• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Dark Territory: Pandora's Jar

DarKush

Rear Admiral
Rear Admiral
Author's Note: This is a work-in-progress. Pandora's Jar is a follow up to Maelstrom. I hope you enjoy.
***********************************************************

DARK TERRITORY:
PANDORA’S JAR



PROLOGUE: THE ASSIGNMENT
January 2376

USS Aegis
Captain’s Ready Room

“He’s alive, I can feel it,” Admiral Samson Glover said, the conviction in his voice bordering on fanaticism.

Captain Terrence S. Glover hated to dash his father’s hopes, but he didn’t want the man to be getting his hopes up too high. “It’s only a beacon.”

His father snorted. “I know that.” The older man’s face scrunched up, crisscrossing his face with new lines to add to the ones he had gained surviving wars with the Klingons and the Dominion. Not to mention the Borg. “That’s why I want you to investigate this. That’s why I want you to bring him home. I owe him that much at least.”

“Dad,” Terrence paused, gathering his words carefully. “I know how much Captain Rahul meant to you. But you’ve got to stop blaming yourself for not wanting him to lead the mission into the Maw.”

“I know that in here,” Samson paused, tapping his salt and pepper-haired skull. “But not in my heart. Maybe my own vote of no confidence lead Command to choose another commander, and maybe that’s what led to the disaster that befell the taskforce.”

Terrence shook his head. “I knew his replacement. It was a good call. Rahul…is a good captain, but he…isn’t on Selmek's level.”

The admiral frowned, regarding his son coldly. “That was uncalled for Son.”

“I’m only telling you the truth,” Terrence wouldn’t back down.

His father sighed. “Bring them him home Terrence.”

“Dad, you know we had to put Aegis back on bricks after the shakedown cruise. I still have an inspection team onboard, rechecking our bioneural connectivity.”

“I’ve already cleared it with the Corps of Engineers,” Samson replied. “They informed me that the inspection should not interfere with critical ship systems.”

“But sir,” the captain said, trying to hide his annoyance behind exasperation, “The Maw is half a quadrant away. Starbase 375 has ships that can be at the Pyxis Cluster faster.”

“I’ve already discussed that with Admiral Salk,” Samson began. “The ships under his command are too engaged in postwar construction and security efforts in the former Cardassian Union. And most of our other starships are similarly engaged as well quadrant wide. That’s leaves you…”

“Glad to see I was first on your list,” Terrence groused, with a pinch of wounded pride.

“You were, but I had to exhaust all logical possibilities first,” Samson replied.

“Been spending more time with T’Prell again I see,” Terrence teased his father. The Vulcan intelligence operative had been one of his father’s oldest and closest friends, but Glover had sensed something more between them. He never knew if his father had sensed it and acted on it, but he hoped he had or would one day. His mother had been gone a long time now, and his father needed some happiness in his life.

“T’Prell’s v’tosh ka’tur remember?” Samson said, falling into his son’s trap. He caught himself seconds later, making a disgusted face. “Oh you.” Both men shared a laugh before the admiral became serious again. “The journey to the Pyxis Cluster will give the inspection team and your crew an opportunity to work out the kinks.”

“Yeah, right before we enter a region of space rife with black holes and other anomalies, a most appropriate way to test the Aegis’s capabilities,” Terrence replied sarcastically.

“You’ve never been one to shy away from a challenge,” Samson admonished.

“And I never will,” Terrence said, “Send the information from the beacon.”
**************************************************************

PART ONE: THE MAW
November 2375


Starbase 116
Main Concourse


“The look on your face says it all,” Commander Ananda Kapoor said sympathetically. “How did it go in there?” She chucked a thumb back in the direction of the ward room. The meeting had let out a few minutes ago, and its occupants had spilled out onto the main concourse, many rushing to their ships. But Captain Rahul hadn’t. He needed time to clear his head. Unfortunately, or perhaps fortuitously, his executive officer had been waiting outside the room for him and had since buzzed behind him like a gnat in an effort to get him to get his take on the meeting’s proceedings.

The Efrosian captain had eventually pulled up along the concourse. Gripping one of the rails, he had sighed and relented. “I am not pleased,” was all he admitted to, and that was quite the understatement. Though he knew the feeling was self-piteous, Rahul felt that no one believed in his command abilities. First Admiral Glover, a man he had served under and admired greatly, had thought his son Terrence was more qualified to lead the Starfleet contingent into the Pyxis Cluster, known colloquially as “The Maw”, to shut down a major ketracel white production facility. The Admiralty had thought differently.

But then the tribulations that had occurred on the pathway to bringing the Alshain Exarchate into the Federation Alliance had shelved the mission. The entry of the Alshain into the war had revived the plan, but in the spirit of comity Starfleet Command had agreed to cede authority of the mission to the Alshain. And the admirals wanted a more experienced Starfleet hand dealing with their largely unproven new allies.

As if reading his mind, the new Starfleet commander, Captain Selmek of the Concorde strode by, engaged in a conversation with Sub-Admiral Hesporian. The slender, silvered Romulan woman wasn’t happy about being replaced as mission lead for the combined taskforce and she appeared to be sharing her displeasure with the stoic brown-hued Vulcan. Selmek was taking the invective with typical Vulcan aplomb.

Moments later they were followed by Nauarch D’Arrosa and the Klingon Brigadier Karnon. The burly Klingon pounded the even burlier Alshain on his back, and guffawed loudly over the bustling concourse. He clutched his stomach and nearly doubled over as his entire frame shook. Whatever the Alshain admiral had said couldn’t have amused Karnon as much as the mortification on Hesporian’s face when Rear Admiral Aggarwal had announced the change in the command structure. Now D’Arrosa was the supreme commander of the Maw taskforce that had been reassembled around the starbase.

“So, that’s the new commander huh?” Kapoor whispered, though it was doubtful that the Alshain, even with his keen hearing, would’ve heard her over the cacophonous crowd. Even though Ananda was right beside him, Rahul was surprised that he had captured the woman’s question. The Efrosian nodded. “What’s your take on him?”

“I don’t know enough about him yet.”

“What does your gut say?” Kapoor pointed at her stomach for emphasis.

“My ‘gut’,” the captain paused to rub his midsection, “Says that I’m ready for lunch.”

Kapoor rolled her eyes. “That’s not what I mean.”

“What does that have to do with my hunger pangs?”

“Sir,” Kapoor rolled her eyes.

“Would you care to grab something before we head back up to Urania,” Rahul offered, “Because it will be nothing but replicated foodstuffs from there on out.”

“This sounds better all the time,” Kapoor muttered. The captain couldn’t agree more.
*******************************************************************

Ketracel Production Facility
Pyxis III

“This is the price of cooperation,” Administrator Aneel scowled, her pallid skin stretching tighter over her skeletal face.

“I fear that the price is too high, but in our haste to remain viable in quickly shifting circumstances we have made a monumentally tragic error,” Chief Scientist Loma threw up his arms, his passion overtaking him, as usual.

“You exaggerate. The Dominion is our ally. They have provided this facility with more profit than the Orion Syndicate and the others could ever provide, even the fattest, laziest Alshain monarch,” Aneel said, lacing her words with a heavy dose of boredom. Loma went on these rants several times a week. It had been fortunate for him so far that he did so out of earshot of the Jem’Hadar guarding the facility.

“But what have they received in return, and if eventually they want to reevaluate our role in the Dominion what leverage will we have to stop them?” Loma pressed.

“The white!” Aneel was incredulous. She pointed out of her office’s large, wraparound window to the floor below. Tarlac, Elloran, and prisoners captured by the Dominion drudged on assembly lines that produced and stored the white, in various forms for consumption by various means. The Jem’Hadar used it for sustenance, while other species used it as a narcotic. It didn’t matter what they used it for Aneel thought, as long as their method of payment was valid. “We control the white,” she added for emphasis, hoping that salient fact would finally pierce through her colleague’s paranoia.

Loma actually chuckled. “Take another look on the floor. Count how many Jem’Hadar are stalking around, and remember how that number has grown steadily in the last several months. Though some may fancy us an Imperium, we are nothing more than a band of nomads, roaming the endless chasm in search of a permanent home.”

“We’ve finally found one,” Aneel concluded, “With the Dominion.”

Loma started to speak and then his brain registered what Aneel had said. He stood before her, open mouthed and dumbstruck, just the way she liked him. “You can’t mean that.”

