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Dark Territory: Shadow Puppets

T’Chaya has quite a bit of fire for a Vulcan, doesn't she? In any case she knows how to improvise. And now a Romulan Tal Shiar agent is asking for help from two Vulcan Starfleet officers. Sure, that's going to work out.

And a Changeling on the Nagasaki? This story lives on the perpetual edge.
 
***************************************************************
USS Shuttlesworth
Soyuz-Class
Merias III Battle Site Reclamation Project
(Former Benzite Defense Perimeter)

“Do something Captain!” Administrator Malmak shouted. Captain Bouchet terminated the visual communication link. He calmly accessed the situation. Their attempts to communicate with the probe had failed, and it was now almost within firing or blast range of the station hanging above Merias III.

“Disable that probe,” he ordered, through gritted teeth.

“Aye sir,” Lt. Geoff Shakingbush said from the tactical console. The phaser beam struck the probe with precision, glancing harmlessly off its shielding.

“Again,” Bouchet ordered, tension tightening his stomach. The probe’s shield held.

“The probe will reach the station in thirty seconds,” Lt. Deborah Eppard remarked, her anxious tone matching the captain’s mood perfectly.

“Cut loose on it Geoff,” Bouchet ordered. A barrage of charged energy illuminated the void.

“Several direct hits,” Shakingbush replied, with pride. The bridge crew erupted with cheers.

“But no change,” First Officer Sibeko burst the bubble. When the energy discharge dissipated, the probe didn’t look like it had suffered even a scratch.

“Just what the hell is that thing?” Bouchet asked. The only positive thing the fusillade had accomplished was that it had halted the probe’s sojourn. It now maintained a stationary position. Perhaps they had managed to damage it in some way, the captain hoped.

“Captain, you’re not going to believe this,” Ensign Grissa from the Science terminal.

“You would be surprised,” Bouchet quipped. “Lay it on me.”

“The probe appears to be of Iconian origin,” the Tellarite junior officer replied.

“Iconian?” Sibeko asked, in shock. He blinked rapidly several times as he mulled the revelation.

“Iconians? Who are they? What’s so special about them?” Eppard asked.

“Please continue Ensign Grissa,” Sibeko remarked. The Tellarite took a moment to glance down at her console before replying, “On Stardate 42609.1 the USS Enterprise-D encountered an Iconian probe. The probe scanned them, downloading a virus into their computer core that almost destroyed the ship.”

“Raise shields,” Bouchet ordered. “Red alert.” A klaxon blared as crimson light filled the bridge. The captain quickly shut off the alarm, but maintained the blood red illumination. It added the appropriate level of portent.

“Iconians,” Sibeko shook his head. “I don’t understand.”

“Care to elaborate Mr. Sibeko?” Bouchet asked. Out of the corner of his eye he saw Debbie nodding in agreement.

“Yes,” the Saurian nodded, almost absent minded. “The Iconians built a super-civilization some 200,000 Earth years ago. Only recently though, was their homeworld discovered, as were some of their left over technology,” Sibeko said. “Even today, their technology is decades, if not centuries, ahead of our own. The probe was the ultimate computer virus and their gateways allowed for trans-spatial travel without the need for starships.”

“I see,” Bouchet muttered, rubbing a hand down his face before rubbing a knot out of his shoulder. “But what is that thing doing here?”

“That’s the question,” Sibeko remarked. “It’s quite possible that the Dominion had secured access to one of the probes.”

Bouchet shuddered, “Thank God they didn’t get to use it if that was the case.”

“But for whatever reason it has become active and we have to stop it sir,” the Saurian declared.

“Any bright ideas then Mr. Sibeko?”

“Quantum torpedo sounds prudent to me.”

“A Saurian after my own heart.”
***************************************************************
Jem’Hadar Battle Cruiser 115
Main Bridge

From their perch they watched events unfold. “Sensors detecting a quantum signature emanating from the Soyuz-class vessel,” the Jem’Hadar Third said. Torak’Clan glanced at Sorix. The Reman could see the gleam of anticipation in the man’s eyes. He was certain his own gaze reflected it as well.

“We can’t have the humans destroying the probe before it has completed its work,” the Reman colonel said. He turned to the engineering auxiliary console and the Reman manning it. “Drop the cloak and prepare to engage.”
****************************************************************
 
Sibeko shouldn't worry about what the probe did to Enterprise. He should be more concerned how it blew up the Yamato.

Of course all that is going to become irrelevant the moment they'll face that Jem'Hadar cruiser.
 
I have finally caught up here. I have to agree with other comments, this is a very interesting web of deceit and manipulation.

...as Dark Territory should be. :devil:

I'm looking forward to seeing how bad bad gets.
 
Thanks again guys for the comments. CeJay, you had a good point about the Yamato. I threw in a line for the finished version.
*************************************************************

USS Falconer
Miranda-Class
Merias III Battle Site Reclamation Project
(Former Benzite Defense Perimeter)


“The shockwave will overtake us in approximately fifteen seconds,” First Officer Lau replied, with an envied calm. The forcefields had been ripped to shreds minutes ago as the explosive yield of the destructing ships overwhelmed the shield generators. Now they had minimum protection against the expanding wave. It writhed behind them, a cosmic lash snapping at their heels.

“Even at maximum warp?” Captain Lilaea had to ask, even if she already knew the answer. Lau merely nodded grimly, without speaking. The chain reaction continued, ships bursting around them, igniting spilled fuel, and ordnance systems.

“Keep her steady,” Lau said to Flight Control. The baby-faced human wiped the sweat from his brow before nodding.

“Try hailing the station and the Shuttlesworth again,” the captain ordered. “We’ve got to warn them about what’s coming.”

“Captain, our communication is being blocked,” Effad said.

“Could it be the distortion caused by the wave?”

“No,” the Arin’Sen replied, shaking his head. He looked up, a troubled expression on his face. “It’s those weird energy readings. They are spiking near the station.”

“Damn,” Lt. Riordan replied through clenched teeth.

“Magnify view, I want to a visual,” the captain ordered. The Arin’Sen promptly got to work. He looked back up, his expression now grave.
“Captain, I think things have just gotten worse.”

“How could that possibly be Mr. Effad?”

He shifted the main viewer forward. Medium-range sensors captured the Shuttlesworth losing against a Jem’Hadar battle cruiser. Shocked gasps spread across the bridge.

“Alter course,” Lilaea said, ignoring the quaver in her stomach. “We’ve got colleagues to assist.”
**************************************************************
Imperial Romulan Cruiser Stiletto
Shadow-Class
Scarab Nebula

“Welcome aboard the Stiletto,” the ebon Romulan female said with surprising warmth. Though she didn’t stand from her seat. And her warmth was not replicated on the faces of the bridge officers, nor on the countenances of the two burly guards behind them. But T’Prell returned the greeting with a large smile.

“Thank you Lieutenant Colonel Vakis,” T’Prell said. T’Chaya dipped her chin in greeting. “How might we be of assistance?”

Vakis held up one gloved finger. T’Prell noticed that she and all of her crew were dressed in black uniforms with silver trim, not standard issue; except for the jutting shoulder pads. It was nice to know that the bowl cuts also remained the preferred hairstyle. “First, I want to know how you detected us?” The question prompted grumbles around the bridge, until the Tal Shiar agent held up another finger, turning the bridge funereally quiet.

