DARK TERRITORY:
PARASITE EVE
USS Renegade
Mekagh Triangle
2364
“Captain Scott, we have arrived in the Mekagh Triangle,” the voice over the intercom said.
“What’s our ETA to the rendezvous point?” Captain Tryla Scott propped herself on her elbows, her voice ragged with sleep.
“Thirteen hours.”
“Have sensors detected any other ships within the system?” The respondent paused a few seconds.
“No sir.”
Scott nodded. “Thank you. I’ll be on the bridge shortly.”
“You know we’ve got thirteen hours,” Lt. Terrence Glover said. He caressed her face, his fingers gently exploring her smooth, walnut brown skin.
“I think we’ve wasted enough time Terrence,” the captain replied, with a semi-serious look.
“You can call it many things, but wasted is definitely not one of them,” he laughed. Tryla turned away from him and sat up. Glover placed a hand on her shoulder. She trembled.
“Are you okay?”
“Why do you ask?” She glanced back at him.
“What’s going on Tryla?”
“What do you mean?”
“Here we go with the evasive bit again,” he sighed.
“Look Terrence, there are things that are need to know, and you don’t need to know,” she replied.
“What’s up with all this secrecy? The encrypted communications, this strange rendezvous? You’ve even cut Commander Holmes out of the loop.”
Tryla turned around to more fully pin him with a stare. “So, you and the XO bosom buddies now?”
“Hardly,” Glover said. “But the man does have some friends onboard this boat, surprisingly, and word does get around.”
“Fred’s a good man,” Scott chided. “And I’m one of those hard-to-believe friends of his. Be careful how you regard a superior officer Mr. Glover.”
Terrence pulled his hand away. “Now, it’s ‘Mr. Glover’. What happened to Terrence?” It had long been a sore point with him, the messy dividing line between how or when he could engage Tryla as a lover as opposed to his commanding officer.
“You prefer Terry?” She teased, attempting to defuse the situation. Wishing not to rehash an old debate, he allowed that moment to pass. However, he just couldn’t not address Tryla’s new behavior.
“I prefer some transparency,” he replied.
Her shoulders tensed, and she scowled. “What is that supposed to mean? What are you implying Terrence? That I haven’t been truthful with you? Don’t you know how much I’m sacrificing just to be with you? There are many on this vessel, and in the admiralty that would not approve of our relationship and punish us both career wise.”
“Like your friend Holmes,” Terrence couldn’t help himself from laying in the jab.
“That’s a low blow,” Scott replied. “Fred’s known about us for months now, and he hasn’t said a word about it.”
“No, he just rips into me every chance he gets,” Glover replied.
“Fred’s a stickler,” Tryla said, “I have no problem with that. He’s not going to let anyone cruise, even you.”
“So that’s what you think I’ve been doing?” Terrence snapped. “You don’t think I’ve been carrying my load?”
“No,” Scott said, placing a mollifying hand on his shoulder. Glover pulled away from her. “Of course not.” She turned back around, and reached for her nightstand. She pulled a small box out and showed it to him. “Go on, take it.”
“I don’t give a damn about trinkets,” he huffed. “You know that.”
“Open it,” she used her command voice. Terrence reluctantly complied. He forced himself not to gasp when he saw the single pip inside the box.
“What’s going on?”
“Congratulations Lieutenant Commander,” she smiled. “I had been planning to do something a bit more formal, but I think the occasion warrants you knowing how much I think about the contributions you’ve made to this vessel.”
“I-I don’t know what to say,” Glover said.
“That’s a first,” she jibed.
“Ha,” he replied, still marveling at the pip.
“Go ahead and get dressed,” she said. “I can’t wait to pin it on you at the official ceremony.”
“Me either,” Glover grinned. “But let me go back to my cabin. I need a shower and fresh uniform.”
“I need to be on the bridge,” she said. “We’ll reconvene later.”
“That’s fine,” Terrence said, not fully listening to her. He was still floored by his promotion and being one step closer to the captain’s chair. He put on his old uniform, smoothing out the ruffles as best he could before poking his head slowly out of the door, glancing both ways down the empty corridor. Satisfied that no one would see him exit the captain’s quarters, Glover quickly left.
**********
USS Renegade
Main Bridge
“So glad you could join us Mr. Glover,” Commander Frederick Holmes scowled. Glover returned the critique with a cocky smirk.
“Sir, I jump at every opportunity to spend time with you,” he said as he quickly took over the operations terminal. Sitting at the adjacent helm console, Lt. Sarhana laughed, hastily placing a hand over her mouth for cover. Glover grinned at the comely lavender-skinned Phalkerian, now a deeper shade due to her embarrassment. Holmes grumbled.
Captain Scott sighed loudly. “Can it Terrence,” she said. “And check the sensors again.”
“Yes sir,” Terrence said crisply. He brought up the sensor readouts on the terminal, his eyes scouring the data, looking for something telling. “I’ve got nothing.”
