fate of Kirk Pere, not Fils. Also, I was among those who debriefed the young couple, so I know well of them. In any event, Kirk is dead, and so are over two-hundred excellent officers, including my mentor. Why a man of his accomplishments never made Admiral is beyond me. Bob April stood like a colossus over this fleet, the first such figure since Archer. So I want to know what killed him. It was suggested to me that your perspective and knowledge as a historian might give me some insight into what did this. Is there any precedent or mention of such a powerful ship meeting its end so quickly in your research?”

John Gill struck West as a man who looked too much in charge, for someone so low on the Starfleet pole. His expertise was widely acknowledged and praised, but he answered to almost any officer of rank he dealt with, at least in theory. But his demeanor was that of a man with a secret, and it was a secret that put him above all those he should have bowed to.

“I can honestly say, Lieutenant West, that there is nothing in all my studies or readings that lends itself to this circumstance. After all, we’re not being invaded.”

West hated admitting that. That simple fact seemed to belie his notion of an attacker.
“I know. Because we are not being invaded, it means that it is not a sovereign power seeking to expand in. My superiors have made me painfully aware of that stance, these past three weeks.”

Gill shrugged.

“I said that my experience as a historian doesn’t help here. But then, I am also the Federation’s premier authority on eschatology.”

West knew that eschatologists studied religious beliefs concerning the end-times, and politely waited for Gill to make his point, despite the urge to roll his eyes.

“We, Lieutenant, are about to leave the narrow era wherein the loss of a single ship, or even a single world, counts as shocking or even noteworthy. If the kind of power exists to break a Connie-Class like that, then soon we will be transacting in the deaths of whole star systems, and clusters of star systems. Historically, this is neccesary, every ten or so millenia. Clears out the flotsam and jetsam. The genetic driftwood, if you will. My advice is to be ready for it, and make sure that this old planet of ours is also ready.”

“Some, Doctor, might call such an attitude cold. Unfeeling. What of the other worlds in the Federation?”

“Them? They can do for themselves, as I imagine they already are. Our Federation is largely an ambitious fiction, Mister West. Under the pressure of such an enemy as you posit, it will all fall away rather quickly. We must learn anew, to do for ourselves, and for our own. George Kirk and Robert April never understood this reality.”

West had wanted facts, and he instead was getting politics and religion.

“Doctor, your feud with George Kirk is well known.”

“My feud, Mister West? Why would we two have had any manner of feud?”

“Kirk opposed the construction of Admiralty Hall, which you were the chief cadet advocate of.”

Gill seemed amused.

“Nonsense! George and I had a spirited debate, and he lost. He was spouting on about a tradition of Starfleet officers serving in the proximity of all their peers, while I helped people recognize the reality of the unique pressures our Admirals face, and their need for a place all their own.”

Gill was being disingenuous, West knew. Kirk had been far from the only one to oppose the Hall’s construction, and an intelligence agent knew better than most that those who make the decisions needed to be near those they presided over. But he wasn’t there to debate the historian. The man had given what he had, and West appreciated that much, end-times talk aside.

As the New Year approached, so did the new era that John Gill predicted. It is worth noting that the era of vanished star systems would have been coming in any event. But in this reality, it would have a sinister bent beyond the mere perils of exploration. Rene West was the first to truly realize that something else had emerged, or, more accurately, re-emerged. In his zeal to investigate this matter, he had just unwittingly told the leader of The Order Of The Ancient Destroyer that his three-headed deity had broached the borders of the Alpha Quadrant.

The Apocalypse would begin in thirty years.

------------------------------------------

2264

West was blunt with Nogura.

“Admiral, this is the second Vulcanian Expedition to go awry. When will it stop? I know the Vulcans desire to know what became of their people on Vulcania Colony, but first, we lost the Constitution, and now, we nearly lost Enterprise. Why is this such a priority?”

The man who wore the burden of Commander-Starfleet gave in on an important detail.

“Rene, two of the people lost on that colony, nearly a hundred years ago, were the only son and daughter-in-law of Lady T’Pau herself. No one on Vulcan even knows how in the hell the escape pod containing the infant who would become Ambassador Sarek got back to Vulcan. Now do you understand?”

“So Security is an issue. Should Sarek even be a Federation Ambassador, if there are such doubts about his identity?”

Nogura shook his head.

“That’s been verified so many times, its not even funny. But knowing what happened and how he got away from it would not only relieve Vulcan, if you get my meaning.”

West moved on to other points.

“How is Pike doing?”

“I don’t know. Other than his endorsing my choice of Jimmy Kirk as his replacement, we haven’t spoken.”

“He needs to be debriefed, sir. Even in mourning, this needs to happen now.”

Nogura sighed openly. Good men like West or no, the existence of Section 31 was a sore point for the man who had been protected by April and Pike against the secret machinations of the Order.

“You have my permission to try. Lots of luck getting through to him.”

West found him in the apartment that had once been April’s, and would soon be Kirk’s. Each captain of the Enterprise was awarded it by his predecessor, owing to its prime location.

“West.”

“Pike.”

April’s former First Officer and his former Chief Of Security in fact got along just fine. Their politics clashed, so they never talked politics. Their views on religion clashed, so they never talked religion. They worked, and appreciated someone else who did their work. Theirs would never be a friendship, they reasoned, but the respect was far from grudging. If a debriefing had to occur, and Pike knew it did, then a no-nonsense, unsentimental man like West was the best one to do it.

“How’s life in the fast lane, Rene?”

“31 is never fast, Chris. Its slow, and deliberative. My work is about as far away from Ian Fleming as one tends to get, unless you count Chitty-Chitty Bang-Bang. You might do well in it. Give you a chance to forget.”

Pike shook his head.

“No combination of the hardest Saurian Brandy and the most mind-numbing analysis work you could throw my way could make me forget her for a nanosecond.”

West closed his eyes. He had seen the late Mrs. Pike, her husband’s former Number One, after the Vulcanian Expedition. Her hair was white, and she was mumbling words from an ancient song that now haunted both men, one who had loved her, and one who respected her immensely.

*Why do the birds go on singing? Why do the stars glow above? Don't they know it's the end of the world?*

The later lyrics in that song had been more hopeful, but the maddened Berema Pike never seemed to get past those grim ones.

“She was a good woman, Pike. And her memory deserves better than your moping and inactivity. I’ve heard that you plan to do inspections of cadet cruises. Not fit duty for Bob’s right-hand man.”

The soon-to-be-replaced Captain Of The USS Enterprise could no longer feel enough to get riled at his old associate. That told West more than he wanted to know about Pike’s state of mind.
“You want to know what I saw out there, Rene’? Okay. I saw the Anti-Christ. I saw Satan, laughing with delight. It was the Devil killed Vulcania colony, and it was the same devil took apart our recent expedition. If Jim Kirk hadn’t ordered the pullout while I was out cold, we would have lost everything. The Hall tried to nail him for mutiny, and it was my refusal to cooperate got me in their doghouse. Hence the cadet inspections.”

“He did override several ranking officers.”

“Who–were–dithering, and they hadn’t even seen the attacker!”

West went back on point. Kirk had been correct to do what he did, and was soon to be rewarded with a captaincy that was almost a proper lordly title. He was not at issue.

“Chris, you say you saw the devil, the Anti-Christ. Those claims alone would make me suspicious of the sanity of any man. In your case, I almost feel compelled to place you under care. I’m the religious one, remember? You are an atheist, and rather hardcore at that.”

Pike produced a file chip from his pocket. He pointed to the image on screen.

“Now--I’m a believer.”

The image had been captured as Pike’s shuttle flew end over end, hurled back by what had been deemed a gravimetric anomaly. The image was hard to view, except for one thing : The confirmable physical presence of three columns composed of what looked like chain-mail, many thousands of kilometers wide and long, told by the position of the shuttle as the image was taken.

“What the hell are those things?”

Pike closed his eyes.

“Necks. Each leading to a head. The creature in question resembled greatly the dragons of Terran myth. Berema saw it and went mad. I would have, but the Talosians did something to me, all those years ago. I’ve never seen reality in quite the same way.”

West was close to losing it himself. He suspended all thought of asking Pike why he had never spoken of this before. How could he? Who would have listened, save an intelligence agent who knew him well?

“Chris, do you know what you’re saying?”

Pike looked at the ceiling.

“I’m damaged goods, Rene’. But they’ll listen to you. Tell them.”

He then looked at West, straight in the eyes.
“Tell them that all the legends are fact. Tell them that Ghidorah has returned.”

While West felt the bottom drop out on all that he held rational and dear, the door-chime rang. Pike moved to answer it, perhaps energized by his confession. It was the man who was soon to replace him.

“Chris, I hate to bother you, but, your Vulcan Science Officer is adamantly refusing to stay on. Can you talk with him?”

“I’ll do what I can, Jim. Spock’s a good man, but he’s always been a bit of an odd bird, even by Vulcan standards. And who’s this with you?”

James Kirk held up an eight-year-old boy.

“My brother’s son, Peter. Peter, this man is Captain Pike.”

“Hello, sir.”

Pike seemed thrown off by something about the boy. West did not comment on this, but quickly realized that he now knew what killed that same boy’s grandfather, on the very day he was born, and yet could say nothing about it. After a little hand was shaken, the pair left.

“Chris? You saw something about the boy? Something based on your encounter on Talos IV?”

Pike sat back down.

“Rene’, I’ve felt that devil’s presence for weeks, now. But the instant I saw Jim’s nephew? It went away. And I mean it went away as in it ran away, straight out of my soul. Like it was scared of that one child.”

West tried to fight his way back to the rational.

“A child’s smile can do wonders for a troubled spirit.”

“I saw wings on his back, Rene’. I saw whole colonies of crested wings.”

West left Pike alone, after that. He was shaking, having been handed the keys to the kingdom come. Who to tell? How to prepare? He recalled another odd meeting, eight years prior. He made an appointment. He made his choice. Good men often dithered in the face of something this large. Under men of good intent, the situation would go slowly to Hell. There was no choice.

“I want to protect this planet. Our way of life. Us, and our own.”

John Gill smiled, and shook his hand.

“You’ve just taken your first step into a much larger world. But how did you know about me?”

“All respect, sir—you talk a good code, but I break those for a living.”

Just a few weeks later, the boy West had seen in Pike’s apartment became the target of an assassination attempt. Chaotic events swirled around the investigation, and when he asked to be a part of it, John Gill offered Rene West the *sensible* idea that he was not to interfere. West learned he had a new master, stated rank and clearance aside. By the end of that year, his new master had left to more directly oversee ‘an ongoing pet project’ on a distant world called Ekos. John Gill would not be seen again by most living beings. His narrow-minded legacy would continue, and eventually threaten every last living being remaining in the universe.

-----------------------------

PRIVATE JOURNAL

That a leash was now on me was beyond dispute. Yet with Gill gone off to play Hitler Version 1.8, it was a leash that no one was holding. This would change, and the secret he took to his grave concerning Peter Kirk would not stay buried with him. To this day, the thing that bothers me the most is not what eventually became of that poor boy. It’s that the leash was one I placed on my own neck, when confronted with the reality of Ghidorah.

As I was to learn, that old dragon was to cause many a strange occurrence, and even stranger bedfellows.
 
-----------------------------------

2267

“You’ve done what, exactly?”

Commodore Brock Cartwright should never have held that rank, most knew. In fact, after an incident seven years prior, he should have no longer been permitted to remain in Starfleet. It involved a group of Human colonists moving to a place held sacred by an insectoid species, the slaughter of their pilgrims, and Cartwright’s protection if not tacit direction of said slaughter. The ship’s then-Science Officer calmly and logically confirmed all details that Cartwright felt he needed to deny. Christopher Pike, it was known, liked neither bigots nor liars, and attempted to have him thrown both in irons and out of the service, the hell out of the service, to hear Pike.

“Someone has crossed the Order, Rene. That doesn’t happen, and it doesn’t go unavenged.”

One night, custody of the prisoner Cartwright was transferred without explanation to the USS Lexington, under the command of the legendary Captain Garth Of Izar. This passage to undeserved freedom had been authorized by the USS Enterprise’s Chief Medical Officer. When Pike did not like the few answers he was given, he did what no one thought he would do and let his old friend Philip Boyce off at the very next inhabited world. By the time the same Vulcan Science Officer who had testified against Cartwright had been found drifting in a shuttle after an extended leave, it was Mark Piper, nearly in retirement, who treated his sorry condition.

“Brock, this is a slight, at best. He got confused, and then got full of himself. You dragged him up on that stage, unannounced. I warned you, trying to involve a Kirk in anything invites chaos.”