“I do,” Aneel said, stepping from behind her desk. She pressed her hands against the cool pane of the window, gazing down with satisfaction. “We are feared once again. The Dominion is more powerful than the Alshain or Federation ever was. It was a mistake to ally with them to begin with. Only the Founders’ mastery of genetics might save the extinction of our species. With their help we might not even need the metaphasic rings around Ba’ku. We won’t have to grovel back to our forebears like Gallatin and the others did. In fact, I look forward to the day that we erase that accursed planet from existence.”

She paused, stepping back, shocked and excited by the rage pumping through her system. She fantasized standing beside her lover Rufaro, on the bridge of his ship, watching Ba’ku burn; the first of many planets that would fall before them. The Son’a had been denied so long, but finally it was their turn, finally they would have a place in the sun. And Aneel couldn’t be happier. “If you speak ill of our alliance again, I will hand you over to the Jem’Hadar personally,” she said, without looking back at him. “Now, get out of my office.”
*******************************************************************
Central Command Vessel Gianour
Pyxis Cluster

Gul Omal Panar paced the bridge, her frustration mounting. “The prisoners are not working fast enough,” she muttered, his head down. She wasn’t interested in looking at the person on the main viewer. His pinkish, striated face disgusted her. “This project is a waste of time and resources.”

Subahdar Rufaro, sitting in his plush office in the administrative quarters of the Hazred Array, leered at her. “Tell that to Sarkos,” he said breezily, referring to the Vorta that had been dispatched to oversee the project for the Dominion.

The goad worked. Panar looked up; seething at the mention of the supercilious Vorta boiled her blood. At Chin’toka he had embarrassed her on her own bridge, stopping her attack on the Starship Cuffe because his gooey Founder wanted to strike terror into the hearts of the Federation by allowing survivors. Of course the Federation Alliance was so terrified that they added the Alshain and a fourth front to the war that had overtaxed Dominion forces. The Son’a didn’t have the men or materiel to match the Alshain war machine. And the Breen seemed to be holding back, but one could never be sure with those shifty creatures.

Dominion forces had failed to take advantage of Chin’toka victory and the war had slipped back into a bitter stalemate, but Panar knew that that state of affairs benefitted the Federation Alliance. Chin’toka, coupled with the Breen attack on Earth, should’ve broken them, but their forces had only expanded. While Legate Damar’s defection had splintered her people, and the gul knew that the Dominion stood no chance of conquering and holding the Alpha Quadrant without unified Cardassian support.

Damar’s actions had spurred a paranoiac mindset among the Vorta. They were testing each loyal Cardassian commander, searching for sedition. Panar felt her loyalty test came in being assigned to the Pyxis Cluster, under Sarkos’s authority again. She had little doubt that it was the bastard’s idea after she dared defy him at Chin’toka. Her anger and frustration roiling in her gut, and warring on her face, she pinned Rufaro with a glacial stare. “The sooner you can field a successful immobilizer ray, the sooner we can end this war.”

“Dr. Nahn assures me that he is back on schedule, after that nasty sabotage incident,” Rufaro’s face became even more wrinkled.

“Can you be certain that he wasn’t involved in the sabotage?” Panar asked.

Rufaro confidently shook his head. “Yes,” the Son’a declared. “Nahn cares only for his research, not politics, and he joined us willingly because he knew the Dominion would fund him completely.”

“I’m sure that once he has successfully captured a wormhole that can be altered into a pathway back to the Gamma Quadrant, the Dominion will level Trill in thanks,” Panar said, her voice dripping with irony.

“That’s not a note of…dissension I detect, is it?” Rufaro’s face cracked when he smiled. He wiped away the glob of blood from his split lip.

“It’s an observation,” Panar replied, smiling predatorily. “Surely observations haven’t become illegal.”

“Not yet,” Rufaro chanced a smile back. “But tomorrow is a new day.”

“Yes…it is,” Panar riposted.
********************************************************************
 
A wonderful start to what will clearly be another dark, depressing and interesting story in the lives of your characters and the enemies they make ;)

Maybe the Dominion will learn that every race has its own agenda for joining them, and not one of them is for the good of the Dominion.
 
Alright, I better start taking notes because I know this is going to be another one of these intricate stories a simple minded fellow like myself might have trouble keeping up with.

Oh don't get me wrong, I think this is off to a great start and I looking forward to the twists and turns and intrigue and Glover-ess moments this new DT tale will surely deliver.
 
********************************************************************
Hazred Array
Magneton Pulse Emitter

Every time his jailers allowed Erik Rydell to pilot a work bee he dreamed of jetting to freedom, though he knew that the small craft’s impulse speed could be easily eclipsed by the Jem’Hadar, Son’a, and Cardassian warships surrounding them. And even if by some miracle he got by them, he doubted a poorly shielded, weak-engine ship could survive the Maw. The legends about ships being swallowed alive by a creature living inside the Pyxis Cluster were mostly true, except that the ancient storytellers hadn’t known the monsters were wormholes that used to open and disappear unpredictably in this part of space, until the damned traitor Dr. Nahn had figured out a way to track and temporarily immobilize them.

How the bastard Trill had done it was beyond Erik’s comprehension. He had been an operations officer in Starfleet and since had been something of a jack-of-all-trades once he had joined the Maquis. What the Dominion used him for was to keep the magneton pulse emitter, which hung like a scalpel from the bowels of the array, in working order.

Since it had never been fully activated, he wasn’t quite sure what working order entailed, but it was better than working in the ketracel lab. There was too much of a temptation to pocket some of the white and escape from the pain in a totally different way.

When he got tired of dreaming about escaping, he fantasized smashing the work bee to bits against the pulse emitter. But of course that wouldn’t be fair to Melcia, his comely Orion copilot, or the vac-suited people working along the length of the scalpel. Though he would love to see the look on both Sarkos’s and Nahn’s faces when they realized they were about to be vaporized.

The two sat behind him and Melcia, watching the construction of the pulse emitter through their respective viewports. From what Erik had gleaned from Nahn’s excited conversation, the emitter’s pulse would interact with an artificially generated subspace tensor matrix and produce a wormhole. The Trill had also fashioned transkinetic drones to seed the wormhole and guide it in the direction of the Dominion.

Erik hadn’t heard how the Trill intended to keep the wormhole stable long enough for the drone to get through or for a Dominion fleet to return across. He didn’t care actually. He knew he had to stop the Trill from even getting that far. He gave a sideways glance to his copilot and the attractive Orion gave him a knowing wink. He chanced a glance up and mouthed, “Soon”.

“What was that….prisoner?” Sarkos asked.

“Nothing,” Erik quickly looked down at this instrument panel. “Just making an adjustment to the astronavigation controls. You wouldn’t want us buzzing the work crews and interrupting your glorious project.”

“Watch your tone,” the Vorta said sharply.

“He wasn’t lying,” Nahn cut in. “It is a glorious project.”

“If it works,” Sarkos turned his ire toward the Trill.

“It’ll work,” Nahn huffed.

“For your sake, it better,” the Vorta replied, all pretense at cheerfulness gone. “The fate of two quadrants depends on it.”

“Truer words,” Erik muttered.

“What was that?” Both men asked from behind him, almost at the same time.

“Nothing.”
********************************************************************'
USS Concorde
Observation Lounge
En Route to the Pyxis Cluster

“Buncha babies is what the Romulans are,” Commander Theresa Gamboa opined. “The Sub-admiral took her toys and went home after she was told she wouldn’t be commanding this mission.”

“The analogy is a crude one, but apt I suppose,” Captain Selmek said dryly. Commander Gamboa hadn’t been his first choice for a person to succeed Commander Raynor; the woman was too blustery, too driven by logic for his taste. But her work ethic and her commitment to the ship and crew couldn’t be denied. Even Selmek understood the importance of emotion in building morale among his crew, and they needed that more than ever after the last few devastating months. “However, the Romulans have supplied support and communications vessels.”

“I don’t like the idea of having Romulans at my back, allies or not,” Lt. Chetna chimed in. The smooth-paned Bolian female had replaced Gamboa at tactical. “However, I would rather have support and communication vessels behind us than warbirds.”

“We won’t even need them if our new partners live up to their billing,” Lt. Thurl remarked. The thickset Tellarite operations officer tugged on the tunic bunched around his midsection.

“Maybe that’s what the Romulans are hoping to see,” Dr. Vanessa Thorndike thoughtfully rubbed her chin. “Perhaps the Romulans are holding back to gauge the leadership capacity or fighting ability of the Alshain. Their Starforce hasn’t been involved in major combat in decades.”

