Re: The Unkindest Cut
OBJECTS IN MOTION
THE UNKINDEST CUT
Benzar System
Early August 2376
“After days like this, I often wonder how I can continue looking at myself in the mirror,” Samson Glover muttered, unable to pull himself away from the shuttle’s aft viewer. Benzar still filled the screen, the bluish-green orb deceptively serene from space. Its innocuous appearance did nothing to uncoil the knots in Glover’s stomach. He knew the hell that was spreading across the planet at this instance, because he had helped unleash it.
“I gave up looking in the mirror a long time ago,” Ousanas Dar gruffly remarked. “Take the conn Daneeka,” he informed the slim Bolian woman in the co-pilot’s chair. Daneeka nodded tersely as the silvering Romulan got out of his seat. He slid into an empty aft seat beside Samson. “These missions never get easy,” he said more softly. “Never.” He repeated, staring hard at Samson. “I really wish it were a different universe, a place that didn’t need people like us. This burden that we carry, this fear….of failure, the doubt over the rightness of our actions… It has a more devastating affect on the mind, on the spirit than a Klingon mind-sifter, trust me on that.”
Though he wasn’t telepathic, Glover got the message. Decades before, Glover’s friendship with Dar had almost ended due to the role Dar played in the Ghorusda disaster, his faulty intelligence resulting in the deaths of dozens of Starfleet personnel and the near immolation of Glover’s wife’s career. But Deitra had been dead for fourteen years now. Glover didn’t think he would ever be able to forget what Dar had done, or hadn’t done to cause such pain to his wife, and the crew of the USS Adelphi, but he had slowly embarked on the journey of forgiveness after their mission in the Romulan Neutral Zone several years ago. Though he realized he had never found it in himself to tell Dar so. And he wasn’t sure that now was the time to do so, not in the cramped Romulan shuttle above the mayhem sweeping Benzar. Complete forgiveness would have to come, if ever, after Glover learned what the body count would total from this latest perfidy.
“I do understand,” Samson wanly smiled, before gripping the Romulan expatriate’s shoulder. “I’m also beginning to understand that sometimes you’ve got to find ways to forgive yourself and push on…though I think this one will be extremely hard for me.” Dar nodded, a blank expression on his face.
It had been Samson’s idea to use a modified Iconian probe to overwrite the complex biomechanical computer system governing the geostructures that Benzites lived and worked in. Samson had informed Starfleet Intelligence that such a disruption would incite an appropriately nasty response from the Romulans now occupying the planet. The resultant Romulan repression would discourage the Benzites pushing to secede from the Federation and join the Romulan Star Empire.
After the Romulans had liberated the Benzites from the Dominion, they had wasted little time installing a puppet government and latching their tentacles into Benzar society. The Benzites were a people who appreciated order; perhaps a bit too much for Samson’s taste and the appeal of the Star Empire’s regimented society was a shockingly easy sell.
As much as Samson loved democracy and self-determination he also understood that having a Romulan beachhead inside Federation territory was too dangerous and would likely lead to another war. Glover had studied the Romulans for over five decades. Despite the recent alliance among the Federation, Klingons, and Romulans during the Dominion War, he knew Romulan hardliners weren’t ready to take the next step to normalize relations with the Federation. It was unfortunate that many Starfleet hardliners felt the same way, and even more distressing that Samson was forced to agree with them and concoct this mission that flew in the face of many of the principles he had built not only his career on, but his life, and had taught to his son Terrence.
“Uh, guys,” Daneeka said slowly. “If you care to put the male bonding on hold, I think you’ll want to look at this.” Seconds later, the shuttle’s proximity alert wailed. Dar launched himself back towards the pilot’s seat. Glover switched the aft viewer’s sensors to the bow of the ship and activated the shuttle’s miniscule weapon’s platform. A vast stretch of space wavered just outside the shuttle.
