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Dark Territory: Parasite Eve

Things didn't end up so good for her did they?


Mistral,

The fate of Tryla is unknown. Some people believed she died, but since we never saw that onscreen nor was it mentioned, and Admiral Quinn survived, I just assumed that she survived.

I thought Scott, being the youngest captain in Starfleet had a lot of potential as a character. I wish they had revisited her at one point. So, I decided to do that in my fanfic. The infestation really destroyed her life, and changed the upward arc of her career and life from the DT perspective and I thought that take provides some interesting ways to explore and expand on the character.

Scott and the Renegade are canon. But Dnoth created Captain Frederick Holmes. Sintina served under him as Security Chief on the Renegade. Once I read that I started thought it would be nice to make Holmes Scott's XO in this story.

With Holmes I was inspired by former Senator Fred Thompson. He was running for President at the time I was writing another story with Holmes in it, and the image of him stuck in my head. Plus I think a character with his height, size, and demeanor made a good foil for Terrence.
 
It's no wonder Tryla is as haunted as she is in her appearances in your other works. While the soldier controlled her mind and body, the part of her that was her could do little more than stand and watch as it killed and harmed those closest to her and her fellow officers and crew. That's something that you can't recover from in a day...a week...or a year. It stays a part of you--very much as Picard's transformation and assimilation as Locutus stayed with him.

I can see Senator Thompson playing Holmes--and yes, someone like that makes an excellent counterpoint to Terrence.

Very well done!
 
***********************

USS Thomas Paine
Main Bridge


Captain Rixx stood up; suspicion warring with relief, as he watched the Renegade turn around and jet off.

“This must be some kind of trick?” He turned to his XO. Lt. Commander Palfrey, a bandage wrapped around his head, spoke up.

“Yes sir, it must be, but for the life of me I can’t think of what it is.”

“Tryla Scott doesn’t quit…ever,” Rixx said, rubbing his bifurcated chin. “This doesn’t make sense.”

“Like attacking us in the first place did?” Lt. Zarla, his Operations Officer, remarked with customary bluntness. Normally Rixx saw the woman’s honesty as refreshing, but at the moment he found it jarring and rude, especially after the dozen crewmembers he had lost today. He merely stared at her with rebuke in his gaze. Zarla eventually turned back around and returned to her duties.

“Captain, Zarla’s right,” Lt. Kirk Wiley, stationed at the bridge’s auxiliary engineering console chimed in. “On North Star we have a saying ‘don’t look a gift horse in the mouth’, I think that’s some advice we should aim to follow.”

Rixx looked at Palfrey for an explanation. But Palfrey looked to the captain for one too.

“I think Wiley is just telling us to count our blessings,” Aquan Ensign Lemare wryly remarked.

“She hit the nail on the head,” Wiley grinned. “How about we take Renegade’s perhaps temporary absence and high tail it out of here?”

Palfrey remarked. “That makes sense to me.”

“Agreed,” Rixx intoned. “Lemare, set course for the Ngame Nebula. If, or when Renegade returns she’ll have a hard time tracking us in the nebula.”

“Yeah,” Palfrey nodded. “And I would rather take my chances with the Paxans than tangle with Captain Scott again. That one was too close to call.”

“Agreed,” Rixx repeated, his thoughts split between concern over his dead crew and what was happening on Renegade. He hoped that Tryla was all right and could pull off at least one more miracle.

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

USS Renegade
En Route to Auxiliary Control Room


“Nuts!” Holmes grumbled as several shafts of light materialized in front and behind them. Both Sarhana and Glover stood back to back, their phasers at the ready.

“Drop your phasers,” ordered the head of the security detachment. The team of six surrounded them. They all had phaser rifles pointed at them.

“No,” Terrence said.

“Listen Lieutenant,” Holmes began. “The captain is infected.”

“Drop your phasers,” the officer ordered again.

“I said no,” Terrence repeated.

“Just everyone hold on a minute,” Holmes replied.

“We have our orders,” the officer repeated. “Fire!” The trio went down in a storm of phaser fire.

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

Starfleet Academy
Earth
Two weeks later….


“How are you doing?” Lt. Calvin Hudson gently asked. Terrence ignored the question, focusing on a bed of recently planted Broadway lilies.

“That Boothby still has his touch,” Glover wistfully replied.

“I see you’re still running away from this right now,” Hudson surmised, punctuating his observation with a frown.

“You know Boothby never cared for me,” Terrence admitted, his voice and his attention far away. “I never really had time for him, whenever he wanted to talk about plants or whatever. I was always so busy, always had somewhere to be, something to do.”