T’Prell deferred to T’Chaya. The Starfleet commander stepped forward slightly. “Your shielding, it interacted with the plasma particles in the astral eddy, creating a unique signature that had not been present in the composition of the eddy previously. I extrapolated each contact your shields made with the eddy to deduce that a starship was trailing us.”

“So, if we had stayed out of the eddy?” Vakis asked, stroking her chin, her gaze pinning the tall, sallow officer standing at a station to her right. The gaze was so intense T’Prell was certain he had to feel it, but the man maintained impressive military bearing.

“In all probability you would have remained undetected,” T’Chaya replied.

“I thought so,” Vakis said. She casually pulled a disruptor from her right side holster. No one moved on the bridge. “I will never listen to my Sensor Officer again,” the Tal Shiar agent replied, shooting the taller Romulan. Without a scream, the man dissolved in a green hail of energy. The gruesome death passed with no notice among the crew. “And neither will anyone else,” she added as an epitaph.

T’Prell had seen many awful things in her service to Vulcan over the decades, and she had been the cause of several of them, but this Romulan’s disregard for life was utterly pitiless. And now they were aboard her ship, at her mercy. Vakis turned her attention back to them, the corners of her full lips turning upward. “Now, where were we?”
******************************************************************
 
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I'm gonna hold out a fool's hope that these brave Border Cutters will pull through in the end. But I can tell it doesn't look good.

As for the Vulcan's new Romulan ally. Yeesh. That's a ship you definitely don't want to overstay your welcome on. Good luck, ladies.
 
A rogue Iconian probe loose in a battlefield filled with weapons systems that also happens to be a political powderkeg between galactic superpowers...

...oh, yeah, this is going to end well. ;)
 
CeJay I definitely felt a need to establish Vakis as someone you didn't want to screw with right from jump. And Gibraltar, you are right, this will not end well.

***************************************************************
USS Nagasaki
Deck Twelve

The jagged metal tore at Captain Zorek’s fingers, but he wouldn’t stop. He ignored the coppery smell of his own blood as the metal tore at his flesh. With a slight grunt he wrenched the doors open. Heat caressed his face and his inner eyelids snapped down to protect him from the bright flash of light. Through the transparent skin, he scoped the nursery.

More debilitating than the fire roaring in the nursery was the raw emotion from the wailing infants. It tore through his brain, smashing against the walls of his mental and emotional controls. The desire to help them, to silence the voices, nearly overwhelmed him. Ignoring the flames lapping at him, he rushed through the inferno. He felt the security guards at his back, their own anxiousness amplified by the screeching children.

He reached the nearest incubator and carefully pulled the writhing child out of it. He steeled himself against the contorted look of pain and confusion on the female’s young face. “Quiet,” he whispered, placing a finger to the child’s forehead. The child immediately grew still, and gaze up at him with a curious sense of familiarity. He had sought to impart some of his own resolve to the child through touch telepathy. Though she would barely remember this connection, he knew they would always be bound. The nursery quickly grew quiet as his security team also administered mind calming techniques.

“Let’s get these children out of here,” He said, before smoke poured down his lungs. Zorek stilled himself and expelled it without crumpling over in an undignified fit of coughing.

“Captain…the nurse on duty,” one of the guards said between hacking. He waved his tricorder and Zorek nodded. He understood. There had been a fatality.

“The children are our first priority,” he said. Zorek scooped up another child before the Vulcans made an orderly exit. Once the infants were safe, the captain took a gulp of air and held it as he went back into the blaze. He retrieved the dead body, throwing the man over his shoulder.

With the extra weight, in addition to the air he was holding, Zorek felt like his lungs were going to burst. But he carefully put one foot ahead of him until he was back out in the corridor. He carefully propped the singed corpse against the nearest wall and expelled.

“Seal off that room,” one of the more perceptive security guards said. A forcefield crackled in place over the room, cutting off the oxygen. The fire would eventually burn itself out. The problem was there were countless fires like this throughout the ship and with the shield generators sputtering they could seal them all off. Some would have to be allowed to burn.

Once Zorek regained his breath, he said, “Deactivate the forcefield,” he said. The guard who had given the initial order looked at him askance. Zorek stoically met his gaze. “We have to conserve energy to put out the bigger fires. Help me close this door.” The guard and another helped the captain. Once it was back in place, the captain ordered them to stand back. The blood made the phaser’s handle slippery as he took it from his side holster. The captain welded the door shut.

“Get these children to Sickbay,” he ordered.

“But captain?” One of the guards asked.

“I will continue the search on my own,” Zorek replied.

“Captain,” the guard started, but Zorek cut him off with a sharp look. “Aye sir,” the resigned female replied.

Once the group was gone, Zorek closed his eyes and gathered his thoughts. He had faced a Changeling once before, during the war. They had succeeded in even briefly capturing it, and Zorek had attempted a mind meld. It had not gone well. He hadn’t been able to say that he had made contact with it exactly, but something had happened, and it had changed him, left him open…to what, he never figured out. But for days afterward he had dreamed of a golden sea, with gently lapping waves that he knew, instinctively, hadn’t been waves at all.

He recalled those dreams and opened his mind again, casting his consciousness outward. If there was a shape shifter aboard, he would find it, and if it had sabotaged his vessel, he would destroy it.
**************************************************************
Merias III Battle Site Reclamation Project
(Former Benzite Defense Perimeter)

The probe maintained a stationary orbit, watching events unfold. The vessel that had launched it into space had emerged from behind its cloaking screen. It headed toward the large space station, its processors burning like a beacon for the probe. It shared the same target.

The other vessel, the one that had attempted to impede its progress, the one that had attempted to destroy it, had moved to intercept the other ship. Both were now fighting over the same prize, the one the probe claimed.

Perhaps residing within the mass of circuits and processors would be a familiar Iconian code or signature, a path to the new home its creators had carved somewhere among the stars and instructed the probe to find.

The battle waged before it, charging the dead space with energy. The combined discharges could disrupt its shielding and prevent it from continuing its mission. The probe could not allow that to happen. It broke orbit.
**************************************************************
 
*************************************************************
Jem’Hadar Battle Cruiser 115
Holding Cell

The ship rocked, tossing Samson Glover onto his stomach with such force that it knocked the air out of him. He rose slowly, stopping each time the ship trembled afterwards. He didn’t know whether to laugh or cry.

Someone was giving it to these bastards and he just hoped it was a friendly. Or even if it wasn’t, he hoped they could take out this ship and prevent them from doing whatever fiendish thing they had in mind. Even though he knew such an outcome would likely result in his death. He would regret not seeing his son and daughter-in-law again, or of feeling the warmth of T’Prell’s smile, but the Jem’Hadar and Remans had to be stopped no matter the cost.

The ship rumbled again. Daneeka uncurled from her ball. “Who do you think it is?”

“Attacking us?”

“Yeah,” the Bolian said, with renewed hope in her voice. “You think it could be one of ours?”

“Maybe,” Samson remarked, sitting up. “Or it could be the Romulans.”

“Great, out of the frying pan,” Daneeka said wryly.

“We’ve got to find a way out of here,” the admiral declared.

“Way ahead of you,” Daneeka said as she reached into the folds of her ripped tunic. She pulled out a silvery device that glinted in the wan light.

“What’s that?”