For you see, Spock Of Vulcan had been a prisoner of the Order Of The Ancient Destroyer on a Romulan world called Hellguard, where he had been forced to sire a daughter against his will, and been so brutalized that he suppressed all active memory of it after his escape. Philip Boyce, angered by his Captain’s captivity by illusion-casting aliens, had joined the Order shortly after the never-discussed Talos IV incident. Before his ultimate breakdown, Garth Of Izar had been considered a prime candidate to replace John Gill as Order-Master. The aggressive, murderous colonists had been members of The Order, and they attacked not because they needed that world, but to live the mantra of ‘Humanity Prevails’. As for Lieutenant Brock Cartwright, he was still not through rising, and had been, since Gill had gone silent, de facto leader of the Order. On each world, the Order thrived, and each species hatefully believed that theirs would be the one spared when the Ancient Destroyer returned. In effect, the protected, nurtured career of little monster Brock Cartwright was set to raise him up to the level of King Bigot.

“He mocked me. He called me a liar in front of the entire rally. I can’t let that go.”

Peter Kirk, survivor of the parasite plague on the doomed planet Deneva Three, had been tricked into attending a major rally of the Order, almost a hate jamboree. During a speech, Cartwright had blamed the Klingon Empire for the parasites. Calling Peter Kirk to say a few words, Cartwright thought to take a confused young man and use him by giving him an outlet for the grief brought on by the loss of his family. But so far as he was concerned, the young Kirk’s family sailed the stars in search of new life, the very new life the Order so feared and hated. More, he knew who and what had been the cause of the parasites, the vile organism that had spawned them from cells that fell from its hide. In dreams, he had seen giant silver-and-red armored warriors with eyes like lit-up crescents cause this before the Beta Quadrant fell.

**Ghidorah killed Deneva. And if all of you worship him, then I will have to stop you. Then I’ll stop him. On my little brother’s memory and by the one true God, I swear I will kill your false one**

The boy was not an egotist, and in fact wondered why he had said such a thing. He ran almost all the way from Colorado to Montana, and a house West knew all too well. But those attending the rally had all seen Brock Cartwright made an utter fool of.

“Brock, the Klingons are responsible for endless atrocities. Listing them would take years. But they are not responsible for Deneva. Damn it, I could have provided you with charges no one could refute! This generational conflict your Order has with the Kirks is a distraction we can ill afford with your..deity...out and about, on the edges of the Greater Alpha Quadrant.”

The phrase ‘Greater Alpha Quadrant’ sounded ridiculous to West, but he understood why an exasperated Sarek had allowed it when the Klingons considered being located in the Beta Quadrant as being some manner of insult. It was often said, diplomats and spies knew the same walls to bang their heads against.

“Oh, Rene. I know you Thirty-One types like to be all business, nothing personal. But I cannot abide that brat’s arrogance. It’s part of your perspective, that you can’t see why this is vital. I am like the fourth head of a Grand Dragon–while you are just a spook.”

West looked hard at the dark-skinned officer, waited till he was certain Cartwright wasn’t kidding, and only then did he speak.

“You’ve never even read one single history book, have you?”

Rather than being enraged by this, Cartwright entered speech-making mode, a mode even James Kirk conceded that this man was a master of.

“No, Rene. I haven’t. We’re rewriting history here. We’re correcting its many mistakes. We’re making history, and I want Peter Kirk to be made history! Contact the Vulcan assassin, Soltec.”

West knew that Soltec was good, and this without any training, mental or marksman. Kolinahri adepts were said to avoid him for the chill wind that he seemed to generate. On a planet of emotional control, only one man truly had no real emotions of any kind, and he never had them in his entire life.

“A problem presents itself. He is the property of Lady T’Pring–your counterpart in the Vulcan Order.”

Property was an imprecise transliteration of the Vulcan term, but it also summed up Soltec’s position and devotion to his Lady.

“Pay him double.”

“Double? His fee is already astron–“

“DOUBLE!!”

West tried a more practical appeal to end this.

“There was an attempt to do exactly this three years ago. It failed. Witnesses said the shooter took the top of his head off. It just didn’t stay off.”

Cartwright nodded, calmer now.

“Tell Soltec to be more thorough than the kid’s grandmother.”

West *neglected* to tell Cartwright that Order member Brianna Kirk had ceased all contact with them. That conversion from sinner to saint was a mystery no one outside of her grandson would ever solve. A week later, West called Cartwright to his office at the Colonial Affairs Center, where the Commodore still held the title of Chief Commissioner of Starfleet Colonial Affairs.

“Did Soltec respond?”

West pointed to the Vulcan woman sitting regally in a chair her people had insisted on bringing in.

“No, not exactly. Commodore Cartwright–I bid you meet the Lady T’Pring of House Setekh.”

Owing to their precisely opposed agendas, never before had two different planets’ chiefs of the Order Of The Ancient Destroyer met and talked. West swore that he felt the temperature in the room, and in that building, drop by ten degrees.

-----------------------------------

PRIVATE JOURNAL

To my great surprise, they got along fine. It seemed that, even if it was of each other, they were united by vast and deep amounts of pure hate. I turned to those history books Cartwright still spurns to find a parallel to the alliance that was bred in that meeting, after I left. I found it. It was made in 1939, between the leaders of Germany and Russia. You may have heard their names somewhere.

Whatever offering T’Pring brought with her, it moved Cartwright enough to change the kill order to a kidnap and erase operation. Peter Kirk was to appear to die, and leave no trace as he went. I was to begin surveillance immediately. This surveillance led to my realizing that we could not make it look like the boy ran away, so a phony kidnapping scenario was concocted. Section 31 was re-staffed in the interim, and my agents, essentially demoted, were to now serve as cannon fodder in the attempt to take and control a young god. The new agents, to my chagrin, barely acknowledged me. A spy is always reluctant to speak of coldness, but I felt an ill wind blowing through the new Section Thirty-One. I wasn’t even permitted to meet with my replacement.

While all this was planned, I received word that, on a distant world, John Gill had given his life attempting to stop his own best student in hate, a man named Melakon, from *ruining* his Neo-Nazi regime. He was dead, and an unknowing James Kirk did not call his former teacher anything harsher than misguided in his official report. But while Gill was gone, the leash I’d put around my own throat grew ever tighter.

-----------------------------------


2268

The Admiral who performed the kidnapping was, if anything, even more of a madman than Cartwright. West knew all too well what–and who–was bound up in the carpet his men held horizontally.

“Get him into cryo-stasis immediately! If he awakens, even for a moment, we’re all done.”

The Admiral seemed to embody smugness as well as madness. The word was, his own son had perished in the ‘expedition’ to Iowa. No one was saying exactly how he had perished, indicating that perhaps the target had not been involved.

“Major West–heh–if you only knew how funny that was–Major West–I brought the galactic dynasty low. Gravimetric batons with duranium shells delivered over 9K per square centimeter to the brat’s swelled head. Even his powers of recuperation—“

West knew well what the ‘Major West’ joke was. His first partner had annoyed him with it years ago. But he was past being annoyed by it, and cut the senior officer off, practically snarling.

“Shut up! Do you know what his uncle did to Kodos’ forces, on Tarsus Four? He was not much older, and he did that without any superhuman powers. What’s sleeping in there is a young god, make no mistake. I am charged with maintaining all your miserable lives, including, to my regret, yours. Now get him in stasis!”

West’s adversary backhandedly jabbed his baton into the carpet, the contents of which jerked at the shock. West’s eyes grew a bit wide. He knew, then. He looked at his opponent in apparent defeat.

“You really enjoy your work, don’t you?”

Admiral Norman Osborn smiled. In one week, West would erase that smile by arresting him for the sale of Starfleet Cadets to the Orions. Some corruption ran too deep to tolerate, even for the Ghidoran Order. That this also cleared the way for Cartwright’s uncontested ascension to both Admiral and Order-Master was almost bearable to the spy.

“Let’s just say I’ve always hated little boys named Peter, and leave it at that.”

-------------------------------------


The long nightmare had begun.

Rene West watched it all on remote camera, and tried not to hate himself. But he was sworn to protect his charges, and in this case that meant remaining alive to call in the resources needed to protect them from their own foolishness.

*Bad little boys don’t get to keep their pants, Peter...*

Admiral Therese Bunson was another of the Order’s special projects, protected against charges of bullying, harassment, and ultimately, pedophilia. West washed his hands when even thinking about this woman.

*I present to you the heir of Kirk the xenophile, and the prime enemy of our Lord Ghidorah, here to serve our uses and to be broken by our power...”

Cartwright was in his glory. The others were so entranced by the sight of their quaking generational and in many respects, religious enemy, they nearly overlooked the presence of the Vulcan T’Pring, who had demanded this attendance as the price of certain logistical support. She began the so-called ‘Bacchanalia’ that would rip wide the dignity of a young boy. West tried several times to switch to a text-only descriptive read. He found he could not. Whether this was for the safety of his charges, or to bear witness to an atrocity for the ages, he could not say.

*Observe the ways of my people before their spines were ripped out by Surak and his domesticated pets. With but one touch, the sireling is ready to service us all. His body’s response is now beyond self-control, hormones, or even his own involuntary responses. The muscle will remain in a state of tension. At the start, it is painful. As it continues, for each target it becomes a new definition of agony.*

There were thirty-one Human adults, men and women, all of high rank and standing. For three days and three nights, they took turns at the boy, ten or more apiece. The boy took it, and took it, and West saw a look on his face not of terror or even shame, but of resignation, as though pain was his lot in life, that he deserved no better. But even when the vile are in control and the good have all but surrendered, a line can still be crossed. Evil may not always lose out to good, but it always oversteps.

*Does it hurt, punk? I only wish it was your worthless uncle on the ground. You can take it...and you have. But him I’d make squeal. Him, his woman, and his entire worthless cre....aaaaarrgh...my...my...he tore off my....*

West touched the screen. The gore began to fly.

“Idiots! His psych-profile. Never insult his family. It was in the briefing!”

The energy weapons failed. Osborn fled as his precious batons also failed. When people began to be split in two without being touched, West knew another fact as well. Their target was telekinetic. On screen, the boy stared at one of the largest guards, a man from a heavy-gravity world. But neither hell nor high-water was stopping him now. The boy’s eyes glowed red. West recalled some of the more fanciful heroic fiction he’d read as a child.

“It can’t be....Wardsen! Get out of there!”

The naked, bloodied boy spoke on-screen : *Burn!* The man before him did just that, in an arc of power that seemed to jump directly from the eyes of Peter Kirk.

“The backup is pouring in now. Why doesn’t he just escape?”

*Orders, Colonel?*

West shook his head.

“The target is immortal. Lethal force is authorized.”

The boy engaged, by hand and mind, over a thousand guards sent in to ‘contain’ him. The blood and bone would end up being so deeply embedded, transporter filters could not verifiably remove it all. Then came the move that would haunt Rene West for years.

“What is he doing now? He’s seized Cartwright, Bunson and Komack telekinetically–“

West nearly spat out his next words.

“–and moving them well out of harm’s way.”

The most charismatic, the most loathsome, and the weakest of his tormentors, respectively, and an enraged Peter Kirk had gone out of his way to protect them, before at last some unknown limit to his power was reached and he collapsed. Cartwright emerged, and in a nervous state, finally did what West had told them to do all along, and put the boy into cryo-stasis. One of his arms was not working. Lady T’Pring’s attendants finally got to her, and while she was under sedation, declared the eye that Peter Kirk had ripped out of its socket a loss. Bunson screamed when she saw the scars on her face. Komack, it was said, never regained complete control of his bladder, despite only having suffered minor injuries. The boy was moved, this time on West’s unopposed direction, to the lowest sub-basement of Admiralty Hall.

None of this mattered to West. He had done his job, directing the efforts to retake the Hall from the boy who they had kidnaped. But more than that, he now was forced to wonder why that boy hadn’t escaped when he had the chance, and why he had spared the top tier of his mortal enemies’ power structure.

---------------------------------

The man with the self-described, self-imposed leash on his neck suddenly found that he was the one holding the leash. Osborn’s arrest, plus the price of ignoring his counsel on Peter Kirk, had raised his stock immensely. Cartwright, who had been increasingly keeping him at arm’s length, now insisted on West’s presence at nearly every meeting. In some cases, this insistence made a lot more sense than others.

“A delay? A delay is unconscionable! We stand at the ready, even if the Hall is too weak-willed to unleash our might!”

If Cartwright was the head of the Order that transacted in political and military power, then men like this one were its social front. They were really how the Order was everywhere. They were angry voices at public meetings, they were the means by which representatives’ comm-call banks were overloaded, and they were people trained to lie to any pollster who sought to know public opinion, so that any reading of that opinion would be utterly worthless. In other words, West thought wryly, just regular folks, except for wanting to kill ninety-seven percent of all neighboring life in the universe, and being willing to tolerate the deaths of half of those remaining from that. After that, it was all on something of a wait-and-see basis.

“The coup was supposed to go forward, Order-Master. It must go forward. Or we must have new leadership. The alien infestation of our planet–our universe–has been put up with long enough. The True Humanity will not be silent very much longer.”

“Please understand, we’ve been decimated. Fifteen of our top people went down that night, and the soldiers we lost were meant to command our wider forces. But good news also came of that nightmare. The Kirk boy is our means to control and direct the movements of Lord Ghidorah himself. Surely the coup can wait for the one true deity?”