“Terrence, what does that got to do with what just happened? I think you need to address it, if for no other reason to get it out of your system.”

Suddenly Glover turned on his old friend, his eyes burning with anger. “You don’t know what the hell you’re talking about!” He snapped. “It’s Tryla that’s going through hell right now. She has to contend with all the damage that thing inside her caused, all the deaths. It’s hell right now for her, and I can’t do a damn thing about it.”

“You’re right,” Hudson said. “Especially when you’re carrying around so much anger for her right now.”

Terrence pulled back, stunned and scared. “You’re talking crazy Cal.”

“Terrence, don’t you think I’ve known you long enough to see through that lie,” Hudson said, with less venom than the charge should’ve warranted. He tried to place a hand on Glover’s shoulder, but Terrence kept his distance. “Terrence, on some level you can’t separate Captain Scott from that neural parasite that was inside her. On some level, you think she brought this on herself, that she wasn’t strong enough to resist the parasite.”

“That’s not true!” Terrence raged.

“Yes it is,” Hudson replied calmly. “You blame her.”

“No, no, I don’t,” Glover declared with lessening force. He turned away from Cal. “That’s not true,” he said far more softly.

“You see a lot of yourself in Captain Scott, and vice versa. You can’t help but wonder if you too would’ve succumbed to the parasites. You used to see a mirror reflection of strength and ambition in the captain, now you’re seeing your vulnerabilities, your weaknesses, and you can’t stand that.”

Glover’s shifted his jaw, trying to think of a response, but he couldn’t manage one. Eventually he said, “When did you become a counselor?”

Hudson smiled. “I’m a jack of all trades.”

“I see,” Terrence replied, mulling over Cal’s words. Terrence, Cal, and Ben Sisko had formed a life-long troika after rooming together at the Academy. Of the three, Cal had often proven to be the most level-headed and sensible. Though Glover wanted desperately to deny the truth of Hudson’s words, he just couldn’t. So he knew the adult thing to do was to examine Cal’s words, and try to figure out how much truth was really in them.

“I don’t know about you, but this walk down memory lane has made me hungry,” Cal said, rubbing his stomach for emphasis. “I promised Gretchen that we would join her parents for dinner in Bavaria.”

“Cal, you shouldn’t have,” Glover said, even though he really didn’t want to be alone right now.

“Yeah right,” Cal said. “Come on, let’s go.”

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

USS Renegade
Main Bridge
McKinley Station


Commander Holmes stiffly placed the third pin on Glover’s collar. “Congratulations Lt. Commander Glover,” he said, with a washed out drawl. The man had aged years in the span of a couple weeks.

Glover nodded. “Thank you sir,” he replied with equal stiffness. The captain had handed off the duty of Terrence’s promotion to Holmes. Since the neural parasites had been defeated and the inquiry had cleared her of wrong doing, the captain had been holed up in her cabin. Holmes had assumed command and was guiding the ship through the refit needed after the battle with the Thomas Paine.

The bridge crew clapped, even Lt. Gart. The inquiry board had also absolved the Nausicaan of responsibility for the destruction of the Raines, but Glover couldn’t, and he was certain Commander Holmes never would. The neural parasite’s actions had divided the crew, and Terrence wasn’t sure if they could ever be united again. He did know that it would take strong action on the captain’s part, and at the moment she refused to do so. But he was going to rectify that.

“Commander, may I be excused?” Terrence asked. Holmes regarded him silently, his bushy eyebrows knitting in consternation.

“Do you think it’s wise?” He said quietly, so that only Glover could hear the question.

“I do.” Glover replied.

“You’re excused.”

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

USS Renegade
Captain’s Quarters


“I don’t have time for this,” Captain Scott said listlessly. She turned back to the vid clips of her family.

“Make time,” Terrence said. He walked in front of the ancient television. Tryla groaned and tried to look around him. Eventually she picked up the small device she had told him ancient Earthers called a remote control to turn off the set.

“What do you want?” She asked.

“You know what I want,” Terrence stated.

“I’m not in the mood for that either,” she replied, causing Glover to sigh.

“You know that’s not what I’m talking about,” he groused.

“Then what?”

“The crew needs you,” Terrence said. “We can’t do this without you.”

“I’ve given almost all of my life to Starfleet, and this ship,” Tryla replied. “I think they can go without me for a while.”

“How long is a while?”

“I don’t know.”

“This doesn’t sound like you. This doesn’t sound like you at all.”