“A spanner.”

“How did you get hold of that?” Samson asked, “And why didn’t you tell me sooner?”

“Hey,” Daneeka said, her tone defensive, “I was healing remember, from the beating the Jem’Hadar subjected me to for their sport. After our last bout, they drug me through Engineering. I was just alert enough to grab something off one of the tables. Wish I had been able to get my hands on a disruptor.”

“No, no, this is good,” Samson said. He stood up and walked over to her, his legs creaking. He held out his hand. “Let me take a look.” The Bolian handed the cylindrical device to him. He gave it a once over. “You’ve been working on it?”

“Yes, I’ve been trying to reconfigure it to turn it into a weapon,” the Bolian snorted. “But engineering was never my forte.”

“I’ll take a look at it,” Samson remarked. It would give him something to do besides worry about Dar, Daneeka, and his loved ones. “Putting our heads together, I’m sure we can figure something out.”

“Yeah, that’s worked so well for us so far,” the woman quipped. Samson didn’t like her attitude, but he couldn’t disagree. So he said nothing and instead, got to work.
*****************************************************************
USS Shuttlesworth
Soyuz-Class
Merias III Battle Site Reclamation Project
(Former Benzite Defense Perimeter)


“The station only has shields and tractor beams, no defensive systems,” Ops Officer Debbie Eppard remarked.

“Of course who needs to defend oneself when you are enclosed within the great wingspan of the Romulan Star Empire,” Captain Bouchet quipped.

“What I wouldn’t give to see some of those Rommies to appear right now,” Lt. Shakingbush quipped as he ran another firing sequence through his terminal. More phaser shafts pinioned the Jem’Hadar battle cruiser, finally breaking through its impressive shielding.

“Yeah,” one of the auxiliary officers shouted. Captain Bouchet wished he could share the young man’s optimism, but he knew that they were far from out of the woods.

“Cruiser targeting us with polaron beams,” Eppard remarked.

“Evasive, evasive!” Bouchet shouted. The ship was just turning starboard when they hit, slicing through the Shuttlesworth’s weaker shielding and gouging into its underside.

“We’ve got hull breaches all across our ventral hull,” Commander Sibeko remarked.

“Any key system hit?” Bouchet asked.

“No,” the Saurian replied.

“Mesi Dieu,” Bouchet muttered. He knew it had been foolish to take on the better armed Jem’Hadar vessel head on but he had to prevent them from reaching the space station, and Bouchet wanted to show the horn heads that he wasn’t afraid of them. That the Shuttlesworth wasn’t going to make whatever they had in mind for the station a simple walk in the park. “Seal off the hull breaches until we can get repair crews on it!”

“Aye sir,” Sibeko replied.

“What about casualties?”

“Still coming in. I don’t have a full report yet,” the First Officer answered.

“Inform me as soon as you do,” Bouchet said. Unlike the bigger exploration ships, the Border cutters were smaller and the crews more like a real family, in his opinion. Not only did Bouchet know every member of his crew by names, he knew many of their family members. Each loss would be personal for him. And he had grown exhausted writing letters and accompanying bodies back home for burial during the war. But with a Jem’Hadar warship in front of them again, it made him wonder if the war had even ended.

“Swing back around, and press the attack,” he ordered.

“Aye sir,” both Shakingbush and the helm said at the same time.

“We’ve still got speed and maneuverability on them,” Bouchet said to bolster his crew’s confidence. “Now, let’s show them that this old bird has talons.”
********************************************************
 
************************************************************
Jem’Hadar Battle Cruiser 115
Main Bridge

Ketracel-white rushed through Torak’Clan’s veins, driven by his thirst for combat. But the Jem’Hadar forced back his savagery as he issued rapid-fire commands. Their battle cruiser was larger, better armed and armored than the starship opposing them, but the Starfleet vessel had so far used its quickness to its advantage.

That ends now, he thought, as he peered through the small, square screen of his headset. The Starfleet vessel was charging them, but moving in an unpredictable weave, that allowed it to strike and mostly hit stress points in the cruiser’s shielding.

“Shields under fifty percent,” rasped one of the Reman soldiers. Torak’Clan nodded. Though he preferred having all Jem’Hadar manning the stations, in the interests of the new alliance he had give the Remans something to do. Though he wondered what would happen after the Remans secured their homeland. He had no interests in joining them and he doubted his brothers would either. Ever since the war, ever since he had discovered that the shape shifters were false gods, he had been lost, adrift, fighting merely for the sake of it, not even much for survival. He had been bred to fight and he didn’t know what else to do.

Until they had encountered the Iconian probe. There had been whispers that apostate Jem’Hadar had sought to harness Iconian technology shortly before the war, but at that time Torak’Clan could never have imagined that any honorable warrior could reject the Founders. But since his awakening, he had sought out more information about the rumor and found it to be true. In the last several days he had come to realization that those ‘rogues’ were visionaries. They had discovered the deception of the Changelings, and they sought out the true gods, the Iconians.

Once the Remans were successful, Torak’Clan intended to enlist their aid on his quest to find the Iconians so that he could serve beings truly worthy to master the Jem’Hadar.

But first he had to swat the gnat buzzing before him. “Strike at the following areas,” he ordered. Torak’Clan had taken a moment, and the starship’s blistering punishment, to figure out the pattern of the evasive maneuvers. He was confident he could anticipate them and have a polaron beam waiting for them at each location the starship juked to.

“Computations laid in,” the Jem’Hadar Third at tactical said.

“On my mark,” Torak’Clan declared. The Third was as eager as him to dispatch the Federation vessel. Despite their rejection of the Founders, they still hated losing the war. “Fire.” If he had been bred to experience joy, he would’ve laughed as the beams spat out from the ship’s gun ports, countering the enemy starship with precision, stopping it in its tracks.

“They’ve lost full shielding,” the Reman officer replied, with envious delight. The starship was spinning, its running lights blinking. “Massive power outages throughout the ship, they are defenseless.” Torak’Clan knew it was the time to strike before the famed and cursed Federation ingenuity restored the ship’s power.

“Finish them,” Colonel Sorix stepped in, denying Torak’Clan the right to give the order. However, the Jem’Hadar Third didn’t react until he got the nod.

“Wait,” Colonel Sorix said, aggravating Torak’Clan further. “The Iconian probe is on the move.” Torak’Clan shifted the focus of his viewer. He increased its magnification, capturing the sphere as it made its way to the damaged starship. Currents of energy lapped over the probe’s surface.

“It appears that the probe has imparted its virus into the starship’s mainframe,” Sorix said with satisfaction. “It will do our job for us.”

“No, it will not,” Torak’Clan said. He could sense the anticipation of his brothers, and he noticed that many of the Remans were almost as eager for the kill themselves. “Fire on my mark.”

“Belay that,” Sorix countered, causing grumbles among the Jem’Hadar. Though Torak’Clan was displeased he silenced the grumbles with a fierce look. Poor discipline would not be tolerated.

“Why have you countermanded my orders?”

Sorix rubbed his chin as he explained. “We could the expertise and know-how of that Starfleet crew. I recommend culling the bridge, engineering, and medical denizens. Plus, I’m sure your men have grown tired testing themselves against the Bolian.”

Torak’Clan nodded in agreement. “I concur, but if you ever countermand my orders again…”

“Threats are unnecessary,” Sorix said, not backing down. “Our interests are one.”