“That sounds plausible,” The Chief Engineer, Lt. Andrea Kim, added. “Sounds like something the Romulans would do; make an assessment instead of joining in the fighting.”

Selmek’s look became dourer. “Though the motives of our Romulan allies are open to debate, they have proven their bravery in this conflict countless times. Without their entrance into the war the Federation and Klingon Empire might have already fallen to the Dominion.”

“So now they want to see if the Alshain will make a similar impact?” The medic asked.

“Or maybe they want the Alshain to contribute their pound of flesh,” Thurl offered as an alternative. Everyone around the table gazed at the stoic Vulcan.

“It could be either, or both, or no reason we can glean from the evidence before us,” Selmek finally concluded. “But in any event it is in all of our interests that the Alshain acquit themselves well in the coming battle. If we fail to cut off one of the last remaining supplies of ketracel white, the Alshain might not have another chance to prove themselves.”

***************************************************************
Alshain Starforce Battle Cruiser Bonespear
Predator-Class
Command Salon

Nauarch Angur D’Arrosa stood in front of his command chair, his gaze rapt on the main screen. Before him swirled the spatial cauldron ancient Alshain navigators had named “The Maw”, the great devourer of stars. His snout twitched and his stomach roiled at the thought of entering its gullet, but the admiral wouldn’t give in to atavistic fears. He had a job to do, a war to win.

It had been far too long since the Alshain had spread their banner across the stars. Exarch Jedalla’s call to rebuild Greater Alshain had sung in his blood and that of his Sept. He had been part of the new wave of military officers pushed forward to obtain Jedalla’s vision.

Angur had even surpassed elders among his own Sept, but Jedalla rewarded talent as much as seniority. And D’Arrosa hadn’t been reluctant to accept the challenge. Now his greatest challenge lay before him. The relatively static calm of the space surrounding them stood in stark contrast to the writhing, twisting, pulsating mass of the Pyxis Cluster. Variegated colors, deep purples, vibrant greens, fiery oranges danced before his vision, an ocular delight.

Jedalla’s grandfather, Exarch Jog, had given this patch of space away to the Son’a. At that time, and largely since, many Alshain felt it had been a good decision. The cluster held nothing of value, and even its shipping lanes were subject to the sudden appearance of subspace vortexes and apertures. However, the crafty Son’a had found a far more lucrative use for the cluster, basing one of the major ketracel white facilities there, and using the unpredictable nature of the space as a natural barrier against rivals or legal authorities.

“Sensors are detecting an elevation in thermobaric radiation levels,” Sensor Officer A’Laia replied.

“We’ve reached the outskirts of the cluster,” Angur intoned. “Modify the shields to compensate for the radiation increase.”

“We have punctured the veil,” Sutahr L’Hoi, his first officer, breathed. “There is no turning back now.”

“No,” D’Arrosa said with growing anticipation, “There is not.”
********************************************************************
 
********************************************************************
Ketracel Production Facility
Pyxis III

“This is a surprise,” Administrator Aneel said, her tone not matching the plastic smile on her face.

“We are not here to interfere,” Gul Ruder replied. “Our intelligence sources have revealed that Pyxis III will be the target of a massive attack.”

“I knew it,” Loma muttered. Aneel’s glare silenced him.

“Surely your sources are mistaken,” Aneel said. “No one would be foolish enough to expend the resources to traverse the Cluster. It would make more sense for them to use those forces on the battlefield.”

“As it would be wise to not withdrawn your forces from action,” Yak’Tazon, the Jem’Hadar First in charge while Sarkos toured the Hazred Array, grumbled. “We did not receive advance warning about your arrival.”

“There was no time,” The gul replied. “We just received this information, and we had to move on it. I had no time to run it through the bureaucratic maze on Prime.” He handed an information padd to Aneel. “The information we collected is on that display.”

“You did not follow protocol,” The Jem’Hadar charged.

“I acted, and it wouldn’t it be better to act, even if the intelligence proves false, than to do nothing and allow this vital part of our war effort to be captured or destroyed?” Ruder asked, holding his ground. The Jem’Hadar seethed, but he couldn’t answer. Aneel was also miffed that she didn’t have a ready retort.

“How many forces did you bring?” Loma broke the tense silence.

“My squadron consisted of five vessels, three Galors and two Hidekis.” Ruder turned to the Jem’Hadar. “With your permission, I would to discuss setting up a defensive perimeter with First Yak’Tazon.”

Aneel didn’t answer immediately. She was busy calculating how many ships would be defending Pyxis III. Five Cardassian warships, one Jem’Hadar destroyer and ten fighters, and the orbital defense platforms should be more than sufficient. Though she wished that the Son’a forces hadn’t been retired to the Array. She wanted Rufaro by her side in the event that Ruder’s information was correct. “Of course, please formulate your plan,” the administrator said after a few moments. Ruder nodded crisply and departed with the Jem’Hadar in tow. She then turned to Loma, her smile a bit more genuine. “See, Dominion membership does have its benefits.”

“That remains to be seen,” Loma crossed his arms and sulked.

“I have a feeling that we will receive that answer very soon,” Aneel said, glancing down at the padd.
********************************************************************

Central Command Vessel Soryon
Command Bridge

“Long range sensors are detecting a massive buildup of gases, moving on an intercept course,” the Sensor Officer replied.

Gul Ruder leaned forward in his seat and rubbed his chin. “Could it be the Alliance strike force?”

“It is likely,” Gil Kolza, his second in command, answered. “I wouldn’t put it past the Alliance to use their Bussard collectors to suck up cluster gases and use them to cover their movements.”

“It is something I would do,” Ruder nodded. “Inform Yak’Tazon.”
********************************************************************
USS Urania
Main Bridge

“It’s going to take us weeks to repaint the hull,” Ensign Willa Janssen muttered. The coruscating gases surrounding the ship clogged the sensors and placed a haze over the main viewer’s imager. Willa didn’t use the main viewport to guide her, but she did like the view. However, she wound up looking up and down from her instrument panel to the main viewer to try to help her maintain a steady course the further Urania drove into the Pyxis Cluster. The astral eddies bombarding the ship, and causing the ship to tremble every few seconds, didn’t help her concentration either. The further they went into the Cluster the more powerful the broadsides became. The last one had rattled her teeth. In addition to the hull, she didn’t know how much longer the shields could hold out.

“I would rather be around to do that drudgery than leaving our ship unprotected,” Lt. Suzanne Harper chided the younger officer. Harper sat beside her at the Operations terminal. Generally the woman was much more congenial, but Willa chalked up her criticism to nerves. Everyone was on edge. It was bad enough going into battle with the Dominion, but the taskforce also had to contend with the cluster’s dangers.

“Pipe down you two,” Commander Kapoor said. Willa looked up, a bit startled to see the woman standing just behind Harper. “Neither one of you will be going near the hull. That honor will go to Chief Soriano,” she grinned, referring to the ship’s chief engineer.

“Yeah, I guess so,” Harper replied with a weary grin. The brown-skinned woman ran a through her short, reddish hair. Kapoor placed a hand on her shoulder and squeezed.
“This is going to be a piece of cake,” the First Officer replied. “We’ll take down the lab and then we’ll be out. The Dominion won’t even know what hit them.”

“I hope so sir,” Harper said, with less confidence. “I really hope that’s the case.”
********************************************************************
Jem’Hadar Battle Cruiser
18-Alpha-X-92387001
Command Center

First Yak’Tazon stared at the gathering storm out of the virtual display lens connected to his headset. “Contact the Soryon.”

“This is Gul Ruder,” the Cardassian’s deep voice filled the bridge’s speakers.
Yak’Tazon cut right to the point, with a tone that would brook no debate, “Our sensors have also detected the incoming attack force. We will take the lead in repelling them.”
“Acknowledged,” the gul replied. The Jem’Hadar was shocked that the man relented so easily.

It didn’t raise his estimation of Ruder or the Cardassians however. Once more the Founder had shown her wisdom by bringing the Breen into the Dominion. It seemed that the Cardassians who hadn’t openly rebelled against the Dominion had lost the will to fight.
Yak’Tazon turned to the Third at the helm. “Lay in an intercept course.”

“Victory is life!” The Second crowed, his battle lust overtaking him. Yak’Tazon pumped his fist in the air and joined in the yell. Soon the entire bridge rumbled with the battle cry.

“Victory is life!”
********************************************************************
 
Why am I getting a really bad feeling about the fate of this task force? Is it because you've already implied their destruction or because this suprise attack will not come as a suprise at all? Probably both.

