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Dark Territory: The Needs of the One (Redux)

Re: Chapter Six

****

CHAPTER SIX


Recent Memory


Deep Space Five
(Hitching Post Lounge)
Six months ago…



Jasmine tried to blame the warmth suffusing her skin on the Sundowner she was drinking, but she really knew that the true culprit was Captain Terrence Glover.

He was gorgeous, tall and broad shoulder, with smooth coffee-colored skin, and a ruggedly handsome face. Despite Admiral Glover’s constant lobbying, Jasmine had did some checking through the grapevine about the young captain, and had learned some things about his rakish behavior that had made her wary even before she met him several months ago.

When she had heard that Terrence, recently promoted to captain of the Cuffe was coming to DS5, Lt. Mendes had made certain her schedule was filled with a station-wide diagnostic, and it had limited their time together to a brief introduction by his chagrined father.

The second visit had taken her by surprise, and the engineer hadn’t been able to manufacture an excuse not to accept Glover’s invitation to a few drinks in the lounge. Jasmine had been thankful that her counterpart on the Cuffe Lt. Commander Rojas had become smitten by the station’s Communications Officer Christina Raeger and Glover had acceded to a double date.

The presence of the other couple helped blunt the man’s magnetism. “You bagged a sabre bear all by yourself?” Raeger gushed in admiration, her face flushed pink from her third Salurian rum.

“It’s nothing really,” Glover said, a small smile creeping across his face.

“Yeah right, don’t act all modest,” Rojas brayed. “The captain told me that the only weapons the Klingons gave him were two little blades.”

“They’re called tajtiq,” the captain added. “With them I fashioned a bow and arrow.”

“And you did this in the dead of winter on Kang’s Summit, with no help, and not even a communicator to call for help if things got out of hand?” Raeger gushed again, her smile widening, and Jasmine’s annoyance and jealousy growing. “You’re something else Captain Glover.”

Unlike most men that Lt. Mendes knew, Glover didn’t disavow Raeger’s declaration. “Yeah, the Captain is a piece of work. You remember that time on the Kitty Hawk when we got into a fight with those Retellians after they insulted our ship’s warp capabilities.”

“That was more of your fight than mine,” Glover said.

“But you had my back all the way,” Rojas added.

“With all that fighting going on, when do you have time for exploring?” Jasmine asked, more pointedly than she intended.

Before Glover could respond, Raeger said. “Well, I think it’s dashing. There’s something very 23rd century about a two-fisted captain and his crew. We don’t see much action, or such men, on this station too much.” She reached over and squeezed Glover’s forearm, and then sloppily kissed Commander Rojas on the cheek.

Her jealousy piqued, Jasmine was regretting suggesting the double date. Terrence turned to face Jasmine, a serious expression on his face. “We do quite a bit of exploring, among other things, but neither Pedro nor I see any reason in boring you two ladies with the mundane.”

“Hear, Hear!” The tipsy Raeger raised her glass. Rojas followed suit.

“I understand that Captain, it’s just….I expected to learn more about life aboard a starship,” Mendes said.

“So, you’ve never been stationed on a starship?” The captain inquired.

“Not for long,” Jasmine answered. “Just a little while before I wound up at doing duty at 40 Eridani, then the Beta Antares Ship Yards, Tranquility Base, and finally at DS5.”

“You must have a thing for old ships,” Glover remarked appreciatively.

“And stations,” Rojas added, looking around the cramped environs of the Orbiter-class station. The Orbiters had been in use since the late 23rd century.

Mendes frowned. She loved the creaky old station. There were always things to fix, and she liked being, and feeling, needed. “From one engineer to another,” she warned, with more bite than she intended, “leave my station alone.”

Rojas recoiled, his eyes shifting back and forth trying to gauge Jasmine’s true mood. Eventually the man grinned. “Fair enough. I punched that Retellian Firek for saying even less about the Kitty Hawk, and she had been around just about as long as this station.”

“If I recall, it was Firek Doff that punched you,” Glover corrected with a broad grin of his own.

“Well, if you really want to be technical about it,” Rojas said with a shrug. Raeger laughed.

“I could listen to you guys all night,” she said. Jasmine winced inside. The last thing Glover needed was his ego stroked again. “So,” Raeger leaned on Rojas, her cheek pressed against his, but her gaze on Captain Glover. “How did the fight turn out?”

Terrence looked at his Chief Engineer. “Pedro, please do the honors.” Rojas hadn’t finished his first sentence before a commotion drew their attention to the lower level of the Hitching Post. The four had been ensconced in a booth on the balcony, courtesy of Slog, the Gorn proprietor and barkeep. He had also offered the foursome a free pitcher of Meridor, a ghastly Gorn beer that only Glover had been mad enough to try. The second mug of the thick, obsidian brew was sweating in front of him.

Both Glover and Jasmine looked down at the same time. Rojas and Raeger leaned over the table. “Damn,” Glover muttered. “It’s some of ours.” A comely Demerian dabo girl was the only thing standing between a young lieutenant and a feral Chalnoth thrice her size. Three other crewmembers from the Cuffe were standing behind the lieutenant. The Chalnoth similarly had compatriots at his back, some had drawn wickedly curved blades.

“This looks like it might be fun,” Rojas clapped his hands together. Glover glared at him. “Come on, you know it’s been a long time since we’ve had a row.”

“Or since we’ve had some excitement around here,” Raeger added.

“Admiral Glover would not approve of a fight breaking out on his station,” Jasmine said.

“I’m well aware of that Ms. Mendes,” Glover said tightly. “Come on Pedro, let’s go squash this.”