For now, Torak’Clan thought. He turned to the Jem’Hadar at the transporter station. “Do as he says.” It took several minutes before the transports were complete. “Fourth Makla’Gar go make sure our new prisoners are secure.” The Jem’Hadar crisply exited the bridge.

“Third Tivon’Adar, destroy that vessel,” Torak’Clan ordered.

“Colonel, First!” The Reman officer shouted. “We’ve got another starship, approaching on an attack vector!”

“What?” Both men said almost simultaneously. The bridge rattled as the ship was pelted with phaser fire. Torak’Clan shifted his viewer’s focus again. Another starship, this one a Miranda-class was coming at them hot. The Jem’Hadar was more concerned by the massive wall of energy behind the ship.

“It appears that the probe has done its work all too well,” Sorix remarked. A ball of rage formed in Torak’Clan’s stomach. It seemed like the fates wished to deny him his pound of flesh and steel, but he would have it regardless.

“Ignore the Miranda and destroy the other starship,” he ordered.

“Both the starship and the shockwave will reach us in under twenty seconds,” Sorix advised, softly but firmly.

“Carry out my orders!” Torak’Clan barked. The gun ports concentrated on the main hull, smashing through it, and reaching the ship’s warp core.

“Warp core breach is imminent,” the Reman officer at sensors replied.

“Activate cloaking device,” Sorix ordered.

“And remove us from this area, maximum warp,” Torak’Clan added. “Make sure the visual recorders remain operational though. We want the capitals of Earth and Romulus to tremble at what we have unleashed.”
*************************************************************
USS Falconer
Miranda-Class
Merias III Battle Site Reclamation Project
(Former Benzite Defense Perimeter)

Gasps rippled across the bridge as the Falconer crew watched the Jem’Hadar warship destroy the Shuttlesworth. Everyone was more concerned about the fate of their colleagues than their own dire circumstances.

“Shockwave will overtake us in five seconds,” Effad said quietly. When they had altered course to assist the Shuttlesworth, it had only bought them a few more seconds. But Captain Lilaea intended to make the most of them.

“Throw everything into propulsion, including life support,” the Aquan ordered. “I want appropriate ramming speed to pierce the hull of the battle cruiser. They had kept up a steady barrage against the enemy vessel, but it had been too little avail. Falconer had been unable to stop them from destroying the Shuttlesworth. “And set us on a direct course.”

“Aye,” the Helm soberly responded. Lilaea closed her eyes for a moment and thought of the sparkling blue green seas of Argo, the home she would never see again.

“Damn it,” Lt. Riordan spat. “The frinxing Jem’Hadar ship just cloaked!”

“What?” Lau beat the captain to the punch.

“Yeah,” Riordan nodded with disgust. “I think those bastards are gone.”

“Phaser spread, wide dispersal,” Lilaea ordered. Perhaps they would get lucky. The ship sliced through the space where the cruiser had just been even as its weapons’ banks lit up the void.

“Nothing,” Riordan slammed his fist against his terminal, the cracking of bone almost deafening in the silence.

“How much…how much time?” Lilaea asked. “What do we have left?” She looked to her First Officer. Moisture ringed Lau’s almond eyes. Her Executive Officer merely shook her head.

“It was an honor…” The captain never heard the rest.
************************************************************
 
Okay ... so much for hope.

But at least some of the crew of the Shuttlesworth may get a fighting chance. And no, I won't put money on them. I am going to root for Samson and Deneeka though.
 
***************************************************************
USS Monarch
Observation Lounge

Captain Walker wished Leza was at his side. Benjamin needed the Trill’s counsel and support. He hated to admit it, but he even wished that Sofia were here as well. He was certain that she knew more than she had told him about this whole affair. He didn’t know what to make of the contingent of Remans sitting across from him. Their iridescent material of their uniforms gleamed in the dimmed lighting they had requested. Only their pallid skin shone in the half of the room engulfed in darkness.

Torkill didn’t like not being able to see the Remans clearly, but Lt. Bakin had been insistent about reducing the lighting and Walker saw no need to perturb the man. Torkill and Liyange flanked him, the Kobheerian suspiciously watching the Remans for any threatening behavior while Liyange dissected their statements with Vulcan-like logic.

Walker wondered how Bakin would like the Vulcan analogy. He wondered if the Remans shared the Romulans’ antipathy for the Vulcans. He wondered a lot of things about these spectral creatures. Next to nothing was known about the Romulan slave caste, except they were ferocious warriors that had proved their mettle in the Dominion War.

“So, where is this weapon? When will this demonstration start?” Walker pressed. Though he was afraid of what Bakin and his cohorts had in store.

“There has been a delay, unfortunately,” Bakin said. “We await an update.”

Walker huffed and pushed away from the table. “Well, how long will that be?” The Reman growled deeply.

“I…cannot say,” he admitted, with obvious frustration.

“Well, until you do, you are welcome to be our guests,” Walker replied, standing up.

“I am certain that guest is not interchangeable with prisoner,” Bakin warned. The captain stared down hard at the Reman. He tugged on his tunic.

“I meant what I said Lieutenant,” Walker replied. “If you wish to transport back to your vessels, you are free to do so.”

“My apologies,” Bakin dipped his head. “Despite our recent alliance, we were often taught that humans were the most deceitful beings in the galaxy,” he chuckled. “Old habits die hard.”

“Old propaganda sounds like to me,” Walker replied. “Well, it’s a new day now. And I will consult further with my superiors about this matter. I wish I had more to tell them.”

“You will soon,” Bakin nodded. “I promise.”

“I guess that’s going to have to do,” the captain hid his frustration better than his disappointment. He glanced at Lt. Torkill. “Please see that their needs are met.”
**************************************************************
USS Monarch
Sickbay

“You released her?” Walker asked, exasperated. “In her condition, you let her go?”
Zammit looked up from his latest patient, his yellow eyes becoming slits. The Bzzit Khaht was decked in maroon surgical scrubs. “She was insistent, plus her injuries had been tended to. I had more pressing matters to attend to,” he said, gesturing at the severely burned patient on the biobed below him. The captain paused, his ire temporarily muted as he gazed at the crewman, his face unrecognizable beneath the soot and blood.

“How is he doing? Is he going to make it?”

“Not sure,” the medic said truthfully, “that’s why every second we waste here arguing about the past is one that is stealing away from his potential future.”

“Understood,” Walker said tightly. He glanced in the direction of the prone Commander Astar.

“She’s fine,” Zammit said, before he could ask. “Still sleeping off that last sedative.”

“Okay,” the captain said, “I’ll leave you to your work.”

“Please do,” the medic said brusquely as he shifted his focus back to his patient.
*************************************************************
USS Monarch
Chief Engineer’s Quarters

Chief Engineer Petrov greeted him with a wan smile. “Can’t stay away can you?” Captain Walker filled the doorway.

“May I come in?” He asked, though he was already halfway through the door.

“By all means,” Petrov replied, stepping aside. “Glad to have the company.” She hobbled over to the couch with a jade Tholian silk cover in the living room and eased her way onto it. Walker stood across from her, his arms folded across his chest. He remembered frolicking around her quarters recently, even making love on that couch and the smooth feel of the Tholian silk against his naked flesh, but now he didn’t think he would ever feel comfortable in Sofia’s quarters again. His presence felt wrong now, and he felt icky. Benjamin wanted nothing more than to take a shower.