I still hold out hope that they'll pull through. So what ... call me a fool.

Great stuff.
 
First off, I should comment on Maelstrom which I finished last night. it was as always action packed and very dark, with Glover again forced to a precipice and having to rein in his anger and revenge. It superbly showed a complexity to the Ashlain race, fleshing out the characters involved, showing cruel and bloodthirsty figures with a lust for power and differing agendas. Certainly, not the Federation's finest and most honourable allies. You did a terrific job of that, throwing in lots of twists with the attempted coup never mind the Romulan/Reman convolutions on the Diadem with a shapeshifter. All very exciting and confusing.
The set up here, looks to be more of the same. This time the Son'a and their tenuous connection/alliance with the Dominion is getting a bit of the spotlight. But you're also throwing in distrusting Cardassians and slimy Vorta and ever faithful but ever brutal and violent Jem'Hadar soldiers. This is going to get messy before even we get to the taskforce. And it seems as though both Glovers will have a bee in their bonnet. Oh and the Ashlain are waiting on the sidelines too. This is shaping up to be very promising and very twisted. Looking forward.
 
********************************************************************
Alshain Starforce Battle Cruiser Bonespear
Predator-Class
Command Salon

Nauarch D’Arrosa spoke confidently, assured that his voice was spread through the taskforce via comlinks. Though none of the other ship’s visual sensors were connected to the Bonespear at the moment, the Alshain admiral stood proudly in front of his command seat. He wanted to be on his feet for this, the moment when the Alshain reclaimed their galactic destiny.

“All ships, attack formation Aleph,” he declared, watching proudly as Starfleet and Alshain ships formed a deadly pyramid, with the Bonespear at its tip. The small Romulan contingent formed the base of the pyramid. It mostly consisted of medical and supply ships, though D’Arrosa shuddered at the idea of Romulan medical practices. He would rather take his chances against the Jem’Hadar, instead of wondering what type of poison the Romulans mixed into their medicines.

The Dominion vessels, two Jem’Hadar battle cruisers bookended a row of Jem’Hadar attack fighters. The Dominion ships were rushing to meet them. Behind them rested five Cardassian warships. Beyond them, a ring of orbital defense platforms, their cannons aimed at the oncoming taskforce. This wasn’t going to be an easy battle, D’Arrosa thought, and the thought made him smile. “Attack!”

*******************************************************************
Central Command Vessel Soryon
Command Bridge

Gul Ruder sat calmly in his chair, watching the battle unfold. The two forces had crashed into each other, their barrages lighting up the void. Casualties had quickly been inflicted on both sides: several Jem’Hadar warbugs, one Alshain frigate, and one Starfleet vessel-Norway class, if Ruder could recall from intelligence reports-had been demolished. The two Jem’Hadar battle cruisers remained largely unscathed, as did the heavy Alshain cruisers and the Starfleet Galaxy-class ship, essentially the heaviest hitters in the fight, not counting his three Galors, and the Jem’Hadar First had been explicit in commanding Ruder to hold back.

That order wasn’t sitting well with everyone. Gil Kolza fidgeted at his station, grinding his teeth every few seconds when the main viewer was awash with light from photon and disruptor charges. It bathed the bridge in an array of colors, a most beautiful display. Ruder’s children would’ve enjoyed the fireworks, he thought sadly. If they were still alive…but they had been killed by the Klingons years ago. “We’ve got to do something,” Kolza eventually said, and Ruder noticed supportive nods among several officers on the bridge. “We came here to fight, and we shouldn’t be kept out of it by order of the Jem’Hadar! Who placed him in command anyway?” The nods turned to grumbles among the bridge.

Ruder shook his head. “Not until the word is given.”

“But sir…” Kolza pleaded.

“Not until the word is given,” Ruder repeated, more forcefully. The gil bit his tongue and settled down, though he didn’t remove the glowering look from his face. “Our time will come soon enough,” Ruder promised. “We will have our battle…and it will be glorious.”

********************************************************************

USS Urania
Main Bridge

“Lo, fire!” Captain Rahul barked. The fast acting Bajoran unleashed a hail of phaser fire at the oncoming Jem’Hadar attack fighters. The beams lashed across their hulls, destroying two instantly. The third cut through the large fireball, strafing the main hull. Lt. Harper heard her terminal short out, and she pushed backwards right before it exploded. Shards of plastic and metal lacerated her skin, embedding in her face and chest.

She blinked wildly, fighting against the pain and the approaching darkness. She sensed more a presence, a shadow come over her. She was in agony, but she it didn’t feel fatal, as if she had an inkling what death felt like. However, it didn’t feel like this was it. Harper blinked again, trying to focus on the shape above her. To her relief, it began to resolve into Willa Janssen and not the Grim Reaper. “It’s going to be okay,” Janssen murmured, checking Harper’s wounds. “You’re going to be all right.”

“Get…back…to your post,” Harper rasped.

Janssen smiled, and a drop of blood splashed from the gash running across the woman’s forehead onto the corner of Harper’s mouth. Janssen shook her head, “My…terminals gone too, sir,” she said, before her eyes rolled back in her head and she fell on top of Harper, driving shrapnel even deeper into her body. Harper bit back a scream, her concern for the young officer overpowering her own pain and fear. She gently took hold of the woman, her fingers disturbingly scraping across a hard metal shard extending from Janssen’s back.

“Oh God,” she whispered, recoiling from the shard. “Ensign Janssen,” she shook the woman. “Willa?” There was no response. “Help me,” she pleaded, “Could someone help me please!”

********************************************************************
USS Concorde
Main Bridge

Captain Selmek was distressed but he didn’t show it. The Urania had fallen back, fire and smoke engulfing its main hull. He wished he could render assistance immediately but he knew he would have to wait until the enemy had been neutralized. “Inform the Romulans,” he ordered.

“Maybe that can actually do something for a change,” griped Commander Gamboa. Selmek couldn’t agree more though once again he didn’t voice the sentiment. He kept his focus on the battle raging around him. Though the majority of the Dominion strike force was composed of Jem’Hadar fighters, the smaller vessels proved extremely durable, not to mention fast, and maneuverable. They could strike multiple times before being taken down. The Alshain interceptors could barely keep up with them. The Jem’Hadar battle cruisers, not to mention the Cardassian squadron, were largely sitting back, allowing the warbugs full command of the field.

“We’ve just lost the Dover,” Thurl grumbled. Selmek’s ears picked up a sharp intake from the aft bridge. He turned around halfway in his seat to see Lt. Ruiz, at the auxiliary engineering terminal, hastily wiping tears out of her eyes.

“Her fiancé,” Gamboa muttered.

Selmek nodded grimly, his anger disturbing, but strangely sustaining. “We’ve got to put a stop to this.”

“Is it time?” Theresa asked, revenge making her florid.

“Give the word,” the Vulcan ordered.
********************************************************************
Central Command Vessel Soryon
Command Bridge

The coded message flashed across the inset screen on Ruder’s armchair. “The word is given,” he said, with a predatory grin. “For Legate Damar,” he said softly, but firmly.

“For Cardassia!” Gil Kolza shouted, pumping his fist in the air. The bridge erupted with similar shouts.

“Charge weapons and engines,” Ruder commanded rapidly. “I want the Hidekis to break off and take out the orbital defense network. The three Galors will make short work of the Jem’Hadar.”

Seconds after the squadron broke formation, the lead Jem’Hadar ship hailed them. “What are you doing?” First Yak’Tazon demanded. Ruder smirked. He wished he had a more memorable answer ready, something he could’ve told his children. But he only could say what was in his heart.

“Waking up.”
********************************************************************
Alshain Starforce Battle Cruiser Bonespear
Predator-Class
Command Salon

“By the gods,” Sutahr L’Hoi remarked. “I don’t believe it.” Nauarch D’Arrosa was just as stunned. He grasped one of his armrests to stay on his feet. The shock of the events unfolding around him had nearly taken him to the deck. The Cardassians were attacking both the Jem’Hadar and the defense ring around Pyxis III. Two Galor cruisers had focused on one Jem’Hadar battle cruiser while the much quicker on the uptake Starship Concorde had rushed to engage the other battle cruiser.

Despite the strange turn of fortune, D’Arrosa wasn’t going to let Selmek or the Federation claim victory alone. “Direct the Bloodfang to assist the two Galors, and follow the Concorde,” he ordered.