Samson’s heart rattled in his chest at the sight of the massive Romulan warbird looming over the bow of their shuttle. The communications console beeped, and Daneeka glanced back at him. “Sir, the Romulans are calling.” Though Samson, Dar, and Daneeka had been stripped of their Starfleet commissions in order to remove any legal or tangible ties to Starfleet if they were captured on Benzar, Daneeka still lapsed in deferring to him since Samson had been an admiral, and hopefully would be again if they got out of the Benzar system alive. The trio had taken advantage of the communication breakdown in the immediate aftermath of the temporary deactivation of the geostructures to escape, with the help of a small band of Benzite partisans. Traveling at Warp Five, the highest speed the shuttle could manage, they had encountered no resistance. Most of the Romulan forces were planet bound on Benzar and the several Romulan war vessels they had bypassed had been more concerned with quelling the disorder on Benzar than closely examining Samson’s cover story. The former admiral should’ve known their luck wouldn’t hold.
“Patch them though,” Glover said, “to my terminal.” Samson self-consciously touched the tapered points of the Vulcanoid ears that had been surgically attached at Adigeon Prime before they reached Benzar. All three agents had been surgically altered. Dar, a fugitive from the Empire for decades had received the most cosmetic surgery, even more so than the blue-skinned Daneeka. Still he and Samson were leery that the disguises would fail at a critical time. So far it had held but the old admiral didn’t want to take any chances. Seconds before contact was established, Glover puffed out his chest and put on his best sneer. “What is the meaning of this?” He snarled, with what he hoped was a convincing amount of exasperated disgust. “How dare you impede us!”
Unfortunately, the stoic face staring back at him wasn’t rattled in the slightest. “A planetary curfew has been issued. No ships are authorized to leave Benzar. Who are you and where are you heading?” The young commander leaned back in her seat, content to wait Samson out.
“I ask the questions here, not you!” Glover retorted.
“If you persist on being recalcitrant I will have no recourse but to either board your vessel or destroy it,” the commander said calmly, as if she were talking to a child. Now she really is starting to get me steamed, Samson thought. “Identify yourselves immediately.”
“I’m Colonel Tiber,” Samson snapped, “of the Tal Shiar.” Samson hoped the mention of the dreaded Romulan secret police would rattle the young officer.
“Please submit your identification codes,” the woman said, still unruffled. Glover nodded, and Daneeka supplied the information.
“I’m on urgent business for the Empire,” Samson said as he watched the woman read the information being downloaded from their shuttle.
“Yes, running while brave Romulan soldiers are risking their lives for the Empire on Benzar,” the woman said, the neutral tone of her voice disturbingly at odds with her harsh words.
“The Imperial Fleet has its duties, and the Tal Shiar has its duties,” Samson grinned. “Are we done here?”
“Who is accompanying you?” The woman asked, her voice cracking slightly. “As I’m sure you are aware, some rebellious Remans have taken advantage of the chaos to join with Benzite agitators. Are you harboring any Remans aboard your vessel?”
“You know the answer to that question already,” Samson riposted. “I’m sure you’ve scanned us thoroughly.” Glover hoped that the painful genetic re-sequencing that the Adigeons had put them through would hold up under the scrutiny of the warbird’s bioscanners.
“Of course,” the woman said. “There’s just one more thing….” Samson’s flare of relief faded when the commander gestured off screen. Seconds later, a new figure stepped into view.
“I am Colonel Viredis… of the Tal Shiar,” the cadaverous man said, a too pleasant tone in his voice. “Colonel Tiber is it? I don’t believe I’ve met you before.”
Samson did his best to hide his fear. It would be just his luck to be almost out of the danger zone when they ran into a ship with an actual member of the Tal Shiar on it.
“Our organization is a large one Colonel Viredis,” Glover said, “And I’m sure you’re aware that it is in the interest of maintaining our effectiveness that a certain amount of anonymity is required among our agents.”
“Yes,” Viredis nodded. “But not among the senior leadership anymore. Chairman Koval changed the policy of his predecessor. But I’m certain you were aware of that?” He smiled without showing his teeth. He knows, Glover thought, his stomach sinking. The former admiral motioned with his hands for Daneeka and Dar to engage in evasive maneuvers.