“How are you doing?”

“Been better,” Petrov’s smile was brighter this time. “But I’ll be okay. I was taking up too much space in the Sickbay. More people needed that bed than I did. Plus, you need me.”

“You think so?”

“Yeah, I think with our ship being surrounded by Remans who haven’t told you squat about what they are doing here or why they want our help, yeah, I think you do.”

“The observation lounge, it’s bugged.” It wasn’t a question. Petrov nodded.

“Now you’re starting to get it.”

“The Remans, this weapon they are talking about, I take it that this is tied to the S.S. Hinode and the data we were supposed to recover?”

Petrov nodded. “That’s a good bet.”

“I think I’m in this too deeply for maybes,” Walker demanded. “What is this really all about?”

“How about you sit down,” the engineer patted the empty space beside him. “You look really stressed.”

“I’m fine where I’m at,” Walker said. “Now, I want some answers. Haven’t I proved myself enough, haven’t I compromised myself enough for you people?”

Petrov grimaced. “Don’t call it that. What happened between us, it was more than a compromise…it was real, it had substance.”

The captain snorted. “Yeah, it meant so much to you that you blackmailed me into this organization, putting me and this crew at risk for some black ops bullshit!”

“Bullshit that might save the Federation,” Petrov added.

“Might is the operative word,” the captain countered.

“Okay,” Petrov sighed. “I’ll tell you.”

“I’m waiting,” Walker said, tapping his foot. The engineer patted the seat again.

“Only if you sit.”

“No,” the captain shook his head.

“Really Benjamin, you look like you’re going to blow a gasket, and you’re making me very uncomfortable right now.”

The captain laughed. “Are you serious? I make you uncomfortable?”

“Yeah,” Sofia remarked. “You do.”

“I’m staying put,” he declared.

“Fine,” Petrov said. She sat back in the couch and composed herself, breathing deeply before responding. “Have you ever heard of the Iconians?”

“Yeah, in history books and I saw a couple vids about them a few years back. A bunch of fantastical pseudo-historical garbage, but the kids certainly liked it.”

“Well, just over a decade ago, Captain Donald Varley of the Starship Yamato found Iconia, their homeworld.”

Walker cocked his head, disbelieving but intrigued nonetheless. “You’re not joking?”

“No,” Petrov shook her head. “It was inside the Romulan Neutral Zone. The homeworld wasn’t all he found. Yamato encountered an Iconian probe, a device that used an ancient software transmission to destroy it. The probe nearly succeeded in destroying the Enterprise-D and the Romulan warbird Haakona before it was destroyed.”

“So, the Remans are in possession of one of these probes?”

“I suspect so,” Petrov nodded.

“Well, what does that have to do with the Hinode? Or the Carson for that matter?”

“Section 31 discovered that criminal elements had a probe in their possession and were possibly attempting to sell it to the Romulans,” Petrov replied. “The Carson was one of our vessels. We were going to intercept the shipment.”

“And steal it?” Walker replied.

“But it appears that the Remans beat us to it,” Petrov said. “Which might not be a bad thing after all. At least the Romulans don’t have the probe and the Remans seem amenable to giving it to us.”

“In exchange for an entire planet,” Walker replied.

“This probe might be worth that, more than an entire system perhaps,” Petrov nodded sagely.

“That seems a bit hyperbolic don’t you think?”

“Let’s see this demonstration first before making conclusions,” the engineer said.
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This Iconian probe is just seriously bad news for everyone involved. As is usual a heavy price is being paid for this super-weapon by a lot of innocents (and some who are not so much).

Really enjoyed the Petrov/Walker interchange. I don't particularly like either person very much but I understand their motivations and I liked Walker's cut-the-BS and give-it-to-me-straight routine.
 
Appreciate the comments. CeJay I don't think Petrov or Walker are unlikeable, well Walker not at least. He's just a guy with feet of clay. Glad you enjoyed their conversation. I enjoy the Walker-Petrov relationship. It's nice and twisted.

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Imperial Romulan Warbird Avengeance
Stateroom
(Orbiting Benzar)

“Commander Volok,” Subcommander Linos said through the intercom.

“Yes,” Volok replied, refusing to take his eyes off the three-dimensional chest board. The two men sat around the tiny coffee table situated near the room’s replicator and refresher units. Since Morgan had decided to take up residence in his stateroom, the Romulan thought he might as well make the best of it. Also it wouldn’t hurt to keep his mind sharp as well as test the human’s mental acuity. Morgan had thus far proved a worthy opponent.

“Commander, Ambassador Ovida is here, and she demands to see you.”

“She’s here?” Volok raised an eyebrow. Morgan remained stone-faced. “Why wasn’t I informed that she would be arriving?”

“She said there was no time,” Linos’s voice was stressed. “She demanded that I beam here directly into your chambers, but I persisted on the bridge.”

Volok still wasn’t pleased, but he knew the fault didn’t lie with Linos. “I’ll be out shortly.” Before Linos responded, there was a rapid fire knock on the door. Seconds later it began to open. Surprised, Volok turned to his human counterpart. But the Section 31 agent was once again a step ahead. His image shifted as a crackling of energy washed over him. A portable holographic imager, Volok nodded appreciatively, so that’s how he got aboard so easily, he figured. Morgan now looked like a tall, severe, ebon skinned Romulan. The human was dressed in civilian garb, an expensive tight-knit gray shirt with matching pants and boots. Ovida swept into the room, her elegant emerald robes swishing behind her. A flustered Linos was on her heels.

Volok held up a hand and the subcommander stopped in his tracks, did an about face, and exited the room. He would deal with Linos later, and he was certain the man was dreading it. Volok buried his annoyance behind a thin smile. “Ambassador,” he said, rising out of his chair, “To what do I owe the pleasure of this visit?”

The woman ignored him. Her eyes widened as she went over to Morgan, who was also standing. She embraced him in a strong hug. “Orestes, what are you doing here?”

Morgan pulled back from here, regarding her with a wide smile. Volok had never seen the man evince such warmth. “Why the work of the Empire of course.”

“You’re more likely fattening your pockets,” Ovida replied with light sarcasm. She then turned to Volok and her expression became frostier. “Or perhaps greasing the commander’s palm to insure you on the inside track when it comes time to divvy up the Benzite resources?”

“Why are you here ambassador?” Volok said with much less tact than he intended.

“There has been a terrible tragedy in the Merias system,” Ovida said.

“What happened?” Orestes was the model of concern. Quite the actor, Volok thought. The Romulan wondered what Morgan really knew what had transpired in the Merias system.

“Some great conflagration at the Battle Reclamation Site, it is feared that the entire planet of Merias III was destroyed, along with the space station orbiting it.”

“Dear gods,” Orestes muttered, lowering his head as if to pray. Ovida also paused. Volok forced himself not to demand more answers. After a moment, the diplomat spoke again. “We have only received reports from long-range communication buoys. Apparently the station’s Director Malmak sent out a message before the station was destroyed.”

“What did the message say?” Volok asked, about to blow a gasket.

“I don’t know, the Benzites wouldn’t share its contents,” Ovida said. “They wished to meet in council before revealing more information.”

“Are you joking with me,” Volok said. “This isn’t a decision they can just make. They can’t merely tell us what to do! Why didn’t you make them see the folly of their ways?”