West, though no longer religious, winced inwardly at Cartwright’s words. If God was out there, it was not in the form of a three-headed dragon. That much he knew.

“The real people of this planet are restive, Admiral. They won’t put up with the alien tyranny, and the imposition of their hive minds on the free and brave. Lord Ghidorah isn’t the only sleeping giant. Be very mindful of that.”

The nearly-crazed man was somehow placated, but West realized from this that the people he protected, while dangerous, were not the most dangerous ones out there.
 
-----------------------


2269

West was apoplectic.

“Kirk has violated the Neutral Zone-again. You all treat him as an enemy, but you’re applauding him! Do you realize the amount of resources we’ll have to turn to all parts of the Romulan border, to prevent reprisals?”

Bunson shrugged.

“Jimmy was always the bad boy. But he’s handed us an enormous propaganda victory. The Romulans will be too busy trying to deny and then spin Hellguard to worry about reprisals. Heh. The Vulcans want their cousins’ private parts chopped off in very illogical ways.”

Komack seemed in his element.

“Even before I signed on over here, I was annoyed by how often he dances around the rules. But they were torturing kids. To the eyes of the media, kids are kids. Hurting them never goes well. He even adopted one. Federation maverick saves innocent kids. The Klingons are said to be seriously rethinking the alliance. They won’t, of course. But this looks like the no-lose scenario.”

Cartwright joined in the chorus.

“The aliens are happy, and not bothering us, which makes me happy. The Council in Paris has something to complain about with an election coming up, so they’re happy. Even our people are happy, and that’s next to impossible. We’ll put on a public show of upset, and then let the people shout us down. We’ll *grudgingly* accede to their will. But maybe there’s an extra benefit to be derived. Kirk’s people followed his orders, didn’t they Rene?”

“Yes. But Kirk bears ultimate responsibility. We’d be lucky to get minor prosecutions on the rest. An officer obeys their CO’s orders.”

For people who absolutely despised James Kirk, the residents and staff of Admiralty Hall now seemed able to live with his existence and presence. It was not within West’s ability to comprehend.

“You fail to see the point, Rene. Let this serve as the stopping point for the ascendancy of the stock of the Enterprise crew. Lord Ghidorah put paid to the classic overman, George Kirk. James Kirk is an existing problem that we now know can be managed to our benefit. Peter Kirk will bring us the keys to the universe. It’s his other heirs that concern me. We cannot stop Captain Kirk, and frankly, we don’t want to. He gives our explicit enemies major pause, and removing him would embolden them. However, the careers of Captain Sulu, Captain Chekov, and so forth? Those we can put a stop to, and we must. We’ve broken the Kirks repeatedly. We broke their anointed champion only just last year, whatever the cost.”

Bunson smiled.

“Quietly, though. The xenophilia Kirk spreads must stay contained to Enterprise. Any ideas come to mind, Rene?”

The plan seemed calm, almost rational. Cartwright was a poser and a yeller. Komack was a careerist and a coward, broken by vids the Order had of him and the selfsame sick little girl who had gladly betrayed Peter Kirk the night he was taken. Bunson was about tender flesh, the more of it she could grab, and the less willing they were, the better. Yet this plan actually was a plan, and they wanted their best spy’s input. What had changed? Was the savagery of that night truly enough to make the bludgeons into scalpels?

“I’ve kept tabs on a group of malcontents. The lowlights of the Enterprise’s crew, if you will. Many of them put off the ship with less ceremony than Paul Stiles, but with much better cause and with one hundred times the petty resentments. Spread throughout the Fleet and protected as all of you were, they can file endless reports and complaints that should slow and stop the careers of all of Kirk’s officers save Spock and Sulu. Spock will likely never seek his own command, and Sulu will be hitting middle-age before he hits a center seat of his own. These cogs in their career machines, as it were, will never be dismissed or resolved, and eventually, the inertia will take its toll, with people wondering why they don’t move up and assuming there must be a reason.”

West left with their approval, and later in his office, fought off revulsion at placing chains on the careers of good men and women. Once, when asked by his former partner if he would ‘pull a JFK’ .West responded yes. He would kill the Federation President if it served the greater good of the Federation, and of Earth. So he rationalized keeping the officers of the USS Enterprise running in place by telling himself that it was there they could best defend the Earth.
“A little boy in Hell, a crew in career limbo, aiding and abetting the rise of what may be Satan itself. Ah, but I did chastise the Federation’s greatest hero, only to have his sworn and secret enemies exonerate him. All in all, a full, rich year.”

Rene West found that he was staring at the phaser rifle on his table for hours, before starting to contact the malcontents he had described.

--------------------

2271

It seemed, by and large, the apocalypse had come fifteen years earlier than some might expect. But there was no dragon in sight, and no coup was raised. The religious prayed for salvation, and so did the agnostics, atheists, and even a budding artificial intelligence nurtured back to health by Richard Daystrom, who was being nurtured back to health by the maternal grandfather of the boy held in secret by Admiralty Hall.

That boy was the only one likely to survive the destruction of Earth.

Rene West did not cower in the bunkers with his charges in Starfleet Command. He did his cowering in the Seattle Space Needle, determined to see the end coming whenever it did.

“This is Colonel West of Starfleet Intelligence. Is anyone out there? Anyone at all? Because from here…it looks like the end of the world.”

The Enterprise’s refit had become a rapid priority when the probe had been detected. When ships and stations went down, wherever it passed, the concerns began. When word came that a Klingon attack force had been summarily wiped away by its power, the fear began. By the time it appeared over Jupiter, skirting its mighty gravity well without incident, the panic was in full swing. Grand Admiral Heichiaro Nogura (who had never wanted the title Grand; but the Hall’s cozy relationship with the UFP Council overrode his wishes) flew to Paris, to be with his family. The word came that the Enterprise had met the entity, called V’Ger, despite interference by the being once called Trelane, now referring to itself as a member of a continuum of beings called the Q. A request for an ancient NASA transmit information code had been received. West was the only one capable of sending it. He did, and all became calm. The earthquakes stopped. V’Ger simply vanished. All seemed well.

Then, the second probe appeared, the waves churned and the cloud cover all over the planet reached one-hundred percent. The transparent aluminum in the space needle burst. An intense spray laden with salt and other minerals left West unable to see clearly.

“Are you all right, Mister?”

It was a kid, a teenager from the sound of his voice. What in the hell was he doing there?

“How did you get here?”
“I don’t know, sir. I was staying at my grandma’s place, and then some people grabbed me, and then I was here.”

Looters, he thought. Not caring what they took, so long as they took something.

“I’ll use whatever I have to protect you. But the Needle is probably coming down at some point.”

“He’ll stop them. He always does. And he has the best crew helping him.”

His eyes were still stinging, but it was his ears West couldn’t believe.

“Little boy, please tell me how can you hold on to such an absurd level of hope? Don’t you know what’s out there?”

The visitor’s shape nodded in West’s vision.

“V’ger, and the other one. And beyond them—King Ghidorah. They aren’t part of him, but it all seems to tie together, doesn’t it? I wish I could be there with them. It took all I have to make it here.”

The clouds began to part and the rains stopped all at once. Rene West’s vision also rapidly cleared, though by now he wished it wouldn’t. He knew who he would see.

“I’m sorry. I’m so sorry. But your captivity protects the Earth, and perhaps the Federation itself.”

The image of a boy frowned at the lingering cloud cover.

“I was hoping to see the sun again. The power for the psi-suppresser should be coming back on. I will be free. They can’t stop that. But it won’t be today, will it?”

“No. Peter—why do they believe they can control Ghidorah through you?”

“Because they’re idiots, on top of everything else? To be fair, though, he and I are mortal enemies. We can sense each other. Night has day, up has down, and I have Ghidorah. We’ve battled across a thousand realities, and I’ve always beaten him. But this place is different. No guarantees, except…”

The scary teen looked with contempt at the spy.

“Except for the one about what happens to those who cooperate with evil, thinking they can do good.”

“Peter, why did you spare the lives of---“

The image began to fade.

“Ogasawara Island, not too far from Japan. Ask after it, Colonel. Ask after it. You’re a good man. You’re better than this. I challenge you to be bett…”

As West begged him not to leave, he heard the first comm-call come through at last, and guessed correctly who it must be. Irony was like that.

“Good to hear, Captain Kirk. I will inform Grand Admiral Nogura that the crisis has been averted, and look forward to your report on the Q.”

“Colonel, if I might. You look like---you’ve seen a ghost.”

West shrugged.

“Very nearly my own, and just about everyone else’s. I thought it was all over. But a wake-up call from a Kirk can still end a nightmare, it seems.”

When Kirk, standing next to what looked like a very exhausted Spock, signed off, West sealed the doors to the restaurant he had taken over as his staging area, and began to weep openly for more reasons than he cared to consider.

----------------

2273

The man in the bar had been one of the top scientists on the Hall’s *unspoken project*. Now, he was a security leak to be plugged, for talking and hinting when inebriated. Before West did this, he got him good and inebriated.

“Osgosh-so-whataa island? Yeeesh! Wadda fugup dat wash---shorry. Yeah, that really went wrong. Aaaggh. Basically, they tried to clone Peter Kirk.”

“They failed?”

“Dependsh on your POV. Oh, they got something outta there. Did you ever wonder what would happen if you crossed a Tyrannosaurus Rex with a Stegosaurus, and then baked the DNA of the resulting hy-br-id with enough hard radiation to cook a large city? “

West waited for the punchline, such as it was.

“Well, the people on Ogasawara didn’t have to wonder—about that, or anything else, ever again. Before the damned thing exploded, it gave off a shriek like a gorilla’s war-cry mixed with whale-song—heh—thanks, Jimmy. Or mebbe a hundred bull-elephants, if they trumpeted backwards. Now, the only creature in the whole god-damned universe that can even set foot on that island ever again is the kid they tried to clone. Oh—I need a drink.”

West got him that drink, and a little something extra, as well. He wished he could drink, but, he reasoned, his dreams were sometimes horrible enough without toxins to aid them.

-----------------------

2275

West stared at the body of a boy who looked for all the world like a younger Peter Kirk. He instinctively kept back comments about knowledge they obviously had not wanted him to have.

“His younger brother from Deneva?”

Cartwright shook his head.

“Half-brother.”

Bunson nodded.

“Dear Carol Marcus got herself knocked up again. Since her first trap failed, she didn’t even tell Jimmy about this one. She believes she miscarried.”

*So*, thought West, *we’re now just shy of cutting wombs open. Lovely.*

Komack, ever more spineless as the years passed, pointed at the corpse.

“Raised and reared by the Order, and with powers similar to his brother, and none of his simplistic morals. Problem was, it was bit like sending an oversized iguana to fight a dragon. Project failure. In the end, he wasn’t immortal. I would have thought better of Peter, than to kill his own brother, even in psychic battle. It does render him a bit of a hypocrite, doesn’t it?”

Aside from the raging hypocrisy of that statement, West fought off laughter at the boy’s tormentors acting like they knew him, somehow. He also realized he had not asked a question in quite some time, and needed to keep up appearances.

“Why wasn’t I told about this project? And why am I being told now?”

Cartwright was nearly beaming.

“Our boy did it, Rene! He kept his older sibling busy long enough for us to make contact! Prime Contact!”

West was bright enough to make the connection, and found that he still had enough ‘simplistic morals’ to be utterly disgusted by what this meant.

“Ghidorah. You’ve contacted Ghidorah.”

His hands behind his back, West dug the nails from one hand into the palm of the other.

“Congrats, Brock! It’s what you’ve worked for. Your dream!”

As he nodded and bowed, West fought to keep his afternoon lentil soup where it was. It was an effort.

“Our dream, Rene. Ours. We could not have done this without you. I could tell sometimes that you thought I was insane---heh—and maybe I am---but you always followed orders, and did it quietly.”

Bunson seemed almost charming, and he could see how someone who didn’t know her at all might see her as pretty. Then came the time after those first five seconds, when it became clear.

“You made all this possible. You, Colonel West, make The Order Of The Ancient Destroyer quite literally the ‘they’ in ‘that’s what they say’. We don’t even need to breathe on people to get them in line, anymore.”

Komack’s words only registered because West felt like being punished.

“You kept the religious looneys in line. Without your firm hand and ability to reassure, they’d have done something stupid, by now. Maybe exposed the whole deal.”

Cartwright glared at Komack, but then nodded.

“Semantics aside, they can be a bit fervent. But now, with the cover and quiet you’ve given us, Colonel, we have the ultimate bone to throw them.”

Again, West sought to focus on business, to avoid grabbing his sidearm.

“What—influence will we have on the movements of—The Ancient Destroyer?”

Komack, still reeling from Cartwright’s glare, answered so as not to look like exactly what he was.