********************************************************************
 
********************************************************************
Ketracel Production Facility
Pyxis III

Administrator Aneel had just lain back on the table, preparing herself for another relaxing skin stretching session when she heard an explosion. The walls rattled around her, shelves medical and cosmetic supplies crashing to the floor. Her Tarlac and Elloran assistants threw up their hands, in a vain attempt to protect them from the impromptu missiles. Aneel sat up slowly, not quite registering what had happened. The anesthetic coursing through her bloodstream clouded her brain.

“What’s wrong?” She asked, her voice slightly slurred. Her servants were equally as perplexed. “Assist me,” she demanded, holding out her arms. They rushed to grab them and ease her off the table. Supporting her, she made her way to her office. The rumblings had intensified steadily, hitting the compound with such force that it almost knocked her and her assistants down more than once.

A frantic Loma met them at the door of her office. His face was contorted with fear. “The…defense grid…it’s been disabled.”

“What?” Aneel asked, her brain still foggy. “What are you talking about?”

“The Cardassians,” Loma snarled the name as if it were an epithet. “They betrayed us.”

“Impossible,” Aneel said, trying not to drift away on a narcotic sea. “They are here to defend us.”

“No,” Loma said. “They weren’t.”

“I-I don’t understand,” she said, frowning. “I don’t…”

Loma grabbed her arm roughly, beating back her servants. “We’ve got to go. Now!”

“Go where?”

“We’ve got to fall back, to the array. At least our own forces are there. Hopefully we can trust them.”

“Rufaro,” Through the haze, Aneel seized on the name. “He’ll know what to do.”

“Let’s go.” Loma said, dragging her along.
********************************************************************
Jem’Hadar Battle Cruiser
18-Alpha-X-92387001
Command Center

The Cardassians’ treachery had thrown the battle into disarray. The Jem’Hadar had flinched, just for a second, but it had been enough for the Allies, and their Cardassian lapdogs, to gain the advantage.

“Battle Cruiser 18-Alpha-X-92387002,” has been destroyed, the Fourth replied somberly. But First Yak’Tazon had seen it already on his virtual display. The Cardassians and two Allied ships had honed in on it, capturing it in a web of phaser fire. The same fate was about to befall his own vessel, if he didn’t think quickly. Already one Starfleet vessel had engaged them full on, though it had inflicted little damage thus far. But other ships, namely the heavily armed Alshain Predator was en route, and the Romulans were now joining the fray.

He did, and came up with the unthinkable. “Retreat,” he said, the word obscene and alien on his tongue. “We will make our stand at the Hazred Array.”
********************************************************************

USS Concorde
Main Bridge

Cheers rippled across the bridge at the site of the retreating Jem’Hadar battle cruiser. “I can’t believe it,” Commander Gamboa said in surprise. “I’ve never seen Jem’Hadar tuck tail and run before.”

“There’s a first time for everything,” Thurl said, pumping his fist. “It’s about time things started breaking our way.”

“The battle is not complete,” Selmek said. “The job is not finished. Not until the Jem’Hadar have been captured…or destroyed.”

“We’re receiving a hail sir,” Lt. Lo said, “It’s from the Bonespear.”

“On screen,” Selemk ordered. The Alshain admiral was seething.

“We need to talk,” he demanded.

“But admiral, we were just preparing to give chase,” Selmek replied coolly.

“Now,” D’Arrosa roared. Selmek’s left eyebrow arched.

“Since you made the request so eloquently, I shall retire to my ready room at once.”
*******************************************************************
USS Concorde
Captain’s Ready Room

“We monitored a coded message sent from your vessel to one of the Cardassian ships,” D’Arrosa said, without preamble. “What was the content of that message?”

“That’s classified,” Selmek remarked.

“I’m the supreme commander of this taskforce,” D’Arrosa declared.

“No one is disputing that,” Selmek said, a little miffed at himself for the rise of heat in his cheeks and his hasty retort.

“I should be privy to any communiqués you send to the enemy.”

“The Cardassians clearly have shown themselves not to be the enemy. They have provided the decisive factor in this battle. Now, we must finish it. We have to track down the Jem’Hadar ships that escaped. Each second we argue is one that is dissipating their ion trails. They will be hard enough to track inside this cluster as is.”

“I know that,” D’Arrosa snapped. “And to think that I once thought Starfleet was honorable, but you are no Monica Covey…Vulcan.”

“No…I am not,” Selmek conceded with a nod.

“If you ever attempt an end run around me again, I will devour your entrails,” D’Arrosa grinned, running a long, ragged tongue over his sharp incisors. “Your blood will serve as the broth of my plomeek soup.”

Selmek reigned in his anger…and disgust. He buried the rejoinder threatening to fly loose. “Understood,” was all he said.

D’Arrosa snarled and snorted with displeasure. He had also expected a sharper reply. “See that it is,” he said abruptly. “And to make sure you understand the importance of communication, you will lead the force to secure Pyxis III. I will take the remaining forces and hunt down the retreating Jem’Hadar.”

“What?” Selmek couldn’t hide his surprise. Or his displeasure. The unvarnished reaction made D’Arrosa smile.

“Since you and the Cardassians are so close, you will take the planet. I will take the rest of the force deeper into the Cluster.”

“You-you can’t,” Selmek said, frustration choking his words.

“This will be my kill,” D’Arrosa stated, “And nothing will stand in the way of that.”

“Admiral, I advise you…”

“Advise yourself,” D’Arrosa cut him off. “Now let’s return to the battle.”
********************************************************************
 
CeJay and Mirandafave,

Thanks for the comments. MF, you're right that it will be more of the same, well, to some extent though I won't be focusing as heavily on the Alshain this go-round. In "Maelstrom" I wanted to flesh out them out a little more, to provide more background for the events that took place, or within the chronology of "Maelstrom" will take place in Gibraltar's "Prophets and Loss" and my follow-up "Fall Out." I also plan for "PJ" to be the second part of a trilogy that will focus on the Alshain post-Dominion War.

I hope you continue reading and enjoying it.

P.S.

Captain Selmek and the USS Concorde first made an appearance in "Pride Goeth".
Captain Rahul first made an appearance in "False Colors".
T'Prell first made an appearance in "The Needs of the One".
Sarkos first made an appearance in "Dance with the Devil".
Gul Panar, and the crew of the CCV Gianour first made an appearance in "Maelstrom".

With the exception of "Maelstrom" the rest of the stories can be found at the United Trek website: http://www.unitedtrek.org/Dark Territory/dark_territory.htm
 
Nice work here.

The Dominion will learn that you do not subjugate the Alpha Quadrant races without a bloody fight.

This they will learn...or lose...oh wait, they did! :devil:
 
Definitely, I will continue reading. My gosh what a complex weave of characters and different ships, and different aspects of the fight, all with different motivations - the Cardassian turning the tables on the Jem'Hadar came as a complete shock to me. Maybe it shouldn't have - but I just wasn't thinking it was quite that time frame. Very nivcely executed.

You have a lots of balls to juggle but you manage to keep track of them all. It helps give a grander scope to your stories, making them more epic in a way. Which considering that you are dealing with war battles that should be the feeling conveyed - lots of ships and lives on the line. Nicely conveyed Darkush.

And again to repeat, love the focus on alien ships and enemies included. Even if the focus on the Ashlain this time round won't be as much, the previous story grounds their nature in my consciousness and helps me appreciate their actions and reactions. Very interesting and compelling to read.
 
What we've all come to expect from Dark Territory stories--strong characters, great plots, and unexpected--and often tragic--twists. After the weekend and week from Hades, you have no idea how terrific it feels to get back to reading everyone's tales--and getting back to writing too.
 
What a terrific twist, I didn't see that one coming.

Whoever said nothing good ever happens in Dark Territory. Yeah, I know, the story ain't over yet and it's too early to celebrate the good guys' victory.

As for the Alshain, D’Arrosa should have left his ego behind when he set out on this mission. I have an inkling that his arrogance will be his downfall. What a shame.
 
********************************************************************

USS Urania
Main Bridge

Captain Rahul was halfway up into the damaged aft Missions Operations terminal. It would have to be reconfigured to serve as the ship’s Operations console. Helm control had already been shifted to Commander Kapoor’s station.

The Efrosian had decided to get his hands dirty, to be of some use because wanted the engineers working in other trouble spots around the ship. Thankfully the damage had been relatively minimal. He winced at the airy comment, his guilt and grief bringing a memory of Ensign Janssen to mind. The winsome woman would be missed. He was at least thankful that Lt. Harper had survived. He had been reluctant to transfer her and the other wounded to the Romulan ship Opalius, but he wanted Urania back up and ready to fight soon. And if that was the case he wanted Sickbay ready to receive the newer casualties.