“Don’t presume to tell me how to my job,” Ovida shot back. “Until the Benzite system is firmly within our control, we must tread lightly, and we must respect their wishes. They aren’t subjects.”

“Yet,” Orestes added.

“Yet,” Volok nodded, with a dip of his head in Morgan’s direction. Though he was certain the man meant to emphasize how slippery Romulus’s grip on Benzar was.

“So in order to continue fostering good relations, I am ordering you to take Avengeance back to the Merias system, and search for survivors, and anything else that might tell us what really happened there,” the ambassador said.

Volok had a good idea of what had happened, and the idea twisted his stomach. Someone had constructed a functional probe and set it loose. Who and why? As long as it wasn’t in his control it was a threat that had to be neutralized if it couldn’t be seized. “I will leave at once.” A ghost of a smile touched his lips. “A rescue mission is no place for a civilian Mr. Orestes,” Volok said. “Perhaps you can stay with the ambassador and catch up on old times.”

“Well actually Commander,” Morgan began.

“Actually that sounds like a great idea,” Ovida brightened as she looped her arm inside the startled Morgan’s. The man glared at Volok before gazing at the diplomat with a pleased expression.

“Yes,” he said, his voice breaking slightly, “Good.”

“That settles it,” Volok said, his voice brimming with satisfaction. He would be happy to have both Ovida and “Orestes” out of his way. “I’ll be disembarking at once.”

“We’ll make our way to your transporter room,” Ovida said.

“No need,” Volok said, stopping himself from dancing over to this desk. He glanced down at the control panel on his desk. “I’ll beam you back to Benzar myself. Every second saved could save a life after all.”

“Of course,” Ovida said, nodding her head satisfactorily. “Now, you get it.”

“Yes,” Volok said, enjoying the mortified look on Morgan’s face. Volok hadn’t beaten the man at chess, but he had just outmaneuvered him. “I certainly do. And I thank you for showing me the error of my ways.”
**************************************************************
 
Volok is one clever Romulan, I give him that. The way he outmaneuvered Morgan was indeed quite ingenious. I'm also quite suprised to come across a Romulan who appears to care for other people's lives for a change. It's clearly a weakness here but refreshing nevertheless.
 
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Imperial Romulan Cruiser Stiletto
Shadow-Class
Scarab Nebula

T’Prell felt as on edge as T’Chaya looked. After their chilling introduction, Lt. Colonel Vakis had consigned them to quarters, under armed guards. It had been approximately five hours, forty-three minutes, and ten seconds in stir before the Tal Shiar agent had summoned them again.

Despite the circumstances it had been good to see T’Chaya again and to see that the woman was well, though her slightly pensive expression gave no sign that she felt the same about seeing T’Prell. Together they had walked in silence down the dim hallway, their guards at their backs.

T’Prell had smelled the food before the doors to Vakis’s quarters had swooshed open. The woman was sitting alone at a table, a delicious plate topped with viinerine. A server stood behind her, holding one arm draped with a napkin across his midsection. Vakis placed her fork beside the plate and smiled tightly in greeting. She followed T’Prell’s eyes to the plate below her. “Of course you are familiar with viinerine,” she remarked. “I’m well aware of some of your clandestine visits to the empire. It would only make sense that you were familiar with our food and drink. More flavorful than the Vulcan variety, wouldn’t you agree?” The brown-skinned woman’s smile widened as he gestured at the two empty seats around the circular table. “Please join me.”

T’Prell’s stomach tightened with hunger, but she walked with controlled steps to the table. T’Chaya trailed behind her. The guards took up position at the room’s entrance. The table was filled with several dishes, from viinerine to jumbo mollusks, with osol twists for desert. T’Prell wouldn’t admit it to the Romulan, but she did fine their cuisine more to her liking than that of her native world. The Vulcan Reformation had leached so much of the spice out of life not just in terms of interpersonal or interspecies relations. Even the food tasted bland.

T’Prell had to admit that she would likely enjoy the array of foods before her and she certainly needed the kick of the Romulan ale the server was proffering. She held up her glass and allowed him to fill it with the sparkling, azure liquid. He sensed T’Chaya’s disapproval. The other Vulcan hadn’t touched any of the refreshments.

Vakis merely shrugged. “Colonel Vakis,” T’Chaya began, “If we are your guests, why have you held us under armed guard for over five hours?”

“Security precautions, merely,” Vakis sniffed. “The important thing is you are here now, and you’re aid is still needed.”

“And where are we now? Why have we moved?” Like T’Chaya, T’Prell had felt the shift in the engines and in the direction of the vessel. Though she had been placed in a windowless room but she had been on enough starships to know when they were moving at warp, without having to see streaking starscapes.

“How can we assist you?” T’Prell cut in smoothly. The last thing she wanted T’Chaya to do was set the Tal Shiar agent off. She would have nightmares about the woman’s casual execution of her subordinate for years to come.

Vakis held up a glass of ale and took a sip before responding. “What were you doing in the Scarab Nebula?”

“We are not at liberty to say,” T’Chaya remarked, staring at T’Prell, as if expecting a challenge.

“What say you, T’Prell?” Vakis turned to her, her gaze predatory.

“Commander T’Chaya is correct,” T’Prell said. “We can’t divulge that information.”

Vakis chuckled. “No matter. I already know,” she said with assurance.

“Is that so?” T’Chaya asked.

“Of course, you’ve received the same reports about the Jem’Hadar-Reman alliance,” Vakis paused, gauging their reactions. The news hit her like a shockwave. She knew that Starfleet Intelligence had cultivated ties with Reman dissidents, in part because the V’Shar had been helping foster that alliance. T’Prell herself had tried to convince Ambassador Spock to do more to link the unification movement with the incipient Reman rights movement, but the venerable Spock had been reluctant due to the combustible nature of the Reman/Romulan relationship. He was concerned about losing the nonviolent character of the unificationists.

But the revelation of a Jem’Hadar-Reman alliance? What in T’Khut was Vakis talking about, she wondered. What was the Jem’Hadar still doing in the Alpha Quadrant. There was no way the Dominion could be planning something and the V’Shar not know about it? Could they? Even after the war, after the exposure of Changeling infiltrators? Had all the Changelings been exposed? Had the war even truly ended, or had it just evolved, or mutated? Questions whirled like dervishes in her mind. It was almost too much for her to process, particularly under the careful gaze of Vakis.

She knew the Romulan was trying to determine how much they truly knew about this alliance, and if she discovered they knew too little, they would like join the executed officer in Vorta Vor. In response, T’Prell’s face was as solemn as Mount Seleya. T’Chaya was impressively impassive as well. The Romulan nodded, certain her speculation had been justified. “You’re here to see if it’s true, aren’t you?”

“Correct,” T’Prell managed to say.

“It is, I can assure you,” Vakis’s face wrinkled. “Several bands of Remans rebelled against their commanding officers and took up arms against the Empire. They fell in league with similarly traitorous Jem’Hadar and have spent the intervening months since the war ended raiding and pillaging throughout this sector. We have found no connection to the Dominion proper, have you?”

“No,” T’Prell said, parched. She sipped the ale, and the burn centered in her chest. Vakis looked at T’Chaya. The Vulcan awkwardly nodded. T’Prell knew it was far harder for T’Chaya to tell a falsehood than her, being far more wedded to logic. However, deception was the only thing that might save their lives at the moment and the Nagasaki commander pulled it off passably well.