“Nudging, really. Kind of like grabbing the attention of an AI-based targeting sensor. We estimate ten years before his paths take him fully into the heart of this troubled quadrant.”

Bunson looked almost orgasmic, for once in a non-carnal way.

“Then the cleansing can begin. Minus the Human worlds, of course.”

Cartwright then casually said among the most chilling words West would ever hear.

“Well, those, he’ll simply spare. Our Lord will know where his elect are.”

At last, West knew the fine details of the big plan to protect the Earth. Wishful thinking.

“Everyone, this is obviously news for the ages. But I have a mandatory meeting with Nogura.”

Cartwright held up the emblematic comm-badge of the Grand Admiral, Starfleet.

“Nogura died this morning. And guess who he nominated as his successor?”

West took in the fact that not only were the lunatics running the asylum, but Madness itself was coming for an extended visit—coming to stay, really. He didn’t even question how Cartwright would pull off this maneuver—the position could not be inherited or designated, or at least not yet. The Federation Council liked a quiet Starfleet, and the Hall gave them that. Nogura never had. Most of Starfleet’s rank-and-file would mourn Nogura, the man who had kept a false fool’s peace with the devil (though was West any better?), the Council never would. The supreme irony being that, most of them being by definition non-Humans, they were high on the Order’s long list of the proscribed.

“Well, Colonel? Shake my hand?”

West lied.

“Poison Ivy, Grand Admiral. A hazard of surveillance work, I’m afraid.”

After being jokingly told not to scratch, West left Admiralty Hall, and booked a shuttle away from the City By The Bay.

“Where are you headed, sir?”

West shrugged at the Ensign, and considered saying something witty.

*To see a diplomat about diplomacy by other means.*

But the Order was everywhere, and besides, he was sick to death of witty remarks.
 
West ditched the Starfleet shuttle near what had become his Seattle office, and used a refillable pay-card to go the rest of his way, the way a tourist would. Spy-work taught one the means and methods of moving under the sensors, and, to coin a phrase, nobody did it better than Rene West.

-------------------

MINNESOTA

Sarek of Vulcan saw a man who looked of Native American extraction, sitting where his call had said he would be. The statue he sat by was at one time considered offensive, being one of a Native American caricature holding a group of tobacco-laden ‘cigars’. Since World War Three, all such items, from Van Goghs to purest kitsch, that survived, were considered treasures beyond price.

“Sarek Of Vulcan. I hear that you’re looking for someone. A lost boy. Maybe Peter Pan himself.”

Sarek kept it all business, but had a visible reaction to the name ‘Peter’.

“You are Proudfoot?”

“That’s the name I’ve chosen for this. Do you have an excuse for meeting me?”

Sarek nodded.

“Should anyone ask, I expressed an interest in your nation’s oral traditions and folklore. There was not much you could tell me, so we parted ways quickly.”

West nodded. The man knew his art.

“Is your ward about?”

Sarek’s face turned arch.

“At one time, Captain James Kirk’s adopted daughter, a Saavik Kirk, stayed as a guest in my home. This arrangement has ended. Is that to whom you refer? Because I am told she stays now in Montana, with Kirk’s uncle.”

West knew that the fate of Peter Kirk’s adopted sister had rivaled the boy’s own for pain. Sarek’s lengthy denial revealed his pain in the matter of Saavik Kirk’s banishment from Vulcan.

“Sorry. It’s too bad that young lady isn’t about. You see, Ambassador—her brother would love to meet her.”

Sarek looked hard at the man he knew only as Proudfoot.

“Certainly, there are many that would welcome news of her brother. Could such a meeting be arranged?”

They both had to measure their words carefully. Things may not have been that bad yet, but they were getting there fast.

“I’m afraid not. The boy’s been ill, and had to stay in his room. The accommodations have not been very good. He’s complained of a chill.”

“I see. Then could he be picked up, say, by his and the girl’s father?”

West shook his head.

“The family he’s staying with is fairly abusive. Some don’t even realize he’s staying with them. Here is a map of where you might start looking.”

Inside the paper map was a file-chip, with schematics for Admiralty Hall, and the design for disguising nanoprobes. Sarek pocketed the paper, and folded over his hand on the chip.

“Can you yourself aid the boy in getting better?”

“I have a position in the household. One of the most trusted.”

Sarek took the inverted implication properly.

“And therefore one of the most scrutinized, as well.”

“Actually, Ambassador, where I work, all positions are the most scrutinized. The paranoid are like that. I believe we can talk freely, now. If they had us pegged, they would have taken action by now.”

Sarek looked about, despite agreement with this statement.

“If not right after you made such a fate-tempting statement. My debt to James Kirk is considerable. And I have learned that a member of my family committed a grave wrong against Peter Kirk. There is also another factor. It involves matters some might call occult. But it has importance far beyond such obscura.”

West did not want this meeting to last long, whoever was and was not onto him. His disguise was of course flawless, but some random factor undoing them increased in possibility with each moment they dawdled.

“That dreadful day, come round at last. That day of wrath, as in the past. The final words of Surak speak of his coming, as do those of Kahless The Klingon. I’m afraid, Mister Ambassador, that in fact, pardon my Francais, it ain’t all crap. The damned thing is real. It killed the boy’s grandfather, on the day he was born.”

Sarek asked West one last question.

“Why are you doing this? Whoever you are, you risk much by your actions.”

“Actually, Ambassador, I risk it all. When they figure out who betrayed them—I’m already dead. But I can accept that, because of my sins, and because I have re-thought a certain deeply-felt conviction. I once believed that the good dither while the world burns. I believed that, while people of good intent run things, the system goes slowly to Hell. I now understand at last, that while this may be true, when seemingly focused, seemingly strong people of malign intent run things—things go straight to Hell, and then just keep on digging downward.”

Sarek got up to leave.

“If I have surmised correctly about the boy’s location, my plans must take time. Does he have that time?”

“He does. All of us might not have much more than a decade.”

Sarek appeared to shudder at West’s words.

“Indeed. I will, owing to the risk described, not attempt to contact you.”

“Nor I you. Get him out, Ambassador. But my frank advice is, do so without involving James Kirk. His rage, upon learning what they’ve done, might play right into their hands.”

“Most logical. Farewell, Proudfoot—a Native American name, or is it taken from—“

The spy was already gone, so Sarek began to calculate a way to free the son of Captain Kirk from his own utmost superiors.

-------------

PRIVATE JOURNAL

I knew Sarek would either reason a way to get Peter Kirk out himself, or finally turn to James Kirk, despite my warnings. I wish I could have told him that Kirk’s uncle in Montana had been my partner and trainer. He drove me out of my mind, but Bill Kirk knew the shadows and how to plot and strike from them. I was stunned when he left Thirty-One to become a cop, and then a lawyer. Then again, it kept him from singing. I called him a fool for leaving the world where the decisions are really made. Bill, forgive a young man his cocksure nature. My hubris may end up costing all of creation.

In the three years that followed, Sarek bided his time. Neither of us was arrested, made to vanish or suffer an unfortunate accident. The girl, Saavik, even managed to get her order of banishment rescinded.

I continued my work, though with a twist. I began to sow chaos among the cleverer members of the Order’s rank-and-file. The ones smart enough to strike hard fast and effectively, but too dumb to realize the value of all life. I had decided I was a patriot, no longer just for one world, but for the Federation. When they came for me, as they must, I wanted not just helping free that one boy, but a laundry list of things to be vaporized for. I still believe there may be a God, and if he pushes me downstairs, I want a positive ledger as well, to at least make it not an easy decision. I will also request that I be permitted to stand above Brock and the others. That shouldn’t be hard. The Admirals, except the monkish Cartwright, had all begun to follow Bunson’s lead. Starfleet Academy was placed under In Loco Parentis, and even that was a pretext for turning our cadets into the residents of a brothel. If someone should read this, and think that In Loco Parentis is just par for the course at a military-style Academy, then you never attended Starfleet. We used to not want willing automatons to be used and then to die as cannon fodder. The fate of some young women who found themselves pregnant by officers they thought they could trust will haunt me all my days. If they did not arrest me, I determined, by the time Peter Kirk was freed, I would go down taking some of these monsters out. I have things to answer for, above and below, including the fates of children. But I will wager my soul that I will have fewer accusers on either side of the veil than any resident of Admiralty Hall.

Yet whether by arrest or blaze of glory, before my time came, I was determined to solve one last mystery : Why had an enraged young god, or perhaps Archangel, saved the lives of those who had most directly caused him to suffer so hideously?

----------------------

2277

West stared at the stark footage as he had for nearly ten years. It was ugly stuff, made harsher for him by the part he had played in it all.

“None of them were gentle, nor did his face betray one hint of somehow enjoying it.”

A sick thought, he knew, but he had to allow for even insane possibilities.

“Guards died after he moved the top three out of the way of his and the guards line of fire. So he wasn’t sick of killing, if he even registered what he was doing.”

He could have just left them in the path of the invading guards. He could have killed them by blowing their heads off, their hearts out, or any number of ways.

“You called me a good man, Peter. You challenged me to be better. But you are the designated hero. You had the chance to destroy your most powerful enemies, short of Ghidorah itself. So why did you forego it?”

As a telepath, he could have even rendered them catatonic forever, the grand conspirators drooling in Alcatraz, or shouting next to Norman Osborn in Tantalus’ secure lockdown.

“Telepathy. If all his powers were in over-drive, then so was that.”

The boy picked up on something? What would Cartwright, all about the business of the Order, have been thinking about?

“That lunatic we met with. The fanatic who demanded the coup go forward. That meeting was scheduled to take place anyway, and the boy had no way to get to all the members of the Order in Sector 001. And those three keep the others in line. So the boy crippled his opponent without causing a new opponent, more vicious and reckless, to move into the place of the one he beat back.”

West never spoke out loud while alone. Normally, that is. But he could feel the wheels turning, and speech focused thoughts he had not been able to put together for nearly a decade.

“Yet he could have done this well before he was raped. He could have moved against them all, and spared the ones needed for stability. He certainly could have escaped.”

His endurance of the shame and humiliation had possible explanations. An immortal would process pain differently. Certainly the Immortals wiped away three years prior had done so. The two Scotsman West had known of were said to be able to outright ignore it. In addition, the boy’s psych-profile indicated someone who took pleasure in out-enduring those who thought they controlled him, like the parents on Deneva and the grandmother in the late, lamented town of Riverside. The loss of his little brother had also devastated him, probably adding survivor’s guilt to his many problems.

“You didn’t feel you deserved any better. The Chosen One felt he was the lowest thing ever created. While the people who have doomed our way of life-possibly all life everywhere-think themselves saviors. Irony. Hmpph! I could do without it.”

But still, there was a missing piece. This Kirk, even for his tender age, had a plan. What it was finally hit the master spy.

“You sensed that allowing them to hurt you so terribly would satisfy their need for revenge upon your family. So by choosing not to escape, and by letting those demons do their worst at you, you protected your uncle—you protected them all. You took the coup—a hopeless situation—and turned the monsters towards everyday business—giving the entire universe a fighting chance. You took your moment of Hell—and made it instead your high water mark.”

But it had gone wrong, West realized as well. Perhaps the boy had thought his heroes would soon rescue him. That had never happened, though it might happen soon.

“Because—of me. At least in part.”

Whether or not his wild theory was true—and to be fair, in large part, it was—the example of a mere boy who, kidnapped, violated, drugged and taunted, had undone the plans of the ultimate conspiracy at the cost of his own dignity and freedom, inspired Rene West to do something he had never expected.

He decided to forego arrests and blazes of glory, and see if the angels had room for a devil who had turned in his horns.

----------------------

2278

“So you left right then and there?”

West shook his head.

“That would have been foolish. No, I bided my time, seeding the intelligence community with false reports that the Orions had a new supplier for Starfleet Cadets. I told Cartwright I needed to go undercover, and that it would necessitate an extended silence. Given Brock’s general depth, I probably could have told him I was going out for smokes.”

Aaron Sisko raised an eyebrow.

“Great-Uncle Brock is a monster. But he’s not that stupid.”

Harriet Janeway agreed with her ex-husband.

“What will you do when they figure you out? They never stop hunting traitors. Look what they did to Finnegan.”

To the divorced but still friendly couple’s shock, West seemed to become blurry in their vision, before reappearing—as Harriet Janeway.

“I’ll just have to use a little trick I learned from interrogating Captain Garth.”

With the disguise even duplicating her voice, Janeway looked at Sisko, and they silently agreed that West would be a great asset. He shifted back, looking unsteady for a second.

“Still haven’t quite got the hang of this shape-shifting. I’ll get there, though.”

Sisko still had a question.

“Why come to us now?”

West actually smiled.

“Twenty-Four hours ago, a disguised Saavik Kirk entered Admiralty Hall. She is the other half of the Rock Of Prophecy, and has all the same powers as him. I would say that Peter Kirk’s freedom is now a foregone conclusion.”

Janeway closed her eyes.

