***********************************************************
USS Sutherland
Captain’s Ready Room
Captain Shelby looked up from the screen, with an arched eyebrow. “Sam, you didn’t have to bring these into me personally,” she remarked, glancing at the padds in her first officer’s hands. “There is such a thing as e-mail you know.”
“I know,” he chuckled tiredly, rubbing the back of his neck. “But I’m not here to deliver the after action reports,” he said.
“I figured,” Elizabeth replied, with a sign. She pushed back from her desk. “You want to talk about Jaxa? About what happened today?”
Sam nodded uncomfortably. Shelby gestured toward a seat. He grabbed it and pulled it up her desk. He placed the padds on the desk before replying, “There’s also other things…”
“Mr. Maldin I presume?”
“Yes,” Lavelle replied.
“Sam, I think he handled himself well enough today,” the captain remarked.
“Seriously?” He asked, his tone just on the edge of insubordination.
“He hasn’t been out in the field too much,” Shelby offered. “He was planetside during the war, and besides if it wasn’t this mission, it would be something else about Maldin’s performance you would be critiquing.”
“What do you mean by that?”
“This is about Maria and not Maldin,” the captain reasoned. “It’s about Lt. Django not being here and you riding her replacement.” Sam winced, but the captain continued. “Sure Maldin needs to toughen up a little, he needs a little grit, but need I remind you that I put him on the away team for that reason, among others, and it was over your objection.”
Lavelle looked away for a moment. “It’s not about Maria,” he looked back at her, “Is it?”
Elizabeth smiled sympathetically. “Sam love can be both a great and terrible thing. And we deal with it in a variety of ways; perhaps Maria taking the reassignment was just a way to get some space, some needed air.”
“Our relationship wasn’t stultifying,” Sam said sharply.
“I’m not saying it was,” Shelby shrugged. “It’s not like I was staying up on all the latest shipboard gossip. It is possible that Lt. Django took the assignment for the opportunity it was, and nothing more.”
Sam mumbled, and Shelby added, “Which I don’t think you do.”
“Yeah, well, maybe,” he admitted.
“Remember it is a temporary reassignment,” the captain pointed out.
“I know,” Lavelle said, a forlorn note in his voice. He shifted his jaw, “Have I really been that hard on Maldin?”
“You’ve got the man running callisthenic programs with Jaxa right now, on his off time, and right after he had been cleared by Dr. Murakawa, what do you think?”
“I see,” Sam said softly, a bit overcome by the evidence he had been oblivious to. “I guess I’ve got some amends to make.”
“You can do that later, after we talk about Lt. Sito,” Shelby said, and Lavelle nodded.
“I think she’s regressing,” he said, reluctance heavy on his face. “I hate to say that, but…”
“I concur,” Shelby replied. “I was hoping there would be down time after the war, a chance to get back to exploring, but Sutherland, just like every other ship it seems, has been thrust into dangerous waters. I was concerned about how Sito’s been handling the strain, so that’s why I brought in Lt. Triese.”
“I know,” Sam replied. “I agreed with the decision, however, I don’t think Sito’s taking it well.”
“It seems like she’s getting along with Triese well,” Shelby replied, a bit too hopefully.
“Above all, Jaxa’s a professional, but she’s also still a fragile soul,” Lavelle said. “She hasn’t been the same since we told the senior staff about the new assignments. She’s been more distant with me, even more than usual. I think she feels we’ve lost confidence in her.”
“Absolutely not,” Shelby said strongly, “Jaxa has a force of will I could only imagine. I should call her in right now…” She reached for her compin.
“I wouldn’t advise that captain,” Lavelle gingerly offered.
“Why not?”
“Because the more you deny it, it’s just going to convince her of how true it ultimately is,” Lavelle said.
“Then how should we proceed?” Shelby asked. She knew that Sam and Sito went back a long time, to their early stint on the Enterprise-D, and shared a unique bond.
“I think we shouldn’t do anything,” Sam finally advised. “I think we should just let her see through our actions how much we value her.”
“I can accept that,” Shelby said, “but what troubles me is the ruthlessness of her response today. Sam, we can’t have that; I don’t want her to be a danger to the crew, or herself.”
“I have to wonder then if her training sessions with Maldin might not be a bad thing for both of them,” the first officer said.
“How so?”
“It gives Maldin some much needed training and it allows Jaxa to let off more steam.”
“I suppose,” Shelby said, not fully convinced. “I want you to keep an eye on her Sam.”
“I will,” he promised.
“Anything else?”
“Nope,” Sam’s smile returned. “Got a poker appointment I don’t want to miss. I’m going to clean out some of these rookies.”
Shelby chuckled. “Just be on guard. I heard Mr. Rudd is a bit of a card shark.”
“Yeah, we’ll he hasn’t faced me yet,” Lavelle’s grin widened. “Have any plans?”