The captain frowned. She leaned forward in her seat. “This doesn’t make sense,” she said quietly.
“What doesn’t make sense?” Glover asked. Really, he wanted to state that this entire mission didn’t make sense. Usually Tryla was pretty open about mission specifics. She saw Terrence as a kindred spirit and a future captain and she wanted him to get as much of a view from the captain’s perch as possible, except for lately. For the last several weeks she had been taking secret communiqués in her ready room, and making decisions that didn’t seem all that logical. He wasn’t sure how much Holmes knew what was really going on, but if the large man had any doubts he wasn’t showing them.
Glover had tried to broach the subject of Tryla’s mysterious behavior, but she had shut him down quickly. Eventually he had decided to back off after she had asked him to trust her. Trust wasn’t something that came easy to him, but he felt he owed the captain the benefit of the doubt. She had placed a lot of trust in him after all.
Terrence pulled himself out of his reverie to the hard stares of both of his superior officers. “That’s none of your business Mr. Glover,” Holmes grated.
“I’m Second Officer on this ship,” Terrence couldn’t help himself. “I think that entitles me to be in the loop.” He could feel the tension crackling in the air between himself and Holmes. He knew their latest testy exchange would fuel the shipboard rumor mill for the next few days, and Glover also recognized on some level how unprofessional the retort was, but Holmes pushed all the wrong buttons with him.
The commander was a competent officer, but that was about it. He was a static person, a workhorse that liked taking orders more than giving them, Glover thought, and deep down he felt that man didn’t deserve to be XO. However, Tryla had thought differently. She had been extremely candid with him that she though Holmes had been looked over because of his bluntness, and she someone who wouldn’t hold their punches as her second in command. Terrence thought that such an arrangement did more harm than good. When he was captain, he wanted simpatico on his bridge.
“You’re ice skating on another charge of insubordination,” Holmes replied.
“Cool it you two,” Scott snapped. She stood up. “I’m going to my ready room. Fred you have the conn.” A blinking light on Glover’s console caught his attention out of the corner of his eye. He turned back around to gaze at the new information streaming down the screen’s flattened surface.
“Captain, we’ve got a tachyon wave distortion, consistent with a cloaked vessel.”
“Red alert!” Holmes snapped. Tryla quickly retook her seat.
“On screen,” she commanded. The main viewer switched to a patch of undulating space, which slowly took the shape of a Klingon Bird-of-Prey. “Hail them,” Scott said, with noticeably less tension than a second before.
“The Klingons aren’t answering the hail,” Lt. Gart said. “They’re powering their weapons.” He paused a beat, “They’re firing!” A reddish rain of destruction poured from the Klingon warship, smashing into the Renegade.
With the ship’s shields up, it made little impact, except to rattle the Renegade nearly to its ramparts. “What the hell is going on here?” Holmes asked.
“Damage report,” Scott demanded, ignoring Holmes’s question. After each department quickly reported in, the captain said, “Hail them again, Mr. Gart.”
“No response sir,” the Nausicaan Tactical Officer said, punctuating it with a snort. “They’re firing again.”
“This is growing tiresome,” Scott said, after receiving a second damage assessment. Shields were down 15% and the engine room had incurred minor damage. Thankfully there had been no casualties to report. “Mr. Gart, target that ship’s weapons and engines. Fire when ready.” Twin golden beams stabbed into the Klingon ship, slicing through their shields.
“Direct hits,” Gart said with glee. “The Klingons are hailing.”
“You’ve come to finish the job of your brethren?” The battered Klingon roared at them. He was slumping in the command chair of a ruined bridge. “We’ll never surrender! We’ll never allow the Empire to be overtaken!” He declared.
“I-I don’t understand,” Tryla said, with equal amounts of confusion and fear in her voice. “I’m Captain Tryla Scott, I came in search of the Federation Starship Bonaventure, have you encountered that ship?”
“Today is a good day to die,” the Klingon brayed.
“Captain, the Klingon vessel is overloading their warp engines,” Glover said. “They’re going to destroy themselves.”
“Not if I can help it,” Scott declared. “Gart, beam as many of those Klingons off that ship that you can. Place them in the brig, and have medical on standby.”
“Aye sir,” the Nausicaan remarked, with less enthusiasm than before.
“Six Klingons have been transported to the brig,” Gart reported.
“That’s all?” Scott asked.
“Those were the ones that had life signs,” Gart said.
“Damn,” Scott cursed.
“Those engines are critical,” Glover reported.
“Get us out of here, maximum warp,” Scott snapped. She jumped out of her seat and nodded to Gart. “Gart you’re with me.”
Glover wanted to go with the captain so bad that it was physically painful to remain in his seat, but his bit his tongue, and attended his station. “Like to come along Mr. Glover?” Scott asked from inside the turbolift.
He was halfway to the lift before he responded. “Yes sir.”
***************