“My father believed he was the Messiah. I babysat him. He was always sad, but when he would smile, you just felt like something good was about to happen. I pray he smiles a lot, very soon.”

Sisko got back to business.
“What can we do for you? The information you’ve provided is a logistical feast, including double-agents’ names. But you can’t be around here for a while. Maybe a good while.”

West stated his terms flatly.

“I need passage to a non-Federation, yet friendly, world. Preferably, someone we have no diplomatic relations with.”

Sisko was master of the Utopia Planitia shipyards. Janeway was Starfleet’s liaison to the Federation President, Ydennek.

“I can get you a ship. Slow, but tough. We built it to fight the Tholians, and named it after the first ship lost to their attacks. It’ll weather the back-routes you’ll want to take, to avoid attention.”

Janeway chimed in.

“I can get you a pilot. A bit of a beach-bum, but he’ll relish the challenge. As to the world, we were recently contacted by it. Its religious leader said that we would soon receive news of Peter Kirk’s fate. Well off the beaten path.”

West focused, then shifted to the form of the Native American who had spoken with Sarek.

“Then Proudfoot is ready. What’s this world called?”

Sisko began to calculate how to do this.

“Bajor. This leader—the Kai, they called him, said that we would also be providing them with a new constable for their security forces. But do you honestly want to use a name taken from the works of JRR Tolkien? That surname could be a red flag to those hunting you.”

West thought it over.

“Good recognition, Commander Sisko, and a good point. Perhaps, during my stay on Bajor, I’ll drop the surname Proudfoot and just use the character’s given name—Odo.”

---------------------

CONCLUDING PRIVATE JOURNAL

On my new world, I may still have something to do. It seems that their Kai has recently become suspicious of extreme free-market traders who have set up shop on their world. They are called Cardassians. He’d like me to ascertain their true intentions. Sounds like fun.


I hope that I can be the better man that young hero seemed to think I could be. But even if I myself can never be a hero, I have decided once and for all that I will stand with the living when Ghidorah comes. For all my fellow beings, I will stand with a bucket and a sandbag, to oppose the crimson tide, when comes the high water.
 
Title : That’s What

Author : ‘Goji’ Rob Morris

Series : The TOS-based AU, The Ancient Destroyer Cycle

Type : Background/Paranoia

Part : 1/1

Characters : Christine Chapel

Rating : PG13, for disturbing concepts

Summary : After the events of ‘What Are Little Girls Made Of?’, Nurse Chapel confronts a deep fear…

That’s What
by Rob Morris

PERSONAL JOURNAL, CHRISTINE CHAPEL, RN

USS ENTERPRISE, 2266

I know what I will and won’t find. I will find the calming answer to the paranoid chills I’ve been feeling since the Captain and I returned from Roger’s little underground nightmare. I won’t find—well, I won’t find what isn’t there, and that’s that.

Everyone, even Mister Spock, has been complimenting me on how well I’ve been handling his loss. I don’t know that this is at all true. Normally, even a hint of a compliment from Spock can send me reeling. I was even going to joke about this with Roger. Needless to say, this never even got brought up. The man down there no longer had room for jealousy, playful or real. Because the man down there wasn’t a man at all.

Yet am I, in my apparent grieving, any better? I know about grief, and that people in it throw themselves into their work. But that’s just it. I haven’t. I haven’t stayed away from my work, and I haven’t immersed myself in it. My routine has been absolute and total clockwork perfection. That’s never been my way, but then, I’ve never before grieved for the man I love while his soulless duplicate stood across from me barely a week before. I have nothing to judge by. That I get. What I don’t get is why I feel nothing. Vulcans still feel. Captain Pike’s late wife and First Officer, still talked about by the ship’s veterans, still felt very deeply. People like that just have control. I never have, and yet now I do.
The Captain and Doctor McCoy put the thought in my head, though certainly without meaning to.

*Jim, of all the fool stunts. Cutting your own hand to see if you bleed?*

*Doctor, YOU weren’t strapped down and presented with a walking solid mirror meant to replace you!*

*I could have scanned you.*

*But Bones, they were built just that well. Could you be certain that the scanners weren’t fooled?*

After threatening to invoke a CMO’s Final Option, Doctor McCoy made Captain Kirk promise to talk with him every day for the next month. The odd part for me came when I realized that, while the Captain’s fears intrigued me, they did not awaken fear in me, except in the very broadest sense. So I’ve given in, and decided to cut my own hand.
I cut it five minutes ago, and there is still not an ounce of blood on the counter in front of me. Because I’m not me. Christine Chapel has been replacezaazaaaz…………

*EMERGENCY SYSTEMIC REBOOT*

*RESET MEMORY CORE*

*CHAPEL-2 ANTI-RECOGNITION ROUTINE ONLINE*

*Diagnostic : Reduce workplace efficiency and social efficacy to eighty percent of standard for a period of two weeks. Sufficient to avert suspicion of condition. Epidermal replacement routines active. Correlate, Korby-3. Confirmed. Alteration of ship’s scanners and tricorders is proceeding. Avoidance of Subject : Spock until surface thought simulator upgrade is available.*

*SYSTEMS REACTIVATION*

PERSONAL JOURNAL, CHRISTINE CHAPEL, RN

USS ENTERPRISE, 2266

I know what I will and won’t find. I will find the calming answer to the paranoid chills I’ve been feeling since the Captain and I returned from Roger’s little underground nightmare. I won’t find—well, I won’t find what isn’t there, and that’s that.

Because I’m not going to look. Apologies to Captain Kirk, but I know what I’m made of.

END ENTRY

SIX MONTHS LATER

“Thanks, Nurse Chapel.”

The little boy gratefully drank down his chocolate milkshake.

“Call me Christine, Peter. Its good to have a child on board.”

“Okay, Christine. Err—why do you keep looking at me?”

*SUBJECT : KIRK, PETER CLAUDIUS. HUMAN-ROMULAN HYBRID, MASSIVE CELLULAR REGENERATION, LEVEL TWELVE PSIONIC VECTORS, PHYSICAL STRENGTH TERRA MULTIPLIER TWENTY-FIVE, POSSIBLE ENERGY MANIPULATION VECTORS ON ALPHA/OMEGA SCALE*

“It’s like I said, Peter. I just like having children aboard.”

Three years after this, Chapel-2 would repeat this exact same intonation, when the child in question was named Saavik. From time to time, the unit that walked like the late Christine Chapel would again realize its true nature.

Just never for very long.
 
Title: Down through the Circles

Author: ‘Goji’ Rob Morris

Series: The TOS-based AU, The Ancient Destroyer Cycle

Type: Character/Flashback/Infiltration

Characters: Sarek, Saavik, others

Part: 5/6

Rating: PG13

Summary: In 2268, Captain Kirk’s nephew and adopted son Peter vanished from his home in Iowa and was presumed killed. In 2278, Captain Kirk’s adopted daughter Saavik undertakes to recover Peter, who may or may not be a figure of prophecy, and who is held by the corrupt upper echelon of Starfleet Command itself. As she enters a hell on Earth, Saavik recalls her past and how it may not be her brother who truly needs saving. In the meantime, Sarek is keeping several things secret. Is one of them a concern about his health?

Note : I really hadn’t intended to go to six parts, but so much stuff came to mind as I was writing the ‘past’ portion that I felt it was best. Also, large portions of this fall outside of Saavik’s ability to narrate, so the POV jumps a little bit. I hope that it doesn’t make it difficult to read – Rob Morris

Down Through The Circles
by Rob Morris

In The Clearing, Stands A Boxer, And A Fighter By His Trade, And He Carries The Reminder Of Every Glove That Laid Him Down Or Cut Him, Till He Cried Out, In His Anger And His Shame, I Am Leaving, I Am Leaving, But The Fighter Still Remains – Paul Simon, The Boxer

-------------------------------------

THE PAST, 2274

Montana, Earth

“I am your grand-niece.”

The man who answered the door to the ranch-style home looked for all the world like an older version of my father, which made sense, as he was his father’s brother. His weight and girth were both greater, and he seemed to speak each sentence as though with a pronounced pause.

“Yes. I can—see the family resemblance.”

William S Kirk claimed that the S stood for whatever he wanted it to. He did not look like the sort who took himself or much of anything else seriously.

“Obviously, I am adopted.”

His smile seemed smug and self-amused. His eyes darted around, as though he was confused.

“Obviously, you have no sense of humor. Jim told me you did. But he was right about one thing. You are a pretty one.”

I began to blush immediately, and shook my head.

“I am not pretty. I have come to accept that. You do not need to exaggerate on my behalf.”

“Are you calling me a liar?”

“Humans are prone to worry over offering offense. You need have no such concern with me. I do not have—“

The door then slammed in my face. After five minutes, I knocked again. After five more, I was on the verge of knocking it down, when he once again opened it.

“Am I a liar?”

I was perhaps already caring for this man.

“We are of differing opinions, but I will respect the honesty of yours, and apologize for offering offense. May I dwell in your house?”

“For—how long, Saavik? For—how—long?”

My face lost a bit of its composure, then and there.

“For—ever. I have no other place to go.”

He sat me down on his couch, what he called a futon bed couch. I told him why I must stay with him. Because I felt I could, I told him everything.

“Do you want me to talk to this T’Pau? I’m—quite the negotiator. Promise.”

If I had always felt on the outside of life’s sense of humor, this was a man who was very much on the inside of the joke. He seemed perhaps dangerously savvy.

“There is no negotiation with the Sra Sra of Vulcan.”
The man I would soon call Uncle Bill chuckled.

“You do realize that her title translates as ‘The Mother Of All Mothers’?”

“That is a disrespectful way to refer to—“

“The woman that banished you, after being attacked by a group of thuggish bigots, all so those same bigots can keep their self-control, which is supposed to be a given for most Vulcans?”

I turned away from him, and hung my head in shame.

“I told you what I did to my attackers.”

He put his hand on my shoulder.

“Yeah. Somewhere on Vulcan, there is a girl, barely in her teens, who is missing a leg for no other reason than you got pissed off. You have to live with that, the other injuries you know of, and more than a few you don’t., and some you may never know of, but caused just the same, in a fit of rage that, regardless of where you were born, is something you knew would be looked down upon on the world you once called home. You have to live with that.”

He then turned me around, and held a finger tenderly under my chin.

“Now, you have to also remember: None of them had to do what they did. They chose to attack you, when they could have just left you alone. This T’Akih, the girl whose leg you took? Whatever her aunt demanded, she chose to try and molest you with a length of glass tube. What you did was wrong. But it didn’t occur in a vacuum. And that part about the sehlat cubs taking the leg before surgery could be performed? I happen to know about Vulcan fauna, Saavik. How many wild sehlats are within the perimeter of a public school?”

I felt more than somewhat foolish, when I considered his words.

“Then T’Pring lies, even to her own, and is so much a liar, she is as a lie herself. How can I
prevail against such as her?”

Bill held me close.

“By surviving. I’ve met her type before. In the end, they hate our ability to endure. They laugh about it, but they know that what we put up with, they never could. Now, how about some Vegetarian Barley Soup?”

The meal was simple, but it was a sign to me that I was welcome in this man’s home. However, I was still to learn why Uncle Jim had called his father’s brother ‘A Trip’. I found it hard to sleep that night for two reasons. One was my thoughts of an older couple on Vulcan, people who were no longer permitted to say my name in public. Several times, I stopped myself from calling Sra Amanda. The only thing that stopped me was the possible use such an intercepted call could be put to by T’Pring and her ilk, seeking to remove Sarek from his post.

The other thing that kept me up that night was the oddest of noises.

“Fly me to the moon, and let me play among the stars—let me see what Spring is like on Jupiter and Mars—in other words, hold my hand, in other words, simply kiss me; Fill my heart with joy, and let me sing forevermore, you are all I long for, all I worship, and adore; in other words, please be true, in other words—I Love You.”

I emerged to find Uncle Bill singing into a microphone-based system, called by some for karaoke. This odd man had accepted me into his home without even really checking who I was. I would be a while in accepting him.

“You were slightly off-key.”

He squinted a bit in response.

“Only slightly? You should hear my rendition of Elton John’s ‘Rocket Man’. It nearly brought down the house at an awards ceremony I attended. And by that I mean, they wanted to demolish the house, so the memory of my performance could be erased.”

“If you know that you have no skill in this, why do you persist?”

Again, I was struck by how much he looked like nothing less than James Kirk, the man I called Daddy, albeit forty or so years past his prime, and yet seeming all the happier for it.

“I have a lot less than no skill, Saavik. I have mad bad skills. I am a horrible singer. Yet I sing. I sing a lot. I will probably be singing a little diddy when I’m just about to join my brother, your late grandfather.”

I echoed my first few meetings with Uncle Jim.

“Why?”

He shrugged.

“When I was twelve, and I learned my parents were never going to return from their mission aboard the second starship named Enterprise, but a newborn little brother I hadn’t even known of was, I sang. When that brother entered Starfleet Academy, I sang. When he was held back a year for punching out a little egghead crypto-bigot named John Gill, I sang. When he married Winona O’Reilly and then when he lost her and married that monster Brianna, I sang. In short, I sing. In good times and bad.”