“I don’t know what I’m supposed to ‘sound’ like,” Tryla hotly retorted, “especially after that monster took over my vocal cords and made me a murder innocent people.”

“It’s not your fault,” Glover said. “No one blames you.”

“I blame me,” the captain poked her chest. “I-I tried to resist. I really did, but it was so…it was everywhere, I-I couldn’t escape, I couldn’t do anything.” She lowered her head, her chest heaving as the tears fell. Glover sat beside her and pulled her into his arms. She tried to pull away, but he wouldn’t let her.

“We’ll work through this, I promise,” he declared.

“We can’t,” Tryla said. “This is something I have to do.”

“I want to help, I want to be there for you, let me,” Terrence begged.

“No, it’s too late, things are different now,” the captain replied.

“Please don’t say that.”

“This…thing between us should’ve never happened. I can live with the doubt in other’s eyes, but not yours,” Tryla admitted.

“I don’t doubt you,” Glover said.

“Yes, you do,” the captain replied. “And you should. It was I who gave the order to fire on the Thomas Paine, to destroy the Raines. It was my hands that killed Gerri and hurt you. I feel so dirty, so unclean. I just want to scour the filth from my skin and my soul, but I don’t know how.”

“Let me help you,” Terrence pleaded again.

“The best way for you to help me is to resume your post Mr. Glover,” she replied with a cold formality, “and forget that there was ever anything between us. The relationship was a mistake, and it’s now a liability. One I can’t afford right now.”

Terrence reared back, struck by the woman’s words. “You don’t mean that. Tryla we love each other.”

“So?” She asked. “You knew one day that the demands of the uniform might require us to go our separate ways.”

“This is not that time,” Terrence said. “You need me, I need you, more than ever right now.”

“No, what we both need is to get back to business,” Tryla said. “To the constant self-improvement that makes us winners. I need to rebuild my sense of self, something that parasite stripped away from me, but I have to do it by myself.”

Terrence shook his head in disagreement.

“I’m not going to change my mind,” she stated. “Go back to the bridge Terrence, and to your first, true love: your career. I made the mistake of making a detour, and it nearly got you killed.”

“Tryla, it’s not…”

“You can say it’s not my fault all you want, but if I believe it is, then it is,” the captain replied. “You’re dismissed.”

Terrence’s throat closed up at the dismissal and a pain lanced through his heart. He looked at her deeply, his gaze imploring, but Tryla’s expression was inscrutable, different, alien. He had never seen that look before and it frightened him. For a second he wondered if the alien parasite had truly been extracted from the captain, and in that instant he understood what she meant. The trust had been severed between them.

He got off the couch and left Tryla Scott’s private life without saying another word.


THE END​
 
Okay, that was gut wrenching. Now you've gone and made me sorry for Donald throwing Tryla in Terrence's face during their little posturing session on DS9. If it weren't for bad relationship luck, Glover would have no luck at all. Fortunately, he's got Cal Hudson and Ben Sisko to fall back on this time. In the Galactipedia, under the heading 'Squeak Toy' is a picture of Captain Terrence Glover. Saying he's been through the ringer doesn't do it justice. :(
 
A great story. This is something Tryla will never completely recover from and as for Terrence--the first of many harsh blows--but like a champion boxer, he gets right back up and is ready to mix it up again.
 
Though I still think that Terrence Glover is a pompous ass, I do have great sympathy for this awful chapter in his life. You've crafted a great story here - a great, action-packed yet poignant story.

Great job! :techman:
 
This might have been a tough episode for Glover but let's face it, the vicitim here is poor T. Scott and her conscience. That's who I really feel for.

In any case this was a great story, classic imposter stuff, real good. At times I wanted to slap somebody and yell to them: "Hey! You never seen movies with dopplegangers? Of course she is not herself! Wake up!" But then I thought, they probably didn't see those movies. It's probably also quite different when you find yourself in a situation where people around you begin to act differently. It could be stress or ... it could be they've been taken over by an alien parasite!

You had a lot of great, tight action here but as usual the highlights were actually the characters themselves and the gut-wrenching situations you put them through. In the end everybody feels worse about themsevels, but that's life.

Now where is that Dark Territory comedy at?
 
Agreed. The fight scene was great. I also like the details about the 'group mind' of the aliens. It's almost unfortuante...knowing that Glover won't be Scott's 'savier.'

oops, there's more I missed somehow. ...ok, caught up now.

This really was a 'tear-your-heart-out' tale. Though, it does help explain why Scott later found herself working with S31. She needed to get away from working as a starship captain...and work 'alone' under the table.
 