Before they could react, the shuttle rumbled. “They’ve latched a tractor beam onto us,” Daneeka hissed.
“I demand you release us at once,” Glover roared.
“I’m afraid that I can’t do that Admiral,” Viredis replied. “You had your orders and I have mine.” The screen went blank.
“Damn it!” Samson smacked the screen. “Charge weapons and fire up the engines. Target that ship’s tractor beam emitter. When she blows, thunder us the hell away from here!”
“Already on it,” Dar said tightly. Feeling helpless, all Samson could do was watch from his screen as the beams from the shuttle’s aft weapons bank bounced off the warbird’s shields.
“We’re not going anywhere,” Daneeka said before uttering a string of Bolian curses. The shuttle rattled with as the engines fought against the tractor beam. “If I keep gunning the engines like this I might rupture a nacelle.”
“Believe me, you would prefer instant death to what the Romulans probably have planned for us…me in particular,” Dar said.
Daneeka looked at the Romulan and then back at Samson. Her voice was coldly detached when she asked, “Initiate self-destruct sir?”
Samson paused; thoughts of his son Terrence, his life in Starfleet, his late wife Deitra, and his friends flitted through his mind. Though he feared what the Romulans would do to them, he didn’t want to do their job for them. As long as he drew breath he there was always a chance and even if it couldn’t find one, he knew Terrence would tear up the galaxy to find them. “No,” Samson shook his head.
“Samson we can’t let them capture us,” Dar protested. “I know I’m a dead man. But they’ll torture you and Daneeka, draining every bit of information they can from you, and they will use that information against the Federation. You can’t let that happen! I won’t let that happen!” Dar unlatched the disruptor hanging from his hip.
“Shoulder that sidearm Mr. Dar,” Samson commanded with quiet force. Daneeka was torn between checking her instruments and the drama going on inside the shuttle.
“I can’t do that,” Dar said. Glover rose slowly, unclipping his own disruptor. Daneeka started to rise, but Glover ordered her to maintain her station.
“Technically you’re not my superior sir,” Daneeka retorted.
“This is between us,” Glover replied.
“Fine time to return to the sandbox,” the Bolian replied, “the Romulans are reeling us in like the fresh catch of the day.”
“And that’s why I must do this,” Dar said, raising his weapon. Glover did the same. A green beam lanced out, sizzling past Samson, connecting with the small sphere that encased the singularity powering the shuttle in the aft section of the shuttle. The beam pounded into the sphere, cracking it. Alarm klaxons bellowed as the singularity began to seep out of its cage, devouring everything it came into contact with. Samson hadn’t realized that he had fired his weapon until Dar clutched his chest and fell to the floor.
“Oh my God!” Samson cried, running to the man. Daneeka left her seat, and knelt beside the fallen Romulan. Samson brushed aside the Bolian’s help. He cradled Dar in his arms, fighting the increasing pull of the mini-black hole growing behind him. Green blood trickled from both sides of Dar’s mouth. He smiled at Glover.
“I guess a Romulan finally did get me,” he weakly flicked one of Samson’s fake ears.
“You’re going to be okay,” Samson babbled, “I promise I’ll get you out of this. I’ll get us all out of this.”
“No,” Dar said, a spout of blood punctuating the words. “It’s too late…die…with…dignity.”
“Don’t say that,” tears stung Samson’s face. “Please don’t say that. I’m so sorry…I thought….” He looked to Daneeka for understanding, but only saw a cold disgust in the woman’s indigo eyes.
“Never trust a Romulan,” Dar’s laugh was a painful wheeze. “You did learn something after all…from our conversations.”
“I…I don’t think I learned anything at all,” Samson wailed. The tug of the singularity was growing stronger, but Glover didn’t think the Great Bird himself could separate him from Ousanas at this moment.
“It’s okay,” Dar coughed again. “Don’t worry…I forgive….” The Romulan’s eyes glazed over. He was gone.
A powerful force tore at Samson and seconds later he was gone as well.
****