I looked down again.

“My middle name is Brianna.”

Again, that gentle chuckle.

“I know. Who do you think suggested that name to Jim? We were both determined that there would be some good and love associated with that name.”

I asked about a name I had not heard before.

“Who was this Winona Kirk?”

Bill accessed a picture of two women, identical in their appearance, standing next to George Kirk. While his hair was dark, like that of my late brother Peter, theirs was the sandy auburn of Uncle Jim.

“So Winona and Brianna were twin sisters, and Grandfather married them both?”

“Well, it was at different times. He married Winona, and she met with an accident. Grieving, he married Brianna. Saavik, there are aspects of this I will not discuss with a thirteen year-old girl. Not even one who has seen the horrors you have. Suffice it to say, everything your grandfather did, he did out of love for Winona and the survival of their children.”

I was immediately struck by the implication : Brianna was not the mother of Jim and Sam. Yet at no time had Uncle Jim ever mentioned her as a stepmother, and had even told me the story of his birth in the sickbay of the yet-to-be-christened USS Enterprise. His birth by Brianna. I accepted Bill’s words and asked no more, at least not outside of my own mind.

I sang with him into the night, and if not a Kirk by birth, my less-than-angelic tones in rendering Richard Carpenter’s ‘Sing’ did not exactly pay best homage to the memory of his sister Karen, whose voice challenged some Vulcans to fight back tears. But I honored and obeyed his lyrics, and did not worry overmuch whether my singing was good enough. I merely sang. I was happy in this man’s home, and wondered quickly what fate would do to take him away from me, as well.

That next morning, I was to learn that I had to earn my keep.

“Clean the horse stable? I am your grand-niece, and you would have me shoveling…”

“It’ll be good practice, if you should enter politics. Now don’t breathe too deeply—and try to use the shower by the pool area, ‘kay?”

I cursed him several times with words I’d heard from the soldiers on Hellguard. But the truth was, I welcomed the work. Cleaning smelly but majestic animals will tend to drive thoughts of illogical logical worlds and people I could never speak to again. As I finished late that evening, as I disposed of the last shovelful of horse ‘duty’, I even dedicated it to an old acquaintance.

“Eat hearty of this offering, Lady T’Pring. It is largely vegetarian, and contains many nutrients. Of course, Mister Edward Post sends his regards.”

Tired, smelly, sweaty and dizzy, I stumbled to those outside shower stalls, where a hastily-set curtain provided me with privacy, and a towel, a robe and a note awaited.

“Dear Saavik : Your uncle is a dirty old man, so be sure and cover up before coming in. Love, Bill.”

I did indeed—until the next morning.

“You have seven more stables?”

I glared to no avail at a grinning Bill.

“How about I let you peep, and we’ll call it even?”

He shook his head.

“I lied. I’m a weird old man, not a dirty one. Besides, you haven’t sprouted yet.”

I had been insulted in that manner on Vulcan. But here, it made me laugh, and seeing him laugh made me remember that he had said—‘yet’ with an expectant tone. He pointed outside.

“You didn’t think it would be that easy, did you?”

I did and do love my Uncle Bill. But at that moment, I wanted to kill him—playfully, of course.

“For just a second there, yes, I believe I did.”

It really didn’t matter to me. I was in an odd bind. Because of Vulcan educational standards, no Earth school short of university could really offer me anything. I am not a fan of Vulcan by any means, but when it comes to actual subject matter and quality of content, as well as teaching method, its pride is not an undue one. My problem comes from the lecture that would automatically follow such praise, focusing endlessly on the thought that Vulcans do not feel such ‘Earth Emotions’ as pride.

Educational standards aside, for me to enter a university would have required contacting my legal guardians, two of whom were still returning from the Kzin Dead Zone and was forced to maintain comm silence for the duration of that journey, and two others, who by law I could no longer speak to. I could stay with Bill Kirk, but legally he had no way to act as my proxy. So I shoveled.

I also met some of Uncle Bill’s friends, from his long and varied careers. There was Lenny Grayson, his former partner when he was a policeman with the Terran Constabulary Force. He turned out to be a relative of Amanda’s who promised not to tell about meeting me, except directly to her at an upcoming family reunion. His resembled nothing less than Spock himself, were he completely Human. There was also a Kate Muldaur, from his time as an attorney, with the worst case of transporter phobia I have ever seen. But when an associate from his days in Starfleet Intelligence came to visit, I was asked to not be in attendance. I respected this wish, and would only later find out that this man he met would play a role in all our lives. I would see this man’s face for the first time when I undertook to rescue my not-so-late brother, some years later.

-----------------
“You want me to arrange a meeting with who?”

Rene West, Bill Kirk’s trainee partner in Starfleet Intelligence, including a branch never mentioned or even whispered of by most, spoke the name again.

“Sarek Of Vulcan. Can you do it?”

Kirk shook his head.

“I don’t even know the man. I hope that you’re not asking me to impose on my niece. She’s been through enough.”

West waved a hand in the air.

“I’m not a fool, Bill. That girl can’t even speak to Sarek, or his wife, or any member of his wife’s family on Earth-with one exception. T’Pring is a royal bitch—almost worse than Bunson. No, I need you to talk to Lady Amanda’s second cousin, Leonard Grayson, like myself, a former partner of yours. Just have him get Sarek to the place I will relay to him. It’s that important.”

Kirk and his partner had not parted amicably. When George Kirk, among many others, died aboard the USS Constitution the very day George became a grandfather, Kirk resigned from his high-ranking post in what he and others euphemistically called Prime Eleven, also known to those few that knew of it at all as Section Thirty-One. Disgusted by the way so many good officers had been ‘redlined’ by forces that undertook a campaign of whispers and then dumped onto the aging Constitution-prototype, Kirk told his partner that he could no longer serve in the shadows. West had called him a fool.

“Is this the kind of thing where you’d have to kill me, if you told me what this is all about?”

Kirk poured a stiff drink, for himself and for a man, bitterness aside, he had lived and died beside, any number of times. West took it and downed it. Kirk knew then it was serious. Teetotaler West maybe raised a glass at ceremonies, but only just that.

“No, Bill. It’s the kind of thing that if I told you, you’d have to kill me. And I’d let you. You were right, damn you. You said the game had begun to stink. Well, the stench you smell is coming from Hell itself, nowadays. They say in bad times there’s the devil to pay. The devil’s apprentices are in charge. Perhaps literally.”

Kirk sighed.

“The Order. Is their sacred boogeyman for real, Rene?”

“Don’t ask me that, Bill. You deserve to sleep at night.”

Kirk sat the shaking man, who looked on the verge of tears, down in his best easy chair.

“I’ll do it. But I need something in return. And it’s not about Peter.”

West looked almost suspiciously relieved at that last part.

“I will do—what I can—on that front, in any event. In fact, I had plans to use your request as my excuse for coming here, should they ask. I’ll say we argued about the Hall dragging its feet in the investigation. But what’s the favor?”

Kirk looked outside, and saw the girl he had grown to adore cleaning up and looking like she enjoyed it.

“Rene, when she was put on trial on Vulcan, not one of the other kids Jim rescued from Hellguard spoke up on her behalf. I can accept most. I can accept almost all. But-not-one-did?”

West looked down, and held up his empty glass for refilling.

“If I’m right, there probably aren’t any left to have spoken up. During one of T’Pring’s visits with Cartwright—don’t ask—she bragged about your niece, the disposability of her brother’s children, and of how Saavik’s banishment completed the lifting of the stain that was Hellguard. As like as not, the attack on your niece was not the first on one of the Hellguard children. It was the last, and the noisiest.”

Kirk felt his blood boil.

“Their families?”

West put his hand to his forehead.

“Remember, Saavik’s Vulcan family never came forward to claim her. Those families that did likely did so reluctantly, and were either apt to ask no questions or to be easily persuaded not to ask them. Hellguard to most Vulcans was not the rape of individuals by individuals, but the rape of Vulcan that is by the Vulcan that was. A sore subject. T’Pring is a monster—but she represents the darker will of a civilized world, to make all the inconvenient things and people simply go away. See? They really are just like us.”

Kirk would make the arrangement for the meeting that would lead to freedom for the brother of the girl he now cared for. But later that evening, he bid that same girl listen to a story he had to tell.

“You are certain of this? I am the last of my—group?”

“My source is a reliable one.”

Saavik held back both tears and rage.

“What about subjects not discussed with a thirteen-year-old?”

He put his arms on her shoulders.

“My niece is a Kirk, through and through, which is to say, she’s strong as hell. She also deserved to know what kind of evil she was up against.”

-------------------------------------------

I fell asleep in those old but strong arms, staring at an iconic portrait of George Kirk on the Luna Colony, the Federation Flag waving behind him, standing like a statue. When I awoke, we were no longer in Montana.
 
“Uncle Bill, what is that noise?”

He had transported me in my sleep to somewhere on the western coast of Canada.

“That, niece of mine, is the Twilight Train, famed in song and story. Rebuilt under the direction of one Charles Tucker, while recovering from wounds taken in his service aboard the first Enterprise. I actually met his sister, at the centenary dedication. They had a falling out when she joined the Terra Prime movement, but she later denounced all forms of big…”

“Bill, what are we doing here?”

He looked hurt.

“Don’t you want to take a trip with me?”

“I don’t like surprises. I don’t like set-ups, or pranks, or blind dates, or anything that is chiefly for the amusement of the planner, which I am then somehow obligated to be grateful for. My life is chaotic enough.”

He sat down next to me on the train station’s bench. Winter was a month away, but that far North, you do not need to be a Vulcan to feel the chill that is already dominating the air.

“You’re right. I should have told you we were doing this. I wanted to surprise you in a good way. Saavik, if we get on board that train, there are no whoopee cushions, no tacks on the seats, and no false friends waiting to hurt you, just because they can. My late nephew Sam had one of the sickest prank-driven senses of humor around, and I, his father, his brother and your brother all told him so. The worst you’ll ever get from me is poking my head inside the shower room to move you along, and I can’t see anything for all the steam. Trust me?”

I felt small, petulant and bratty. I was not chained to a wall, and we hadn’t even gone that far from home. Was I to be haunted and restricted by my past, even when staying with one who accepted and loved me without a whole planet staring us down?

“No more surprises?”

“Ehhh..,one more. But it’s another good one, and you’ll be wide awake for it.”

The train ride was slow, but the ride across the length and breadth of Canada was a breathtaking one. It was then I learned that trains can take you places. They can take you away. My love of trains, in every genre of literature one can imagine, is something I plan to keep with me, even in my exile to come, when going other places is all I can manage. I will still read of trains where clever murderers wait for cleverer sleuths to unmask them, where an outcast may become a wizard, and where a child can believe once again. Even when I have nothing else, I will keep this.

I do not know if the original Twilight Train ended in Newfoundland, but that is where Trip Tucker had apparently taken it through. Scotty delighted in talking of him, but oddly, only over pieces of pecan pie. I asked Bill if we would now be headed back to our quiet corner of Montana.

“After all, the horses must be tended to.”

“Nope. You and I, Saavik, are headed for Scandinavia. For the entire month of December. Culminating with—wait for it—Christmas At The North Pole!”

For once, I had hit the limits of my cultural familiarity with Earth.

“Would not Bethlehem or Rome be more appropriate? What association has the North Pole with Christian beliefs?”

Bill looked a bit thrown, but found his voice quickly.

“Well, to some, nothing at all. Unless you take into consideration just how a Bishop from ancient Turkey managed to survive in the coldest place on Earth, and yet somehow manages to deliver toys to children all over the universe. Some believers say this detracts from the true meaning of the holiday.”

“And you?”

“Me? I don’t know what I believe, anymore. But if I were to say I believed in the specifics of the holiday, I’d call the legends of Saint Nicholas a primer. Kids get gifts to learn about the joy of getting, and then the joy of giving. The idea is that Human Charity is a reflection of Divine Charity, summed up by the concept of what God gave Humans out of Love : His Only Begotten Son. Kids need to be walked into this. It’s actually a fairly big concept. Hell, most adults don’t really get it, except as something to hold over someone else.”

I raised an eyebrow without realizing I had done so. My blood is still copper-based, proclamations aside.

“For someone who doubts his level of belief, you speak with some conviction.”

Bill shook his head, and for the first time, he looked rather sad.

“Your grandfather was a believer. So was your brother. But Jim and myself? I wouldn’t say we’re atheists, but we require a lot more proof than some. The Second Coming ever happens, we’re apt to ask for some ID.”

He closed his eyes, and began to look rather misty.

“George was a miracle, and he lived a wonderful life. Peter held on to what he held dear. His parents nearly let him starve, and he held on. They worked him to death, and he held on. They left his little brother’s care all to him, and he held on. He went through the death of a world, an abusive Grandma, all that and a bag of chips? Never gave in. I just wonder, if, on the night he was taken from us—did he give up then?”