“We have an agent inside the most radical group of brigands,” Vakis said. “They have informed me that they have recently acquired some type of superweapon, not to mention support from some outside source. I think it’s in our mutual interests if we discover the veracity of both of these claims.”

“I concur,” T’Chaya said coolly. “But I would consider this more an equal partnership if you released us and our vessel.”

Vakis scoffed. “But Stiletto is faster and has better armaments. If we encounter serious resistance from the Jem’Hadar or Remans, you stand a better chance of survival onboard my vessel.”

“In the spirit of cooperation,” T’Prell interjected, a bit more smoothly this time.

“No,” Vakis snapped. “You will remain here, and we will not discuss this matter further.” T’Prell sensed the guards at the door tensing, shifting their disruptor rifles.

“Well, it appears that we are no longer your guests, but your prisoners,” T’Chaya rejoined.

“Call it what you will,” Vakis said. “I try to ensure your safety, and you think the worst of me.”

“Perhaps you are more concerned that we will fly back to Federation space with knowledge of this remarkable vessel,” T’Chaya shot back. T’Prell winced. She had thought the same thing, but had the tact, and strong sense of self-preservation to not voice it.

“Colonel Vakis,” T’Prell tried to intercede again, but the Tal Shiar operative was not having it.

“Guards!” She shouted, jumping out of her seat. “Remove this veruul from my sight!” She demanded, pointing at T’Chaya, who remained calmly in her chair. “If she insists on declaring herself a prisoner, I shall make her one. Take to her a cell!”

The commander stood up without fuss as the guards flanked her, their weapons at the ready. They led her out of the room. T’Prell watched her go, dread knotting her stomach. Vakis sighed and sat back down. She grabbed her half-empty glass and lifted it for the dutiful server to fill. “Now, T’Prell, where were we?”
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What a deliciously awkward and tense encounter. You gotta give a lot of credit to T'Prell and in smaller measure to T'Chaya for being able to think on their feet (or sitting down, in this case) going along with the pretenses of knowing what they don't.

Vakis is not only ruthless and dangerous but also not as much in control of herself as she might think. That makes her an unpredictable opponent.

Really enjoyed this segment and I'm curious to find out where this might lead for our Vulcan guests/prisoners.
 
CeJay,

Glad you're enjoying Volok and the Stiletto segments. I really like writing the Romulans. Perhaps they are the species best suited for many of my stories. You are right with Vakis. I wanted to show how ruthless she could be upfront so that T'Prell and T'Chaya had to walk a very tightrope. With Volok, I wanted to let him get a win and easily remove Morgan from the stage.

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USS Monarch
Deck Four

“You’re heading to the bridge I presume?” Chief Engineer Petrov asked, with a smile, as soon as the turbolift doors opened. Captain Walker frowned as he stepped into the car.

He had taken a few moments to call his wife, but Emmanuelle hadn’t been at home. He just had wanted to see her face, to latch on to something real, or had once been real, now that the universe had turned upside down. Walker tugged down tightly on his tunic and moved to the opposite side of the lift. He cleared his throat before commanding, “Main Bridge.”

“Come on now Ben,” Petrov said, her voice becoming throatier. “How about we let bygones be bygones?”

“How about you stop bugging my room,” he riposted. “How long has that been going on by the way?”

Petrov shrugged, before wincing, “I don’t think you really want to know.”

“My God,” Walker shook his head. “All of this…it was all a setup. You’ve been playing me all this time.”

“Ben, we’ve traipsed through this territory before,” the engineer said. She moved across the small enclosure, getting close to him. Walker pressed against the wall, recoiling from her touch. Petrov shrank back from him, looking at her own hand as if it were diseased. She placed it by her side. “Benjamin, I never have stopped caring about you, but I had a duty to perform. I’m really sorry you got caught up in all this, but it’s too late to turn back now. I think the best thing we can do is work together for the interest of the Federation,” she paused, leaning forward, whispering “not to mention for our own lives.”

The engineer pulled back from him. “I just wish that we could remain friends while doing it.”

“That ship has sailed,” Walker said tightly.

“Pity,” Petrov replied. She moved away from him and arched her back, her posture rigid as the turbolift reached the door. The captain strode onto the bridge. Lt. Commander Liyange rose out of the central chair in response, but Walker’s attention was drawn to the figure on the main viewer.

“There has been a major disaster…in the Benzar System,” Admiral Visala said, her words as grim as her expression.
**************************************************************
Jem’Hadar Battle Cruiser 115
Holding Cell

Admiral Glover couldn’t believe it. Within a span of seconds, the holding cell was filled, with bewildered, disheveled, and some injured Starfleet officers. He stood off in a corner, with Daneeka, who was similarly baffled.

Samson zeroed in on one man in particularly. He was a short, barrel-chested man, with walnut brown skin and grayish hair. He, like his crew, wore Border Service variant uniforms. In particularly, the quartet of pips on his maroon turtle neck stood out. He was a captain. And befitting his station, he surged forward, checking on the injured among his crew.

So far, none of the new arrivals had realized he or Daneeka were there, and Samson wasn’t sure what to do once they did. Should he reveal his true identity? Or would that lead to questions he couldn’t answer. But then again, maybe this crew had been sent by Logan to find them once they hadn’t made their rendezvous.

While he was agonizing over how to proceed, he heard the familiar crackle of the life cell’s forcefield deactivating. Daneeka tensed beside him. A confused rumbling filled the room as the crew headed toward the opening. “Don’t!” Daneeka shouted, and the captain turned to them, his eyes widening as if seeing them for the first time.

“Who are you?” He asked, his voice carrying the lilt of Earth’s Caribbean. “Where are we?”

“No time for that,” Daneeka said, “Get away from the entrance!”

“I don’t understand,” the captain said, looking at Samson. “Please explain.” Before Samson could he heard a sound similar air gushing rapidly from pneumatic pumps. Movement overhead caught his attention and he saw several small objects flying above them.

“Oh frinx!” Daneeka said, crouching as she covered her head. “They’re grenades.”

“What?” Samson said, mimicking the gesture.

“Sneaky bastards,” the Bolian replied before a terrible rumbling filled the admiral’s ears and strobes of light tore at his eyes.
*************************************************************
 
Ok, that's low, throwing grenades at unprepared prisoners. Not sure were the sport is in that. In any case, looks like Samson's new allies are not going to be around for long.

Pity, as Petrov would say.
 
***************************************************************

USS Nagasaki
Captain’s Ready Room

Captain Zorek had holed up in his office after scouring the ship without finding the Changeling. He knew his presence was starting to distract the valiant effort of his crew to save lives and repair the ship. He knew that he could direct both efforts just as ably from the Ready Room as he could from the Bridge.

Plus, he didn’t want anyone to see the vein throbbing on his temple as he struggled to control his rage. Before Surak, Vulcans had been a species capable of great passion and extreme violence. Many non-Vulcans often thought that his kind had no emotions, but they merely buried their volcanic emotions behind a cool veneer of logic. His facade had slipped when he saw the level of devastation the saboteur had done to his ship, and he was having a hard to time putting the mask back on.