“Captain, we’re getting a hail,” Lt. Lo Karie replied. He grunted, wiggling himself out of the terminal. Standing up, his legs stiffed, he tried in vain to knock off the soot and grime on his uniform. A nasty crack ran bisected the main viewer. A hazy image eventually emerged from the white sea of static. It was Nauarch D’Arrosa.

“Captain Rahul, are you ready to rejoin the fight?”

“Yes,” he said without a second’s hesitation.

D’Arrosa grinned. “Then fall in beside me. You will be my second.”
******************************************************************
USS Concorde
Main Bridge

“Would you looka that?” Commander Gamboa threw up her hands in frustration. “Of all the lowdown, dirty, rotten things to do.” Everyone watched the blackened Urania take up position beside the Bonespear before the remnant of the Allied force warped away after the Jem’Hadar.

“It doesn’t make much sense at all that the admiral would choose a damaged vessel over the taskforce’s Federation flagship,” Thurl huffed.

“It does if D’Arrosa’s trying to make a point, show who’s boss,” Gamboa spat.

“And he’s put the lives of the crew of the Urania in danger to boot,” Lt. Chetna said darkly.

“Captain Rahul is a fine captain,” Selmek cut through the pall of disbelief. “If he didn’t think his ship or crew was up to the task at hand, he wouldn’t have joined the Bonespear. He knows his crew can do the job, as I know mine can, so let us begin to do the work we were assigned.”
**************************************************************
Hazred Array
Prisoner’s Modules

“You’re going to get us airlocked for this one day,” Ceven grumbled.

“Just not today,” Erik Rydell said, running his hand over the crusty Bolian’s baldhead.

“Do that again and I’ll shank you myself,” Ceven warned. Rydell chuckled. He and Ceven had been in the same Maquis cell and both had been captured early after the Cardassians had joined the Dominion and started a renewed campaign to remove the freedom fighters from the Demilitarized Zone. Most members of their cell had long since been killed or died in captivity. It was a surprise, or some might say a miracle that both men had survived and found themselves slaving on the array.

“Hey, I’m putting my ass on the line here too, and don’t tell me you don’t like jumba sticks just as much I as do.”

“Well,” Ceven shrugged. Rydell held up a finger. Both men flattened themselves against a wall. They waited anxious seconds.

“Thought I heard something,” he whispered before they proceeded again, this time more cautiously. It had taken Rydell months to figure out how to override the access to the module’s doors. Though a vague thought of staging a revolt had been floating around in his mind, primed by the knowledge, Erik hadn’t put much concentration into it. He didn’t trust any of the other prisoners besides Ceven, and sometimes Melcia. He also didn’t think there were enough ships docked to accommodate the hundreds of prisoners captive on the array. And it wouldn’t feel right abandoning them all, even though he didn’t trust most of them far enough to throw them.

So he had shared his knowledge only with Ceven and both men had struck back at their jailers in small ways, sabotaging the project and the array’s systems whenever they could. But tonight’s mission was of a different sort.

The Bolian placed a callused hand on Rydell’s shoulder, pulling him back around the corner. “Why’s a light on?”

“How did you see that?” Erik asked surprised. Ceven had been behind him when he rounded the corner. He had just seen the faint light coming from the kitchen seconds before Ceven had yanked him back.

“Something doesn’t smell right,” the Bolian said suspiciously.

“I think we’re both a little paranoid. Everything’s okay,” Rydell said. Erik took another step forward. Ceven yanked him back again mere seconds before a disruptor beam would’ve drilled his face.

“Oh crap, we’ve been made,” Rydell yelped. The two men turned around quickly, preparing to bolt. The air shimmered around them, resolving into four Jem’Hadar soldiers.

“Rydell,” a slimy voice called from behind him. Both men turned back around slowly. Adhar Rufaro strode from the kitchen. He was roughly dragging a frightened Elloran woman. More Jem’Hadar followed him.

“Lachell,” Erik murmured.

“This belongs to me,” Rufaro said, glaring at the woman. He threw her forward. She landed at Rydell’s feet. He bent down to help her up. “As do these!” A soft, sticky jumba stick hit Rydell’s cheek before falling to the floor. “And you tried to steal them both.”

“I’m sorry,” he whispered to the mewling woman, glad his words were keeping her from totally melting down.

“Oh stop that keening,” Rufaro hissed. Rydell heard a rustling, and then he saw the Son’a produce a weapon from the folds of his jacket. He aimed it at Lachell. He got off the shot before Rydell could cover her. She dissolved in his arms. Her gold-flecked eyes, seized with terror, burned into his soul. She had been the one thing holding him together…and now…

“You bastard,” Rydell sprang to his feet. Rufaro casually swung the disruptor in his direction. “If I didn’t need to figure out how you escaped our cells, I would vaporize you right now.”

“There’s no need to wait Pruneface!” Rufaro’s upper lip twitched at the slur, but the monster wouldn’t put Erik out of his misery. “Screw it,” Rydell said, before charging the man.

“No!” Ceven shouted, grunting seconds later. Rydell heard the man hitting the ground but he was so enraged that he didn’t stop to look back. He kept his eyes forward, on Rufaro.

The Son’a sighed, and the Jem’Hadar formed up around him, a deadly circle of kar’takins pointing at him. Erik was not deterred. If he got ran through in his attempt to get at the murderous Son’a then it would be a fine death for him. There had been many a day that he had wished he had died along with the members of his cell anyway.

“Adhar Rufaro, you are needed in the control center at once,” Sarkos’s voice slithered through the public address system.

“Incapacitate him and take them both to a holding cell,” the Son’a snapped behind his wall of Jem’Hadar. One of the soldiers stepped forward, neatly arcing his polearm, its blade slashing across Rydell’s cheek. The blow turned Erik around, and the Jem’Hadar brought the polearm low, cracking his knees and taking him off his feet. Erik crashed onto the hard floor, his teeth clacking, and the gash in his face widening. His hand went to the fold of loose skin, pressing it against his face. The Jem’Hadar grabbed him.

“Don’t fight them,” Ceven’s voice was slurred. He looked and saw Jem’Hadar holding the man under his arms. “We’ll find another way.”

“Yeah,” Erik mumbled, for the Bolian’s benefit more than his own. He knew the fight was over.
******************************************************************
 
******************************************************************
Hazred Array
Control Center

“Why did you interrupt me?” Rufaro said as he stepped through the lift’s doors. “I was just about to enforce some needed discipline on two of our unruliest captives.”

Sarkos, bending over the large table dominating the octagonal room looked up, clearly not concerned. “We have more pressing matters.” He pressed a button, and a holographic image emerged from the table and took shape above them. It was Loma, cast in a sickly green holographic light.

“What happened?” Rufaro demanded from the Vorta. He hid his concern for Aneel behind his frustration.

“We received this message only moments ago,” Sarkos said. He pressed another button activating the recording.

“Pyxis III…has been lost…an Allied attack,” Loma said tightly, his voice coated with fear. “Administrator Aneel…is alive,” the scientist added next, as if reading Rufaro’s mind, “but she was injured during our escape. We have lost control of our propulsion systems. We are in need of immediate help.”

“I’ll prepare my vessel at once,” Rufaro turned away from the table.

“Hold!” The Vorta snapped. Despite himself Rufaro froze in mid-step.

“What is it?” He turned back around, his anger at his reaction getting the better of him.

“We received another communiqué seconds after Loma’s,” Sarkos said, with a flicker of welcome and terrifying doubt in his icy blue eyes.

“Play it,” Rufaro said, his stomach twisting with dread.

“An Allied taskforce is pursuing us,” the voice of the Jem’Hadar grated on the audio speakers. “We are the only remaining battle cruiser of our defensive force; the other was destroyed at Pyxis III. Our ETA is twenty minutes…” the communication fizzled out.

Sarkos turned to him. “You have more pressing duties than attending to your paramour. You must lead our forces against the allies.”

“We don’t even know the size of that taskforce!” Rufaro balked. “How can you hope to defend the array with our miniscule forces? Not to mention with the Pyxis Cluster surrounding us. I say we scuttle the station and make our escape. The allies will be so concerned about saving the prisoners that they will ignore us.”

“We will not surrender this station,” Sarkos declared.

“Fine,” Rufaro shrugged, “I’ll leave you to defend it.”