It was my turn to be strong, and guide someone in pain to our next destination. The joy of giving was not lost, even on a soul as lost as mine. I also had occasion to ponder the many stories of Father Christmas. I came to the conclusion that, in a galaxy as stark as ours, there are far worse myths to teach a child than one about a kindly old man who does nothing but think first and last about the welfare of children everywhere. There are those who would say its sets children up for a harsh disillusionment. I say, and this is from experience, that such a harsh reckoning comes anyway, absent any talk of toy-making bishops and the Carpenter whose faith that bishop once spread.

Like a welcomed virus, the idea of the man in the red suit invaded my psyche. How little I realized of my own state of mind. I had seized upon the legend of Saint Nicholas only partly because of the odd charm and warmth of the stories. For all I had seen and done, for all the greatness and horrors I had witnessed, for all the demons and angels I had bumped shoulders with, I was yet still a child with a savaged soul. My need to believe in something kind and gentle—and perhaps even jolly—was as profound as the little boy in the Polar Express, or the girl whose mother dismissed Kris Kringle as a bearded eccentric in that ancient cinematic.

When we arrived in the Scandinavian Freeholding, Uncle Bill delighted me by introducing me to a real part of the legend of Santa Claus. Not everyone was as impressed.

“He’s all shaggy and smelly. And his antlers are all crooked!”

I petted the reindeer, delighted with its reality and lack of perfection. I looked at the little boy critic.

“He is what he is. Father Christmas thinks well enough of him.”

A girl I took to be the boy’s younger sister looked at both me and the deer in wonder.

“Lady, are you a Christmas Elf?”

An elf. Given Spock’s experience with the Coms and Yangs, I suppose an elf beats out being taken for Lucifer.

“No. I am a Vulcan.”

Another child from the same group stepped up and pointed at me.

“You can’t be a Vulcan. Vulcans are like grumpy robots, and they never smile, and they speak like computers!”

I was about to say something choice when Bill stepped in.

“Young man, have you ever actually met a Vulcan, besides my niece?”

His muted response was predictable.

“No.”

Bill proved to be a diplomat to rival Sarek himself.

“Do you know who her father is?”

They all shook their heads, and the adults semi-governing them also took interest.

“This young lady is Saavik Kirk, daughter of Captain James Tiberius Kirk of The USS Enterprise!”

The first little boy to speak up now did so with far greater enthusiasm than he had for the reindeer.

“Your Dad is the coolest guy in the universe! Maybe even the whole world!”

What could I say?

“Indeed. I have always thought so.”

I turned my attention to the other boy, the would-be fount of misinformation.

“Are you going to pet the deer, or what? He will be too busy to allow this, in just a few weeks.”

The carrots and apples in their hands and the joy and wonder in their hearts seemed to be appreciated by the gentle creature. Yet somehow, having all this happiness and a place I was simply accepted made me feel all the emptier inside, and all the more fearful that once again, it would all be taken away. I still had fun that day, with the deer, and with other dumb animals.

“Hey, kid? Why doesn’t your Dad man up and take out those Kzinti lions once and for all, instead of just coddling them in the Dead Zone? Make rugs out of them, is what I say!”

I waved Uncle Bill off, and took this one myself.

“Uncle Jim would never do that.”

“Why not?”

I shrugged.

“He is allergic to cat dander.”

Expecting some logical argument he could then dismiss, this obnoxious man was somehow confused by my quip. As we walked away from that scene, Bill whispered to me.

“See? I told you—at Christmas, everyone’s a child again. Some more than others.”

In the joy and laughter, I was able to ignore my feelings until the 21st of December, when we stood as far north as the European continent would allow. The line of the Arctic circle was well below us. I stared at the frozen wastes even further north of me, and it was then I must confess, the insanity of the past year made me go briefly insane.

“Every legend has a basis. Sometimes these legends have tangible sources. If Saint Nicholas is real, then surely he will take me in, and I will never have to leave.”

Bill would later tell me how he lost track of me, as I began my trek to meet Santa Claus at the North Pole.

The really strange part is, to this day, I believe I found him. And while he did in fact send me away, that dear old man did tell me that one day, I would have someone who was just for me. Someone who was to be mine and mine alone.

Hypothermia has been known to cause such delusions, I am reliably told.

----------------------------------

The Kzin Containment mission, a contentious joint effort between the Federation and The Klingon Empire, was a rousing success. Captain James Kirk even received a special commendation directly from the Federation Council itself for convincing the Klingon Captain Kang that destroying the Kzin Home World might only trigger some manner of failsafe plan by the lion-like aliens. Federation member Tellar, whose diplomats proved to be the pipeline the Orions were using to arm the Kzinti, suffered an embarrassment it would not soon forget, but they would live, and the Kzin’s fabled Day Of Tall Grass would be put off once again. Actually, it would be put off forever, but no one at that time knew this. While arguably one of the greatest and most complex triumphs of a great crew to date, it almost went unnoticed amid all the other triumphs associated with the mighty USS Enterprise.

The instant the ship left the aptly-named Dead Zone, Communications resumed with the rest of the galaxy. Its Console Officer had not been idle during this period. She had undertaken a very secret project, granting the veteran senior crew the ability to converse without fear of scrutiny from the dark powers that a messenger probe had informed them had taken command of their beloved Starfleet. But now her primary task resumed, and one of the first messages was for their captain. It was not the worst news, but it was not at all good news.

“Jim, it’s about Saavik.”

The Captain of The Enterprise then announced the ship was going to make best speed for Earth, under his authority and with him taking full responsibility. This message was passed directly to Admiralty Hall by means both official and some very, very unofficial. Nyota Uhura collected all evidence of these unofficial means, and gave this to the ship’s First Officer. After strict vetting to see who might simply be objecting to controversial orders and who might have other agendas, the senior staff had choices to make concerning the reporting officers, and these choices made some of them physically ill, to live in such a time and place.

Yet still the Enterprise made best speed for Earth. The Kzin Containment, while again not the parade-inspiring triumph it might have been, protected Kirk from all but a formal reprimand. Kirk noted amusedly that, his wishes aside, they still hadn’t demoted him from Admiral, a title he refused to use out of disgust with Admiralty Hall’s publicly known policies. Had he known their secret policies, especially toward his own son, Kirk would have ordered his loyal crew to fire upon the Hall with all banks.

But so far as Kirk, his crew, and ninety-nine percent of the galactic population were concerned, the boy for whom the Top 75 Ballad, *Peter, Did You Make Any Plans?* was written, was just as dead as that sad song implied at the end when the lyricist wrote, ‘no need to make plans for tonight, the man is coming round for you’. So Kirk concerned himself with the living daughter whose heart had been ripped out, and who, like her brother, he could not be there for when the worst occurred.

“Captain? There’s a message from your Uncle.”

“Dammit! Spock, the instant we make orbit, scan the Arctic Circle around Lapland. She’s out there, and we’re going to find her.”

---------------------------
 
When the Captain of the Enterprise found his little girl, she had gone an incredible distance before the inevitable occurred. A man who was not quite an old country doctor was not too surprised when she began recovering almost immediately.

“Yeah, she’s Jim’s all right. Nearly pushed her luck all the way to the North Pole.”

While James Kirk made it clear to William Kirk that he was not to blame for such an unbelievable episode, and while William Kirk undertook a secret journey, Spock Of Vulcan entered the Sickbay and sat silently, watching the sleeping form of the child he had denied to her face on several occasions. His thoughts fairly buzzed with secrets kept at great cost.

*I had been betrayed into captivity by Sybok, and held by the woman called Linviaj—the very Romulan Commander we later stole the cloaking device from. I came to love her, and she me, for we each found something in the other. Yet we could not bond. Some unknown factor prevented this, and in her rage, she assumed my reluctance was that factor. I was used for her pleasure, and in a means and manner that precluded any of my own. Many months later, bound to a stone slab, I felt something crawl upon my chest. It was smelly, filthy, and clawed at me unmercifully, till it settled near my heart. It was the most beautiful thing I had ever seen. You still are. In my fevered delusion, I saw downy wings upon your tiny back.*

*I had not begged throughout my ordeal, in honor of the Vulcan men desexed after they had served their purpose, and for the Vulcan women, delimbed into brainless incubators after they had served theirs. But I begged then. I begged Linviaj to take our child away from there. I begged Sybok, whatever scrap of him remained in his madness, to protect her—and then I threatened him if he did not. Linviaj, laughing and in control, learned how little she really had when her own mother and superior officer approached her. This woman was named T’Rea, and she had been a Romulan spy sent to marry a Vulcan—one of several spies our lost siblings sent among us when we did not yet know them, and yet they knew us. The Vulcan she had been sent to marry was named Sarek, and from mating with him she bore a son named Sybok. The original T’Rea was disposed of handily, I am told, and easily so by means of the fact that Romulus kept to the ancient marriage arrangements between clans. Many Vulcans as a result have dopplegangers on Romulus, and many have met them—exactly once. But T’Rea, my daughter, was far craftier than any dared guess. For she also took what she needed from Sarek during an extended illness and from this material produced a daughter—Linviaj. Linviaj’s face turned ashen at the realization of her mother’s cruel deception. Before her training reasserted itself, I felt a flash of regret in my sister’s soul, regret for her actions, and regret that we could now never be together. Understand, child. Your parents did love each other. Just not at the time of your conception. And we could never have bonded. Even IDIC does not allow for this.*

*An argument began between mother and daughter. T’Rea wished to sacrifice you to their wretched monster deity. Linviaj wished to corrupt you, make of you yet another weapon of deceit against Vulcan. With no time for a proper meld, I began a process in you by which I gave up part of my own strained mind to ensure that their best or worst would not affect the true you. My gambit succeeded, but it came at great cost to us all. I have been worthless to you since the day we met once again, and, as the years passed, I have been of less and less value to the man you call Father, and whom I call Brother. Worst of all, I betrayed the one who saved you that first day of your life.*

Spock watched her for signs of consciousness, then kept on with his private mental account.

*T’Rea had prevailed, and you were torn from my chest and set to be sacrificed. In a flash of light, a Human boy of about seven years appeared and warned that he would lay waste to Romulus, were you ever brought to harm. He freed me with but a thought as he held you quite tenderly. He warned T’Rea that, should she even attempt to harm you, he would tear off her remaining arm. When she—quite logically--pointed out—that she in fact had two arms, the boy altered his statement to say he meant her other arm—and then tore her right one out of its socket. He apologized to you for not being able to do more, then vanished. The guards saw my freedom, and fired upon me. Struck by a stun beam, I was only able to refocus long enough to seize back the spacecraft I had been captured on and escape. My mind reeled that I had to leave you behind. But logic demanded of me to recognize that my recapture or death could not serve you at all. Yet by the time Captain Pike found me again, my savaged mind, ringing with betrayal, deprivation and the insanity of that boy’s inexplicable appearance had driven all surface thoughts of my child from me. Shame that I allowed this only drove thoughts of you ever deeper. I would not see you again for seven years. That strange boy, though? Him I would see a scant three years later. He was the son of my new Captain, James Kirk. His name was Peter, and while I would not send him to Hell, it was by my hand he would stay there.*

A brief exchange with McCoy concerning any changes in Saavik’s condition ended, and Spock kept on when he was once again alone.

*At Peter Kirk’s funeral, I received information on a dream had by David Marcus, the boy’s half-brother. On a hunch, I transported to just outside Admiralty Hall, and made contact with the boy’s powerful mind. He begged me to tell his Uncle, and to remove him from the place that was already replete with the souls of slain children, taken in sacrifice to a killing machine that likely knew nothing of either its victims or its worshippers. They had broken The Rock Of Prophecy. I could have freed the boy. I could have brought low a conspiracy of unimaginable proportions and the vilest depths. But you see, Saavik-kam, my mind had constructed a warden of sorts to keep my Katra Tow in check, and keep me from splintering into several different personalities. This warden keeps my secrets, and enables me to function. This warden would not in the end permit me to do more for Jim’s child than I had been able to do for my own. As his cries for help and release grew louder and yet more distant, I abandoned Peter Kirk.*

Spock began to trail off. Even thinking these thoughts was activating his ‘warden’.

*So it is, Saavik Of House Surak, that I can never be your father. But you will always have my love, hidden though it is behind remarks harsh and unneeded. I do not regret giving up a piece of myself for you. I regret only its results. I love you, daughter. You are still the most beautiful thing in all of creation, in the eyes of Spock, Father Of Saavik.*

As she finally awoke, events resumed their sad course, dictated by a sacrifice that gave a child the means to endure anything, including the seeming indifference of the one who had made that sacrifice.

“Spock?”

“Saavik—your adventurism was gravely foolish, and caused your family great concern. I must advise against its recurrence. In fact, I must strongly advise this. That is all.”

Before she let a more healthful sleep take her, Saavik muttered a comment at the departing First Officer, one that briefly cut through all mental guards and barriers.