“Actually I do,” the captain remarked. “I was invited to a game of Parrises Squares, by Mr. Grace.”
“I don’t know if that’s the way I would score brownie points with my new captain,” Sam chortled, “but I guess to each his own.”
“You know I haven’t played Squares in years, so I couldn’t resist the offer,” the captain remarked. “I just hope I don’t embarrass myself.”
“That’s not even possible,” the first officer declared.
“I see you’re still good at earning brownie points,” Shelby remarked.
“Old habits die hard.”
“Keep it up and you might get in a big chair sooner than you think,” Elizabeth replied.
“I’m not in a rush to leave anytime soon,” Lavelle said. Shelby blew through her teeth and rolled her eyes.
“You’re not going to Riker me are you? It took a while but even the Iceman melted and is doing a hell of a job on the Perseus.”
“It’s not my time,” Sam declared.
“There is a still a dearth of captains,” Shelby observed.
The man leaned forward, “Have you heard something?”
“No,” she answered, “It’s just something to think about.” He leaned back, relaxing.
“As if I don’t have a lot to think about already,” he grumbled, with good nature. “Keep this madhouse in line is enough for me to handle right now.”
“About that?” Shelby’s eyes lit with devilish merriment. “What are you and Jadon’s plans for breaking in the new crew, Sutherland-style?”
“That’s a secret,” his grin was just as evil. “Which I can’t reveal on pain of death.”
“It’s perhaps better I don’t know,” the captain relented. “I can at least claim plausible deniability if it gets back to Command.”
“Don’t worry,” Sam waved away her concerns. “We’ll take extra care not harm one head on the head of Lt. Grace.”
“Do that,” Shelby only half-joked. “With his father the Fleet Admiral now, you know the Suthy is going to get even more scrutiny.”
“Which we can withstand any day,” Lavelle pumped his broad chest out.
“Well, with Alvin’s dad the new C-in-C, and mine the new Defense Minister, I just feel that Sutherland’s going to wind up in the crosshairs of a lot of political malarkey.”
“We’ll do you proud captain,” Lavelle declared, “while also keeping with tradition. Being Starfleet’s number one party ship is an honor I have no intention of losing.”
Shelby shook her head sadly, “Is that true?”
“Yeah, it was on a poll, Starfleet Times,” Lavelle remarked.
“Well, I guess we do have a tradition to uphold,” Shelby declared. “Carry on Mr. Lavelle.”
*******************************************************
USS Sutherland
Captain’s Personal Quarters
Captain Elizabeth Shelby toweled off her face. Though the sonic shower had been refreshing and necessary, she still liked the feel of warm water on her skin. Even after the shower she still didn’t feel she had gotten all the sand off her skin or out of her hair. Being nearly covered from head to toe had provided little defense against the pernicious grains.
She glanced at herself in the mirror above the sink and ran her hand threw her damp, hanging blonde strands. She knew she should celebrate tonight, even though they hadn’t gotten the information they came for, Drux was already proving to be fount of information about the criminal organizations preying on postwar misery in the former Cardassian Union.
Now, whether the information could be believed, was another story. Though the Ferengi did have a bevy of holodeck programs that he offered free of charge after Sutherland had impounded his vehicle. She pursed her lips while gazing at her reflection. “Should I play the Vulcan love slave or her liberator tonight?” She pondered.
The squawk from the intercom system embedded in an overhead bulkhead put her ruminations on hold. “What’s up?” She asked.
“Captain Shelby, you have a priority message from Admiral Glover,” Lt. Maldin replied. Her heart skipped a beat at the mention of the familiar name.
Could it really be him? She wanted to believe. “Pipe it down here,” she said quickly.
“Acknowledged.”
She didn’t reply, Shelby was gripped with too much false hope to speak. She had heard the reports, and then had seen the footage supplied by the Romulans, and she had even attended the memorial service, but deep in her heart, Elizabeth hadn’t wanted to believe any of it. If anyone could cheat fate, it would be Samson. And she could see the old codger making sure he was the first to tell her of his return.
The captain rushed to take a seat at her desk. Her eyes moistened in anticipation. The blue screen on her desktop faded into the outline of a human male.
Shelby blinked, her disappointment swapped by surprise. “Wow,” her lips worked into a smile, “When did this happen? Excuse me, I should say congratulations.”
Terrence Glover, an admiral’s bars glinting on his turtleneck, had an uncharacteristically flat expression on his face. Gone was the knowing smirk, and Elizabeth assumed the flirty banter that they had been engaging in for years. But what could she expect, she chided herself. The man had been through hell over the last year.
From being taken hostage by the True Way, to losing his ship, to his marriage’s dissolution, and perhaps the deepest blow had been the capture and purported execution of his father by the Romulans.
His elevation to the admiralty seemed like cold comfort to Shelby, and she could tell that Terrence felt the same way. If things had been different, she could imagine the promotion would have him grinning ear to ear.