“We built this station together, and we shall defend it together,” Sarkos’s voice was harder than duranium. “You are subjects of the Dominion now. You will do your duty, and it is the will of the gods…”

Rufaro laughed, “Gods…the shape-changers, really?” The two Jem’Hadar flanking Sarkos snarled, but the Son’a commander ignored them. “We’re your partners, not your subjects. Without our assistance you wouldn’t even have this array,” he sneered. He motioned for his men. The wary Son’a and Tarlac soldiers, their hands hovering over the pistols strapped in their holsters, formed up behind him. “I’m leaving,” Rufaro announced, turning his back to Sarkos.

“How dare a snail like you turn your back to me,” Sarkos hissed. “First, if the adhar doesn’t turn around to face me immediately, eliminate him!”

Rufaro heard the two Jem’Hadar step forward and the activating of their weapons. He turned back around slowly. Sarkos grinned. He waved for the Jem’Hadar to lower their weapons. “That’s more like it.”

Rufaro nodded imperceptibly and Sarkos’s grin turned into a gasp of horror as his two Jem’Hadar protectors gurgled, reaching for their throats. They pitched backward, the slight smell of cooked flesh wafting on the air. The other small group of Jem’Hadar soldiers ringing the octagon drew their weapons while the two Tarlac among his contingent slid their weapons back in their holsters. But his Son’a compatriots had theirs at the ready. Both Rufaro and Sarkos were both surprised that his men had gotten the jump on the vaulted Jem’Hadar, but the Son’a commander thought he did a better job hiding it.

He was thankful that there were more Cardassians occupying the control center than Jem’Hadar at the moment. They looked nervously from Sarkos to Rufaro, not sure what to do. “The Jem’Hadar aren’t the best at everything,” Rufaro shrugged nonchalantly. “Tell the rest of your men to stand down. You’ll need them to protect your precious project as best you can. I will not waste another Son’a life for this insane idea! The loss of Pyxis III will pauperize us, and it’s time the pain was shared.”

Sarkos motioned for his men to lower their weapons. He glared at Rufaro, his wintry gaze now even colder. “I won’t forget this.”

Rufaro met his gaze with a fierce one of his own. “I already have.”
********************************************************************

Hazred Array
Private Quarters

Dr. Coman Nahn ran his hands down Melcia’s bare, dark green arm and around the curve of her equally naked and wonderful hip. He hesitated to venture further. The Trill wasn’t sure if enough of his stamina had returned to tangle with the Orion again. Melcia purred at his touch, the sound thrilling him. She scooted back into him, her feel of her damp flesh against his a bit sticky, but not completely unpleasant. “Care for another trip beyond Antares?” She joked, referencing the name of his favorite song.

“Not quite, please take mercy on me. I’m an old man,” He mirthfully pleaded.

“No, only your symbiont,” her hand reached from behind and stroked his stomach, “And he’s certainly taught you a centuries’ worth of things or two.” Her sharp nails scraped across his washboard abs. Coman did little but work and work out, until both his mind and body were blessedly exhausted. He was surprised that he found time at all for his occasional tussles with Melcia, but he enjoyed them even more because they came so rarely. It’s not that he couldn’t have her, or any of the female prisoners, if he so chose. The Dominion had promised, and delivered, everything he could’ve ever imagined.

“You know, leaving Trill was the best thing I ever did,” he replied. He had repeated this story countless times, but Melcia always accommodated another retelling. “They were holding me back there, interfering with my research. I never would’ve received the accolades I deserved,” he said, shivering slightly as spectral memories touched him, cooling his resurging ardor. He continued stroking Melcia’s arm, but his mind was far away, back on Trill. Again before the Science Ministry committee, his team forced to pay for the failures of Lenara Khan, their project lead. After her failure to create a stable wormhole the Science Ministry had shelved the project. Years of work put away like a forgotten toy.

It had been horrendous accepting the finality of their decision. The other members of the team moved on eventually, but Coman found he couldn’t. Nahn had rejected teaching positions. He had wanted, he had needed, to see the project to fruition. Coman cared little for geopolitics. As long as he was able to work unhindered he didn’t care who controlled the galaxy and when Dominion agents offered him just such an opportunity, he left Trill. He promised himself that he would never step foot on his homeworld again except to be feted for his success in making warp travel a thing of the past. It would revolutionize trillions of lives and prevent the destruction of subspace due to frequent usage of matter/anti-matter propulsion. It would put him in the pantheon of the great scientific minds of the galaxy.

It wasn’t just his dream. One of his previous hosts, Emery had worked on Starfleet’s first transwarp engine. It had been installed in the Excelsior. Its failure, due in large part to sabotage, had caused Starfleet resources to be shifted elsewhere and Emery never got over seeing his dream turn to ash. What made it even worse were that the saboteurs were rewarded by Starfleet while he was relegated to obscurity. Coman had no desire to become as bitter and empty as Emery had become.

He would reclaim the dead man’s honor and burnish the name of his symbiont. There would be a fierce competition for the person wishing to claim the Nahn symbiont and all of Coman’s experiences.

His reverie was interrupted by a loud knock at the door. Melcia jumped with a start. Immediately she sat up in bed, pulling the tangled sheets around her. Seconds later, a Jem’Hadar soldier barged into the room. He ignored Melcia as if she wasn’t even there. “Doctor, come with me.” He brusquely ordered.

“What is this about? What’s happening?” Nahn demanded, still sitting on the bed. He didn’t cower in fear of the Jem’Hadar like almost everyone else did. He knew the dangerous reptilians wouldn’t harm them, especially while he still worked on the magneton pulse emitter.

“Come with me now,” the Jem’Hadar barked, in a tone that brooked no debate. Coman flinched slightly and hoped that Melcia didn’t notice.

“Give me a moment to get dressed,” he said with enough annoyance that he hoped he saved face. “You can wait outside the door.” The Jem’Hadar didn’t move. “Didn’t you hear me?” Nahn demanded.

“If you raise your voice at again Trill, I will rip out your throat.” Coman blanched. He knew the threat wasn’t an idle one. “Now, get dressed.”

The Trill slid out of bed and tried not to put on the clothes crumpled on the floor beside the bed at nanospeed. He didn’t want to look like a total coward in front of Melcia. Even though he knew he shouldn’t care what she thought of him at all. If anything she should be grateful that she caught his eye. It is doubtless that she would get the perks she had without him.

He did his best to smooth out his wrinkled tunic. “What about me lover?” Melcia asked, sitting demurely on the bed, the sheet still pulled up and covering her best parts.

“You can stay here,” Nahn said.

“No, you will come with us,” the Jem’Hadar said. “We can’t have anyone unaccounted for on the station.”

“She wouldn’t be, she would be in my room.”

“But nothing would prevent her from leaving the room once we leave,” the Jem’Hadar countered. “She comes with us.”

“Fine.”

“Fine,” Melcia said, dropping the sheet and with it all modesty. Coman gawked, and to his fear and secret dismay the Jem’Hadar wasn’t fazed at all by the Orion’s nakedness. He calmly watched the woman bend over, her well-shaped posterior before them as she slid on her one-piece glittery black dress. The Tholian silk had been Coman’s gift and it hugged Melcia’s body perfectly. She puffed out of her hair with one hand while grabbing her matching black heels with the other. She held them in her hand. “I’m ready.”

The Jem’Hadar opened the door. “After you.”

“Who knew Jem’Hadar warriors had manners,” Nahn quipped on his way out the door. He had one arm crooked around Melcia. She leaned against him.

“We don’t,” the soldier riposted. “I just don’t trust you.”
********************************************************************
Hazred Array
Isolation Cell

The soldiers pushed both men roughly into the cell. Ceven crashed against a wall, and Rydell smacked against the floor. He pushed himself up slowly, the sound of the door clanging shut on them ringing more loudly in his head than the pain from his cheek. The wound had started bleeding profusely after his head hit the floor. “Damn it,” he said. “Where’s a bottle of aspirin when you need it.”

“Now is not the time for levity,” Ceven groused. The Bolian leaned in a corner, his eyes attempting to bore through the cell door.

“I can’t think of a better time,” Erik sat down on the floor in the barren room. The only feature the colorless, empty room had was a hole in the center of the floor.

“How about you think of a way to get us out of here…genius,” the Bolian griped. “No, what a second, didn’t your last brilliant idea get us into this mess?”

“You didn’t say no, now did you?” The human grinned crookedly. Ceven snorted in response. “Just be patient, Ceven, we still got friends in here.”