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Wow, for a moment there I felt sympathy for Glover...oh, wait, it's gone now. At least I'm starting to understand why he's such an ass. Real good piece(I read like the last 6 bits all at once-you left me in the dust over the weekend). Is that it?
 
Great story...Scott had a kinda post BOBW Picard thing going...very good.

Now have you done more storties with these characters? I'd be interested in them. If so, PM me!
 
Once again I would like to thank everyone for reading and commenting too. I'm really glad you all seemed to like this story.

It took me a long time to really put it on paper. I had hinted at it in several stories, but I could never really come up with a good enough idea to really flesh it out. Eventually I just threw up my hands and started writing.

This event was very gut wrenching for Terrence, Tryla, and the Renegade crew. I sort of liked the idea of trying to imagine them learning how to trust each other again.

I do see this event for Tryla as being very similar to what happened to Picard and the Borg. Unfortunately Tryla will choose a darker path in her attempts to heal or overcome her sorrow and pain as evidenced in other DT stories.

As for Glover, I see him as something of a tragic figure. I believe I read somewhere that Stephen King said that you put your hero up in a tree and throw rocks at him. That's pretty much my approach for Glover.

I know CeJay would like a comedy, but for now the best I can tell you is to assume that all the really funny stuff is happening between the misery and ass kicking :lol:.
 
First, I thought this was a great premise, and I really liked how you set up the story and used Conspiracy. The parasites had been greatly overlooked and it was one of those things that never got followed up on because Tracy Torme left to do Sliders after season one, so there was no opportunity for him to play on the open-ended nature of the the episode. Reading the tie-in was awesome, and I sincerely hope this isn't the last time we get to see Lieutenant Glover and Captain Scott, because there was a chemistry there that I was eager to see more of.

That being said, I felt like the ending was a little rushed with proportion to the fantastic rising action you put together there at the beginning. I was thoroughly enjoying not only the events of the foreground, but the subtle hints you kept dropping with regard to Glover and Scott, until you came out and overtly stated the shared past they had. And then, I got to the point with the action and then all of a sudden we're in the denouement of the story and I'm looking back wondering where the payoff pitch went.

I guess, in the end, I wished for more of Lieutenant Glover, because this had the potential to really expose more of the character in a different setting than the one we get used to in DT.

-- ZC
 
First, I thought this was a great premise, and I really liked how you set up the story and used Conspiracy. The parasites had been greatly overlooked and it was one of those things that never got followed up on because Tracy Torme left to do Sliders after season one, so there was no opportunity for him to play on the open-ended nature of the the episode. Reading the tie-in was awesome, and I sincerely hope this isn't the last time we get to see Lieutenant Glover and Captain Scott, because there was a chemistry there that I was eager to see more of.

That being said, I felt like the ending was a little rushed with proportion to the fantastic rising action you put together there at the beginning. I was thoroughly enjoying not only the events of the foreground, but the subtle hints you kept dropping with regard to Glover and Scott, until you came out and overtly stated the shared past they had. And then, I got to the point with the action and then all of a sudden we're in the denouement of the story and I'm looking back wondering where the payoff pitch went.

I guess, in the end, I wished for more of Lieutenant Glover, because this had the potential to really expose more of the character in a different setting than the one we get used to in DT.

-- ZC

Very valid criticisms ZC.

I don't know if I have a right to throw the blame on someone else, but I'm going to to some extent :lol:. I was trying to work within the confines of the show "Conspiracy" itself. But I wanted to have space battle as a way to show how Tryla is acting differently, but not so bizarrely enough that everyone realizes she's infected. But then I had to speed that up to get her to Earth.

I didn't want to go into too much detail about when they got to Earth because we saw Tryla on the episode "Conspiracy", so I saw no need to rehash what happened to her.

Now, I blame myself for perhaps a 'quick' ending. But this story was really done to flesh out an arc that began with the first DT story I wrote "Valley of Peace", which establishes the Tryla-Glover relationship. And I've mentioned in several stories since. So, this was more of a flashback type story for me and I guess people who have read my previous work. I don't know how well it works as a jumping on point.

Little secret, in "Valley of Peace", which takes place in 2376, Terrence is married to another woman.
 
The toughest part of writing within your own, personal canon is making it accessible to readers that haven't followed what you've written previously. Sometimes it just can't be done. (my latest Seleya story is a perfect example-you HAVE to read the first one to know wtf is going on). I think given how much water you've shown has passed under your characters' bridges you did fine.
 
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