CeJay,
The story ain't over yet

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USS Monarch
Starbase 336
Two Weeks Later
Commander Leza Astar’s fingers were bent over her keyboard but she couldn’t command them to type. Instead all she could do was stare at the name in the communiqué’s send line: Denise Nash-Bridges. The only relative he had left, and now the only member of his family. Demetrius’s older sister was a science officer aboard the Shenlong.
Though this mission had been classified, Astar knew how information could leak. What could she say to her? How could she confirm any of the rumors Denise was bound to hear that her brother was a traitor? That he worked with the Romulans? Denise would find out and she would come to Leza for the truth. Astar thought it best to get ahead of the woman.
The Trill had told herself that it would be better coming from her, that she might be able to cushion the blow. But now that she had been able to come up from air after days of interrogations masked as debriefings, she didn’t know what to say. No, she knew what to say, she just didn’t want to say it.
So she sat there, stretching her rebellious fingers, and let the time pass by. Leza didn’t know how long she had been parked at her desk when she heard her door chime. “Enter,” she said absently, realizing how scratchy her voice sounded, and how dry her throat had become. She turned around to see Dr. Zammit glide into the room.
The Bzzit Khaht looked around furtively, his yellow eyes narrow. “Who are you communicating with?” He asked, nodding at her desk.
“What business is it of yours?” She said, his suspicious behavior putting her on alert. The petite alien backpedaled, holding up his hands in supplication.
“I’m sorry Commander,” he said. “It’s just, sometimes you don’t know who you can trust.” The statement reminded her of Demetrius. Leza felt a sharp pain in her chest.
“What do you want?” She asked, not wanting to be rude, but really not in the mood to entertain guests, especially paranoid ones.
“Okay, let’s get down to brass tacks as the humans say,” Zammit replied, becoming deathly serious. “I’m here to talk to you about what really happened.”
“What are you talking about?”
“The truth?”
“What truth are you referring to?” The bronze-hued alien was really fraying her nerves. “If you’ve got something to say, get on with it!”
Zammit muttered under his breath before saying, “I know that Demetrius was not working with the Romulans. He was framed.”
Leza gasped, wanting to believe it, but not wanting to get her hopes up. “How?” was all she could ask.
Zammit grabbed a chair from her dining area and dragged it over to her desk. He placed a small cone-shaped device, a kind she had never seen before on her desk. He twisted the bottom and it clicked. “That should scramble any listening devices for approximately one minute.”
Leza was truly dumbfounded, “Listening devices?”
“We don’t have much time,” Zammit whispered as he sat beside her. “Have you ever heard of Section 31?”
“No,” she shook her head. “What the hell is all this about Zam?”
“I don’t have time to get into specifics, but they had at least one operative on this ship, and that operative framed Demetrius.”
“Who?” Leza demanded. “Why?”
“Commander Astar, by just telling you as much as I have, I have not only endangered my life, but yours as well,” Zammit replied.
“When, since the cat’s out the bag,” she replied. “You might as well tell me everything.”
“Section 31 is a rogue intelligence agency, bent on protecting the Federation at all cost. They have many agents, spread throughout the Federation like weeds.”
“How do you know all this?”
“Because there are groups opposed to what Section 31 is trying to turn the Federation into,” the doctor replied. “I am a member of one of those groups.”
“What does any of this have to do with Demetrius? Was he a part of your group? Or this Section 31?”
“No,” the Bzzit Khaht strongly shook his head. “Demetrius was an unfortunate victim, who more than likely died after discovering who the actual operative was.”
“And that would be?”
“It’s not obvious?” The medic asked, with disbelief. Leza frowned, and the man sighed, “It was Commander Petrov.”
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Starbase 336
Ward Room
“I still don’t understand how you were able to obtain a weapon of this magnitude Admiral,” Captain Jarod Singleton said, pacing the floor, his arms locked behind his back. The room was empty except for the two of them. Singleton had just raked Captain Walker over the coals again, perhaps as a warm up for him. Singleton enjoyed repeating the various accounts of what occurred in the Benzite system ad nauseam in an attempt to catch those recounting in falsehoods.
Daneeka had to be restrained more than once during her questionings. He wished he had been there to see the Bolian almost take the arrogant man’s head off. He smiled at the thought. The balding man pitted Samson with a doleful stare, but Glover was not intimidated.
He would never reveal Logan’s involvement, or Shanthi’s. Plus, he was certain that Logan had covered his tracks thoroughly. “No one authorized it, and at present no one at Starfleet Intelligence knew the device was gone, until it was unleashed at Merias III.”
“I think the most important thing we have to concern ourselves with Captain,” he emphasized the man’s lower rank, “is the very good probability that the probe is still out there. We have recover it.”
“Don’t worry about that,” Singleton sniffed. “We have agents on that.”
“Then why have you brought me back here, instead of allowing me to help with the search.”
Singleton smiled coldly, “My orders are to detain you until further notice.”
“I guess the repeated inquisition is just your innovation?” Samson huffed. Singleton laughed.
“Quite the defiant attitude,” Singleton shook his head with displeasure, “for a man of your station.”
“A station that outranks yours,” Samson snapped. He stood up, prompting a surprise reaction from the intelligence agent.
“What are you doing?”
“What does it look like?” Glover rejoined. “I’m leaving. This talk is over.”
“You’re not going anywhere,” Singleton declared.
“Stop me,” Samson replied. He turned toward the door. He moved without thinking when the man clamped down on his shoulder. His elbow plowed into the man’s midsection. Without turning, the admiral felt a satisfying groan and felt a gush of air. He glanced back to see Singleton on his knees, clutching his stomach. “Now file that in your next report.”
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