“Where the hells are these friends now?”

“Give it time,” Erik said. “Have some faith.”

“Time and faith…both are in short supply,” Ceven sighed. He looked at Rydell, his face hardening. “It’s been a ride.”

“The ride’s not over yet,” Erik replied.

“I’m too old for foolish hopes kid,” Ceven said somberly. “When I joined the Maquis I knew I was on borrowed time. Now the bill’s came due.”

“Stop talking like that,” Rydell shook his head. “We’ll figure a way out of this. Just let me think on it…”

Ceven laughed bitterly. “You humans…sometimes you can be too damned optimistic.”

“You’re the first Bolian sourpuss I’ve ever met,” Rydell quipped. Ceven’s laugh was full of mirth this time. The laughter was cut short when both men heard a loud thud against the door.

“They’re coming for us,” Ceven said, pushing away from the wall. He set his feet and clenched his fists.

Erik swallowed, preparing himself for what would be the last fight of his life. The door swung open and a Jem’Hadar soldier staggered through. He was clutching his chest. He turned toward Rydell, reaching out for him. The human instinctively shrank back. The Jem’Hadar swatted the empty air. He fell to his knees and Rydell saw blood seeping through the fingers of the hand still on his breast. The creature’s eyes rolled back in his head and he fell backward.

Both men rushed over to him. “He’s dead,” Rydell intoned, shocked, confused, and a bit rattled.

“No shit,” Ceven retorted.

“Stand back,” A voice barked from the hallway. Both men complied. A muscular Cardassian male strode through the doorway. A slender female, the markings on her dull brown cuirass denoting her gul rank, followed on his heels. She looked at Rydell, sizing him up with obsidian eyes.

“You’re free to go,” she said after a moment.

“Go, go where?” Ceven demanded. Rydell quickly grabbed the man’s elbow and yanked him toward the door.

“On my planet, there’s a saying about looking a gift horse in the mouth,” he explained.

“What’s a horse?” Ceven asked, even more perturbed.

“I’ll tell you about it on the way to the shuttle bay,” Rydell promised. Once they had crossed the threshold, Erik heard the whine of disruptors and the smell of melted metal and plastic. The lights in the corridor began flashing and an ear splitting klaxon rent through the hall.

“Oh my God, they’ve released all the prisoner modules,” Rydell said, grinning. Their chances of survival had just increased exponentially. He tugged on the Bolian’s elbow again. “Let’s beat the rush to the shuttle bay.”
******************************************************************
 
Guys,

Thanks again for reading and commenting. Mirandafave, I'm glad you liked the battle scenes. I'm always afraid I'll mess those up so I'm glad it was engaging and clear enough for you to follow. And for the rest of you guys, I might have a few more twists coming around the bend and as for D'Arrosa, you know what they say about pride and falling or destruction.
 
I'm getting the impression that Erik is going to paly a part in this story. He's an interesting character with what I'm sure is a rather intriguing backstory.

Nice to see that the honeymoon between the Son'a and the Dominion is coming to an end. At least for Rufaro. I don't think we've ever seen how these two powers came together or came apart. It be interesting to find out more about this alliance.

For now it looks as if the good guys have the upper hand ... but as I' always say: 'It aint called Dark Territory for nuthin'

Great stuff.
 
Yeah, I decided to throw Rydell into the mix when I realized I wanted to focus on some POWs. I thought it would be provide for an interesting backstory for the character.
 
******************************************************************
Hazred Array
Control Center

“I need you to activate the magneton pulse,” Sarkos said, not even looking up from the master display. Dr. Nahn, just entering the room, was stunned. He took a step back.

“Excuse me?” He had to ask.

The Vorta looked up. “Activate the pulse.”

“But…but, it’s not ready, we haven’t even conducted experiments with it yet. If we attempt to activate the emitter too soon, it might overcharge the station’s systems, and leave us dead in the middle of this accursed cluster.” Seeing his distress, Melcia sidled up to him and locked her arm around his. He was vaguely aware of her gesture of support; Coman was too busy trying to process the Vorta’s insane demand.

“An Allied taskforce is on the way here,” Sarkos said slowly, each word chilling Nahn. “It is a real possibility that we will lose the station, but if we can activate a wormhole into the Gamma Quadrant, and with your targeting, open a portal to Dominion space, we can resume refining your emitter and bring additional men and materiel to end this conflict.”

“I understand,” Nahn said, “But I don’t think you understand that I am far from achieving predictable transkinetic vectoring.”

Sarkos smiled insincerely, “There is a first time for everything.”
****************************************************************

Son’a Destroyer Rorana
Command Salon

Ahdar Rufaro lounged in his spacious seat, a smile plastered over his cracking lips. The station occupied the main viewer.

“The Vorta hasn’t mobilized the station’s defensive grid, or sent the Jem’Hadar out to stop us,” he remarked in wonder, stroking his rough, dry chin. “Has this imminent invasion made Sarkos lose his nerve?” He glanced in the direction of Subahdar Bi’pin, who manned the tactical console. The Vorta had relented too easily to Rufaro’s command, which was totally out of character. Living the oft-nomadic life of the Son’a had taught him that nothing came easy, except trouble and death. He couldn’t helped but wonder if his defiance had just brought both upon him and his crew.

The stoic Bi’pin pondered Rufaro’s question before shrugging. “Who can divine the minds of such creatures?” He offered.

“You are correct as always, my friend,” Rufaro’s smile was ghostly, as his thoughts shifted to Aneel. She was out there somewhere, and he was going to find her, the fates be damned. “Prepare to disengage,” he ordered.
******************************************************************

Hazred Array
En Route to the Shuttle Port

“Just remember to keep your head down,” Erik Rydell said, his hands flying up to cover his head as a wrench flew past him. He removed his hands just in time to sidestep a burly Retellian grappling with a Jem’Hadar soldier.

“I don’t take advice from whelps,” Ceven griped. He broke through a Valerian and Finnean who were cutting each other to shred with shanks. Both men hit the ground. Erik looked back to see that the more svelte Valerian had beaten the portly Finnean to the punch, and on the attack. The Valerian slashed the man across the throat and wiped the blood on his pants. He grinned at Erik.

“Come on,” Ceven said, yanking Rydell by the collar. “Make new friends on your own time.”

“That reminds me,” Erik snapped his fingers. “Melcia.”

“Forget about her,” Ceven said. “She sleeps with the enemy, remember?”

“Maquis don’t forget their friends,” Rydell said.

“Who said she was a friend?” Ceven retorted. “She was a weapons runner for the Orion Syndicate, she was our supplier. Not a friend. There’s a difference.”

“Not when we all bore the Dominion lash,” Erik riposted. He started looking around, but he couldn’t make out many distinct faces in the melee. The pent-up frustrations building had finally been let loose in a deluge of rage. Most of it was aimed at the oppressors, but just like a burst dam, the water surged without direction or reason, often swamping friend or foe.

“Melcia’s a resourceful girl,” the Bolian replied. “She can make it out on her own.”

“I would rather increase her chances,” Rydell said. “I’m going to find her.”

“Don’t be a fool,” Ceven snapped. “We’ve got to get away while we still have time.”

“Listen, just truck it to the shuttle port, and prep a shuttle for us. I’ll be back in time, I promise.”

Ceven sighed, “I just don’t get you Terrans sometimes.”

“I know,” Erik smirked. “And that just makes us so damn interesting.”
********************************************************************

Hazred Array
Prisoner Module Section

“Where are you?” Sarkos squawked.

Gul Panar held the communicator close to her lips so she could make sure the Vorta and everyone else in the control center could hear her words. “Cleaning up your mess,” she hissed. Around her raged the din of rioting prisoners. She fired at the ground to keep the rioters at bay.

“The Jem’Hadar can handle that,” the Vorta said dismissively.

“They’re not living up to their billing,” the Cardassian said derisively. The Jem’Hadar were being overwhelmed by the rampaging mob, just as Panar had intended. The poison she had slipped into the station’s ketracel-white supply had been slow acting but was finally bearing fruit, and at the most opportune moment. The reptilians had become more sluggish and incoherent, allowing the rioters to keep them on their heels.
Sarkos was oblivious to her observations. “I need you in orbit. An Allied taskforce is heading here this instant.”

“You’re joking,” Panar said, rolling her eyes.

“Have you ever known me to have a sense of humor,” Sarkos asked.

“As you command,” Panar said jauntily before signing off. It will be your last command, she promised.
********************************************************************
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top