“Nice to see you as well, Spock.”
 
VULCAN, The Council Of Elders, Mount Seleya, The Work Chambers Of Lady T’Pau, Sra Sra

T’Aca pointed at the Human intruder.

“The Lirpa Honor Guard will attend us soon. You are advised to try nothing.”

William S. Kirk smiled the family smile.

“Lady T’Pau knows who I am. Lady, haven’t you ever told this young woman about her predecessor?”

“T’Melia? What of her?”

T’Pau seemed particularly incensed by this intruder, but finally spoke.

“T’Melia, gone from us twenty-five years, did not die in an off-planet accident. She was a Romulan agent, killed while trying to end our life. Killed by this man, when he served Starfleet Intelligence.”

T’Aca sat down at these words.

“But she was my aunt. I am no Romulan. At that time, we did not even know who the Romulans really were.”

“Yet child, it was that Those Who Left knew well who we were, and in this wise, they drew their plans against us.”

Bill Kirk moved a open calming hand within a foot of T’Aca’s face.

“Your aunt was killed and replaced. It’s a long story, but she had a perfect duplicate on Romulus. Many Vulcans do. It’s happened before. Steps have been taken to see that it doesn’t happen again. Your aunt was among the last to be so victimized.”

T’Aca looked up at the Human.

“Thank You. My Lady, why was I not told of this?”

“We sought to spare thee, child. Thy aunt, my boon companion of many decades, was already no more. Thy focus was best spent on replacing her, a task thee has ably fulfilled.”

T’Aca asked to withdraw, a request her mistress granted.

“Thy nephew James, some years after, showed the grace thee never gained, and offered apologies for his actions. Why dost thou return?”

Bill Kirk shook his head.

“Vulcans are often accused of callousness. I know that the vast majority of such talk is the province of people who are the spiritual heirs of the ‘Cochrane faked warp-flight’ bunch. But currently, I’m caring for a girl who seems to embody the worst beliefs about Vulcans. A girl who was attacked, and yet somehow, she was the one punished. Did you know that she almost was lost in the Arctic, chasing a children’s legend? Did you know that she did this solely to find someone somewhere beyond the power of governments to turn her out?”

Before she could respond, Kirk placed a data wafer on her desk. Without words, she scanned and read its contents.

“Thy information?”

“Accurate. Deadly accurate. Saavik may have violated the law, and decorum, though I’d debate that, given how she was assaulted. But the other children were not the proverbial square pegs my great-niece is. They had no silly Humans putting wild thoughts in their logical heads. No incidents. No citing for emotionalism. If Saavik will never be a proper Vulcan in your eyes, these kids surely were.”

Kirk then turned away.

“Yet they are dead. Killed by the people Saavik stopped from ever carrying out any more such attacks. Lady, the people you’ve tried to appease cannot be. I suggest that the time has come to cast them off. Call their bluff. Humans might get away with the muddle caused by armed revolt. I doubt the efficacy of such an uprising on Vulcan. At least for now.”

“There are many considerations in these matters. An edict may not be so casually unmade.”

Bill Kirk fought off laughter, knowing full well who he was dealing with.

“There always are many such considerations. In this case, consider how long you want the story of a despondent Vulcan girl banished for poor cause wandering the North Pole looking for Santa Claus to remain in the media. Frankly, I see it lasting weeks, if not months. Did you know she’s getting fan mail from children on Tellar, Andor and about fifteen other worlds? With nothing to do on Earth, she may feel she has to work the talk-vid circuit to respond.”

Kirk let those words hang in the air as he left, passing T’Pau’s personal physician as he went.

“T’Nia.”

His smile was met with hers.

“William. You seem well.”

“Hanging in there.”

T’Pau glared at her much younger sister, and the implications of the exchanged smiles. T’Nia was having none of it.

“Do not knock what you have not tried for over one-hundred and fifty years, Sre-Kam.”

-----------------------

Back aboard the Enterprise, Saavik met with her adoptive father.

“Uncle Jim, I am so sorry. I feel I must have lost my mind.”

He hugged her for just a moment, then kept hold of her hand.

“You boldly went where just about every kid in Terran history has only dreamed of going before. Exploring is in the surname, I guess.”

“Hardly every child. Christianity is only two millennia old, and not every Terran child is of that belief system, and even those who hold to it are in disagreement as to whether the idea of Santa Claus calls attention to commercialism and away from the Christ-child…”

She stopped. They both knew who she was sounding like.

“I will never have his acceptance, will I?”

“Let him come to you. Speaking of which, there’s two people here to see you. You might know their son.”

-------------------------

Sarek and Amanda had come to claim me, in the company of Bill Kirk, who merely whispered to me :

“I told you I was a good negotiator.”

Sra Amanda held onto me for dear life.

“My baby. You don’t know how hard it’s been. I am so sorry.”

I had made the mistake of thinking myself merely a well-liked guest in their home. I, who often wept that I had no house, had my choice of them, and they all chose me.

“But how can you be here? The edict was clear.”

Sri Sarek raised his hands in salute.

“Live long and prosper, Saavik Of Vulcan. The edict has been rescinded. My grandmother can still surprise me, it would seem.”

“Live long and prosper, Father. Live long and prosper, Mother, Daddy, Uncle Jim, Uncle Bill, Aunt Nyta, Doctor M---“

That same doctor now silenced me with a finger over his lips.

“Young lady, it is still Christmastime. So there’s a much easier way of saying what you want to.”

I puzzled for a moment, till I recalled the exact quote.

“And May God Bless Us. Everyone.”

For the first time in my life, I felt truly blessed and did not think upon sorrows to come—except in the case of T’Pau. If she had changed her thinking, it was a fair bet others had not. What price might she pay for defying House Setekh?

-------------------------------

T’Belia read the proclamation to Lady T’Pau.

“Since the Lady T’Pau has proven largely unmindful of the peace that has existed between our Houses, my mistress is left with no choice but to invoke the specter of Plak Mu, unless the barbarian child is once again turned out.”

Plak Mu, a phrase unknown on modern Vulcan. Deepest conflict between two great and powerful houses. A Terran might translate this term to mean Blood Feud, and in this they would be reasonably accurate.

“Thee will approach me, this to bear back my response to thy mistress.”

As the haughty servant of an arrogant house approached the old woman, thoughts of her Lady’s delight at once again making T’Pau back down filled her head. This was broken by a sharp pain to each of her cheeks, as two fingers from T’Pau’s hand met them in two separate slapping motions.

“Thee will tell thy mistress this : If she should wish to bring about the specter of Plak Mu, I urge that she should not bother with specters. If she would bring Plak Mu, I tell her then to bring it.”

Thoughts of who might succeed her filled T’Belia’s head as she left to deliver bad news to a woman not known to react well to it. For her part, T’Pau sat back and closed her eyes.

“This cannot end well, and yet it must end.”

In five years time, it would do just that.

-------------------------

The new year, counted as 2275 by some, went far better for me, save for an incident involving the bizarre entity known as The Q, who accused me of being a future threat. Uncle Jim said that this may not have even truly concerned me, but rather was some manner of test that the arrogant creature, once known as Trelane, liked to subject him to.

I attended a new school, less prestigious than my prior one, but with, shall I say, a great deal less institutional dislike of me, and all I represented. I strove ever harder to be a proper Vulcan, both for Father Sarek and for the memory of those others from Hellguard taken in the night, as had been my brother. Yet the stain of what I had done, when I met carnage for carnage, would not leave me so easily.

--------------

2276

“You are Saavik Kirk.”

I saw the Starfleet Lieutenant walk in my direction, but did not think he was there to speak to me.

“I am, sir. You are?”

“I am Xon of House Rustim. I am here to direct you to refrain from speaking to my young cousin, Tuvok.”

I kept my temper back, hoping that this was not another simple-minded bigot. He was not, but I would gain no comfort from this.

“I know of Tuvok. Indeed, we had both listed a career in Starfleet as a goal, when this was asked of the students.”

“I would recommend against that for you, Saavik Kirk. My service requires discipline. Something you were obviously never taught.”

He was either truly disenchanted with me, or merely taking me apart by the numbers. Either way, I would never care for this man.

“That sir, comes very close to a disparagement of my father, who is your superior on a great many levels, not the least of which is tact.”

That seemed to hit home with Xon. No, he was not a simple bigot. He was in some respects, worse. He was not the sort of Vulcan who would have held me down that dark day. He was the sort of Vulcan who was just as happy to see the likes of me put out from the sight of T’Kuht.

“I of course mean no disrespect to Captain Kirk. But you cannot deny the savagery of your actions towards the children who accosted you. A true Vulcan would have understood that such actions only continue the cycle of violence.”
“And what of my attackers, Xon of Rustim? Have you approached them and also directed that they not infect members of your family with the prejudice that drove them to believe I could be attacked with impunity, or worse, deserved it?”

The allegations concerning the other Hellguard survivors were just that, in the eyes of the law, so I did not raise them to Xon. But I could see behind his speech, that he knew well of their fates.

“I am sorry that you were attacked. T’Pring has flouted decency and propriety on far too many occasions. This is known and understood. But I cannot hope to appeal to one such as her and those like her. I can only speak to you, in the hopes that you have such decency at your core. Tuvok has struggled with his emotions, to the point of causing an incident. He need not associate with someone who has plainly foregone her struggle.”

I closed my eyes, and breathed in.

“I will respect your wishes. That is to say, I will respect the wishes of one who tasks only one who will listen to him, while giving a pass to the ones who caused the actions that are objected to. In addition, I will offer up a prayer on your behalf. I will pray that, should you ever find yourself in a state remotely similar to my own, that your judge is nothing like yourself.”

“You show visible signs of upset. An Ear---“

“If you say Earth emotion, I will then demonstrate the full gamut of such emotions upside your head!”

“You speak to me in such a manner? You are just a girl.”

I walked away from him and his logical contempt.

“Don’t I wish.”

I was approached in my despair by the only student to regularly speak with me. I was now let alone, as I had wished, but this meant not neutrality but isolation, save for this one girl.

“He was unnecessarily harsh and judgmental. I believe he may have issues concerning his more personal endowments.”

I shook my head.
“Unlikely. My actions that day have added to my own nightmares of Hellguard. His flaw lies in thinking that my absence from his cousin’s life will spare him a struggle that we are all supposed to undergo.”

“I still say, he tends small in more than his patterns of thought.”

She once again gave that odd tilt of the head, according to her a nervous tick she picked up during the Klingon raid that killed her parents.

“Are you not afraid that associating with me will place you into the position of having to either abandon me under pressure, or betray me to satisfy the small-minded?”

There is something odd and off about that girl, but who am I to judge or talk?

“On that front, you need never worry, Saavik.”

She openly smiled at me.

“Valeris is your dear friend, and will never betray you.”

------------------

2278

Father told me a story of his past. He then made an odd, even an untoward request of me.

“You wish me to enter Admiralty Hall, using the stealth and survival skills I gained from Hellguard.?”
“Indeed.”
“To what end, Father?”
“To this end, Saavik. Before you, Captain Kirk adopted his orphaned nephew.”
“Peter Kirk. I have been to his grave, next to that of my namesake grandmother, Brianna Kirk. Uncle Jim roared at the fact that Peter’s middle initial was an incorrect ‘R’, rather than ‘C’.”
“Saavik, your adopted brother is alive. He is the prize you will seek to liberate, from the deepest, most shielded parts of Admiralty Hall. His ‘death’ was a kidnapping, staged by the Hall and its allies in Section Thirty-One. For ten years, they have held him, and attempted to twist his existence to their purposes and goals.”
Of all the many ways I had heard about my brother, this one surely took the proverbial cake.
“Their dislike and contempt of Uncle Jim is legend. He cites it as the reason the members of his senior staff have not advanced further. But why direct so much effort against a mere boy, whoever his family is?”
“That his name is Kirk is almost irrelevant. Suffice it to say that the Order worships a being who is as the devil. On the day Peter Kirk was born, King Ghidorah shrieked to know that the one who would end his reign had arrived.”
Ghidorah? Sri Sarek, the embodiment to me of all things positive on Vulcan, was speaking as though the Order’s hideous deity was real.
“Father, I will gladly rescue my brother, if only for the delight it will bring to Uncle Jim and to all his crew. But to rely on old myths as our guide is not logical. Also—it kind of scares me.”
“Will you do it?”
To accomplish what he asked of me would require completing my journey back to the muck and savagery of Hellguard. Despite Bill, despite Uncle Jim and his crew, despite Sri Sarek and Sra Amanda, I still had no one. Despite her oddity, Valeris had remained my friend, and yet I felt I had no friends. With dying not an option for me, I came to a conclusion : With Peter Kirk returned, the need for Saavik Kirk was in dire question. But I would respect those I loved and get my brother out of that living hell.
Then, I would disappear back into the hinterlands of the galaxy, my dark circle complete.
“Yes, Father. I will rescue my brother.”
TO BE CONCLUDED
 
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