So, he sat in his office, a candle burning as he recited calming chants in between issuing orders. It wasn’t quite working. And he wasn’t the only person afflicted among his crew. Dr. Sevda had been vigorous in expressing her displeasure with his orders to split up the medical team to administer blood screenings to the entire crew, including patients. He understood the woman’s arguments and he even empathized with her fierce presentation of them, but he had stood firm. If there was a Changeling onboard, it could be anyone. It could also be anything. So far, the quantum stasis sweeps throughout the ship hadn’t snared the shape-shifter.

The captain was starting to wonder if the saboteur was in fact a polymorph. Perhaps the culprit or culprits had a different motivation than revenge for a lost war. To that end, he had also dispatched another security team to Ambassador Steen’s quarters to see if there was any evidence that hadn’t been vaporized in the explosion. Part of the team was operating on the ship, behind the forcefield protecting them from the hole in the hull the explosion had caused. While other team members had donned EVA suits and were conducting the investigation outside the starship.

His compin chirped. The captain tapped his small device over his breast, activating it. “Captain Zorek here,” he said.

“Captain, this is Lieutenant Tassos,” the man’s voice sounded tinny, even coming from the delta-shaped communication badge. “We have completed our scan of the debris outside Ambassador’s Steen’s room. We have found trace elements of infernite…”

“Just like in the other bomb wreckage throughout Nagasaki,” Zorek said.

“Correct,” the junior officer said without missing a beat. “We have also found genetic residue that matches Lt. Commander L’Nira.”

“What about Ambassador Steen?” Unfortunately Zorek had put restoring the communication system at the low end of immediate priorities. So far, he had yet to inform Starfleet Command or the Diplomatic Corps directly about what had happened. However, he had hastily sent out a message buoy, in the event that the saboteur’s blow had been fatal.

“Captain,” the young man paused, causing both of Zorek’s eyebrows to lift.

“Go on Lieutenant,” he urged.

“Captain, I am…confused, there’s no trace…no sign of the Ambassador’s remains. The explosive could not have completely vaporized him. And it is unlikely that the debris was flung into space. Even if the majority of it had been, there would still be residue left.”

Zorek stroked his beard. “There is another possibility,” he spoke quietly, not wanting to voice the dark thought sprouting in his mind.

“What could that be sir?” Tassos asked.

“That the ambassador was not in the room,” Zorek said, leaning back in his seat, feeling both relieved and dreadful at the same time. The winning kal-toh pattern was starting to emerge. “Lieutenant, Ambassador Steen is the saboteur.”
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USS Monarch
Captain’s Ready Room

Captain Walker felt like he had been slugged. Admiral Visala had been incommunicado before Petrov had left Sickbay and now the Andorian returned with one hell of a revelation. Hellish more like it, he thought, his heart tugging at him to break orbit and gallop to the Merias system to assist in the rescue effort.

But he had restrained that impulse. And he had graciously acceded to the Andorian’s request for a private meeting. Much to Liyange’s consternation, Walker had asked Petrov to join him.

Behind the safety of the closed doors, he had dispensed with pleasantries. “Let’s talk turkey, shall we?” He said coldly, clasping his hands as he leaned forward, staring hard at the small display screen inset into his desk. Petrov stood behind him.

Visala shrugged. “Of course captain. I pride myself on being as candid as possible with my operatives.” His stomach roiled at her claiming him like he was a pet. Her pet.

“The Remans had something to do with this, didn’t they?” He demanded. “This was a demonstration of that weapon they are offering us?”

The admiral nodded. “Yes,” she said, without preamble. “And we must recover this weapon, at any cost.”

“What is it, exactly?” Petrov asked. Visala’s gaze slithered to her.

“I’m not at liberty to say,” Visala remarked. “Needless to know, it is paramount that that weapon not fall into Romulan hands, or that it no longer can be used as weapon of terror.”

“Well, how exactly do we do that?” Walker asked.

“Whatever they demand, give it to them.”

“Excuse me?” Walker coughed.

“Do I need to repeat myself?”

“No, no,” Petrov slid in, playing the peacemaker. “We understand.”

“No,” Walker shook his head vigorously. “No, we don’t. And we don’t negotiate with terrorists.”

“Starfleet doesn’t negotiate with terrorists, and that is the current Administration’s policy as well,” Visala said. “But we are not Starfleet.”

“But you serve under President Santiago,” Walker countered.

Visala chuckled. “Section 31 is more important than any one politician. We are an institution that predates the Federation.”

“And you’re saying all that to say you’re above the law?”

The Andorian nodded, “When that law is shortsighted or puts Federation citizens at risks, yes.”

Walker pushed away from the desk and folded his arms. “I won’t do it. I won’t negotiate with terrorists.”

“What do you think the Federation is doing right now, with the Cardassians?” Visala scoffed. “Mintof Urlak, a man with ties to shadowy militant groups stands poised to take the reins of control there, after Premier Lang’s assassination. An event that perhaps bore his imprimatur.”

“Do you have proof of that?” The captain challenged.

“Not exactly,” the Andorian admitted.

“Then it has nothing to do with this argument!”

“The Romulans are terrorists!” Visala snarled, losing her poise. “They are slavers, and we negotiate with them. I didn’t see you waving your humanistic flag when they joined the fight against the Dominion. Santiago negotiated with them, because it was in the best interests of the Federation. You will do no less.”

“What if I don’t do anything at all, except contact Command!” Walker flared. Visala pulled back, though her jaw remained set and her gaze steely.

“Talked to your wife Emmanuelle lately?” She asked sweetly. Blood rushed to his face.

“You leave my wife out of this,” he demanded.

“I will…if you do your duty,” the Andorian replied. Walker jumped slightly when he felt a hand on his shoulder. Petrov leaned down, strands of her perfumed hair touching his cheek.

“She’s right,” she whispered. “Do you really want the Remans to remain in control of a superweapon? If they don’t trade it to us, don’t you think there will be others willing to purchase it? The Breen, the Alshain, the Son’a, the Orions, the Romulans, or even the Klingons? We can’t afford not negotiating with them.”

“This isn’t right,” Walker groused, shrugging Sofia’s hand off. “We-we’re better than this.”

“No, we’re not,” Petrov replied, pulling back from him.

Visala made a sad face and feigned crying sounds before adding, “Grow up and do your job.” She deactivated the link before Walker could reply.

He remained at his desk, mulling his options. To her credit, Petrov didn’t interrupt him. She remained posted up by the wall behind him. Finally he jabbed his combadge.

“Liyange here.”

“Commander…” he paused, his face contorting, “Inform the Remans that I wish to see them in the Observation Lounge, ASAP.”

“Aye sir.”

He glanced back, looking at a contrite Petrov. “Just what did you get me into,” he asked, shaking his head.
**************************************************************
Scarab Nebula

“Did you hear that,” Visala asked the woman. “What a sanctimonious prick!”

“He’s not so bad,” the woman replied. “Once you get to know him.”

“How far out are you?” The Andorian admiral asked.

“I am five hours away from Monarch,” the woman answered. The Andorian snorted in response.

“Well, get there fast. Walker might have another crisis of conscience and ruin this for us.”

“I’ll make sure that we get the probe,” the woman promised.

“Even if Walker proves an obstacle?” Visala asked.

“I will not fail,” the woman declared. "Benjamin will be no obstacle at all.”
**************************************************************
 
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