“Captain Shelby,” he said coldly, as if he didn’t know her at all.
“Rear Admiral,” she said, disappointed to take on a formal tone in her voice. She really wanted to reach out to him, to share more condolences about Samson’s loss. The elder Glover had always been in her corner and was nearly as instrumental in advancing her career as Admiral Hanson. “How can I be of assistance?”
The admiral paused as a curious expression crossed his features. She saw a light slowly come on in his eyes and he nervously shuffled the papers on his desk. Through the scuttlebutt Elizabeth had heard that Terrence had also been a Romulan prisoner but had somehow escaped, though he had suffered some memory loss as a result. Perhaps his synapses were misfiring as they struggled to remember her.
“Captain,” he stopped again, “Elizabeth,” he said, his voice and demeanor taking on an old, though not quite familiar, semblance.
“Terrence,” Shelby said, her tightness loosening.
“Good job on Aridus,” he remarked, with a ghost of a crooked smile. Her heart pinched at a trace of the man’s old confidence. “That helped make this decision easier.”
“And what decision might that be?”
“Sutherland has been selected for a very important mission,” he said.
“Okay,” she said, wanting to prod him to elaborate, but remembering they were no longer peers, so she restrained herself, and waited.
“You’ve been assigned to escort Fleet Admiral Grace to Cardassia Prime to attend the inauguration of Premier Urlak.”
The tension eased slightly, though not Elizabeth’s displeasure. Though she was a skilled bureaucratic fighter she had wearied of it over the years and preferred long missions of exploration or even the occasional space fight as opposed to office gossip, maneuvering, and backstabbing. “Why was this a hard decision to grant Sutherland such a gift?”
“I would think you would be a bit more thankful for this honor,” he said sharply. “Transporting the Commander-in-Chief of Starfleet is the highest honor.”
“Admiral, I think you’re being coy with me,” Shelby rejoined, not fearing a reprimand.
“You know,” he said, rolling his broad shoulders, clearly not wishing to explain.
“No,” she cocked her head. “No I don’t,” she said, even though Shelby had a damn good idea of why some of the higher-ups didn’t want Sutherland anywhere near the C-in-C or the inauguration. Over the years, her personal life had become fodder for some admirals and they had made it their mission to stymie her rise and to deny Sutherland choice assignments. It seemed so petty, some centuries-old that Shelby had stopped letting it bother her years ago.
“Come on captain, it doesn’t hurt to have admiral’s son as a member of your crew,” Glover remarked. “Plus you were in the area. All I can say is well played,” his smirk suggested something cynical and untoward.
Shelby frowned, “Sir…I don’t know what you’re getting at.”
“I’m not judging you,” he said. “I think it was a nice move.”
“Terrence, admiral, excuse me, but you know me better than that,” the captain remarked. Glover merely stared at her blankly. Elizabeth realized that maybe he didn’t know her as well as he once had. She sighed and just accepted fate, “I take it this decision didn’t sit well with some at Command or in the administration?” Glover scowled, confirming it. “I bet my father was among the opposition.” She had been estranged from her father for a long time. Philip’s joining Satie’s administration, hell his support for the former admiral, had been the latest bone of contention, between the two, though they hadn’t spoken in so long that Elizabeth had never made her distaste for his political choices even known.
“I have other matters,” the admiral revealed.
“Well, I guess the only way to burst the naysayers’ bubbles again is to do an admirable job,” she smiled.
“From your record,” Glover said, glancing down as if he were looking for information, as if he were not as acquainted with her record as Shelby knew he was, or had been, she reminded herself of his memory loss. “I am certain that you are more than competent to complete the task.”
“Thanks,” her sarcasm was tinted by sadness at her friend’s condition. “So, admiral, if I may be so bold, how are you doing?”
“Fine,” he said, his voice revealing nothing of the turmoil she knew he had to be experiencing. “Why do you ask?”
“Are you kidding me Terrence?”
“No, why would I?”
“This is me you’re talking to, Elizabeth, Liz, Lizzy.”
“I am well aware of your identity Captain,” Glover’s scowl returned and irritation crept into his voice. Shelby sighed.
“I’m sorry Admiral,” she said, straightening. “I didn’t mean to pry.”
“You didn’t,” he said, “Anything else?”
Shelby paused. She had wanted to discuss Jaxa with him. The woman’s display of savagery on Aridus had been unsettling, but she didn’t know if Terrence even remembered the young Bajoran, or if in his own state he could provide much assistance to her or Lt. Sito. “No sir,” she said, making up her mind. She, Counselor Freedman, and the rest of Suthy’s crew could take care of her. They were her family after all. “I have nothing to else to say.”
Terrence nodded curtly. “Glover out.” Shelby touched the darkened screen, where the admiral’s face had just been.
“In more ways than one,” she muttered.
*********************************************************