Raeger slid out of her seat to swallow to follow the men, but Glover told her to remain where she was. “I don’t want you ladies getting hurt if things go south.”

“So, you’re saying we can’t handle ourselves in a fight,” Jasmine huffed.

“Damn it woman, there’s just no pleasing you is there?” Glover exclaimed. Mendes smirked. Terrence was cute when he got angry, his broad nostrils flaring, his full lips quivering.

“Fine,” she exhaled, playing at being outraged. “The little women will do the gathering while the manly men go hunting.”

Terrence rolled his eyes, but didn’t respond to her jab. Instead he tapped Pedro on the shoulder. “Let’s go Mr. Rojas.”
*****


“Captain, not only did Dog Breath just insult you, but your entire blood line,” Lt. Dryer said, her face a mask of anger. “Chalnoth culture demands a response.”

Glover sighed. Keeping one eye on the Chalnoth glowering before him, Terrence said, “We’re not on Chalna. How did you become such an expert on Chalnoth culture anyway?”

“I do more than just fire a phaser sir,” Dryer remarked. “A lot more,” she said more loudly for the benefit of the Chalnoth. The tusked, lupine alien laughed.

“If you had wanted to return to my bedchamber in the place of the dabo girl you should’ve told me so,” he crowed. A dozen other Chalnoth guffawed behind him. Terrence tamped down his rising anger.

The captain had quickly extricated the Demerian from between Dryer and the Chalnoth named Garq. The frightened, half-dressed attendant clutched herself by the bar. The massive Slog leaned over the bar top, cradling an old style phaser rifle in his clawed hands.

A security team was already rushing in as several patrons were hastily making their exits. The majority remained at their seats, transfixed by the scene unfolding before them, many with expectant, almost predatory gazes.

Glover had waved for the station’s Security Chief to stand down while he tried to defuse the heated argument.

“Nyota, do you mind telling me what just happened here?”

“He,” she pointed, “Dog Breath tried to force that dabo girl back to his barge.”

“Is that true?” Glover asked the Chalnoth.

“I don’t answer to you human!” Garq spat. “The Chalnoth don’t recognize Federation law!” He thumped his barrel-chest, and the other Chalnoth snarled in agreement.

“You will respect Federation law while you are on this station,” Glover said with quiet resolve. “Now, is the lieutenant’s claim true?”

Garq shrugged. “I merely wanted to cap off another successful night at the Dabo wheel.”

“You had no right putting your paws on her!” Dryer said. Pedro, standing on the captain’s other side, nodded in affirmation. Garq looked down at his hands, in confusion.

“These aren’t paws,” he stared at Dryer a few seconds, with the realization dawning slowly that he had just been insulted. “You will pay for that human!” He charged.

“Damn,” Glover whispered as he ducked low, ramming his shoulder into the Chalnoth’s midsection. The lupine alien went down hard. The other Chalnoth sprang into action, one leaping over Garq’s back, pinning Glover beneath the gasping canid.

Glover flipped Garq off of him, but kept low to the ground. A melee had already broken out in the Hitching Post, replete with flying chairs and tables, shattering glass, and the sounds of running, screaming, and insane laughter.

Terrence moved quickly, capping as many Chalnoth at the knees as possible. He fell to the ground, courtesy of a double ax handle blow to his back. Recovering quickly enough to avoid the boot rushing to smash his face, Glover reached up and thrust his fist hard into the unbalanced assailant’s crotch. The Chalnoth yelped, and Terrence decided it was time to stand up and fight.

A large mass bumped against him, knocking him out of the path of a flying chair. A strong hand stopped Glover from tumbling into a shard-filled table. The captain whipped his head around. Pedro, blood trailing from his broken nose, was grinning ear to ear. “Just like old times eh?”
****
 
Re: Chapter Six

*****


Present


USS Cuffe
(Holodeck)


“I can’t believe you’ve still got a bee up your bonnet about that scrape seven months ago?” Terrence exclaimed.

“It’s not that at all,” Jasmine replied hotly. “If you want to prove your manhood you didn’t have to wreck my station to do it!”

“I tried to stop that fight from breaking out.” The captain protested.

“And what a bang up job you did,” Jasmine retorted.

“There’s just no winning with you is there?” Terrence threw up his hands in defeat. “First you say all I do is fight, and then when I try to play peacemaker you can’t abide that either.”

“You should’ve let Chief Mickelson do his job,” Jasmine said, “Instead of trying to run the show yourself. A lot of people might be blinded by the glare from that fourth pip, but I assure you that I’m not one of them.”

“Noted and logged,” Terrence said tightly.

“You didn’t have to constantly prove your virility to us weak womenfolk.”

Glover sighed loudly. “Here we go again with that. I just didn’t want you to get hurt. You’re an engineer and Christina is a Communications technician by training. Those Chalnoth were rough customers.”

“Commander Rojas is your Chief Engineer,” Jasmine shot back, smiling with relish that her point had been made.

“Yes, but Pedro also spent a tour with the Marines before joining the Exploratory Division,” Glover remarked with equal relish. “Can either you or Raeger say the same?”

“I thought she was Christina to you now?”

“ ‘Christina’?” Glover asked, perplexed. “What do you mean by that?” He looked askance a few seconds before a light bulb turned on inside his head. “You wouldn’t happen to be jealous of Christina would you? Noticed she was a little too interested in my stories last time huh?”

Jasmine crossed her arms. “Of course not,” she sniffed. “I’m sure you probably had a wonderful time after the fight, Officer Raeger binding your wounds.”

Glover’s smile vanished. “A few bruises and cuts, that’s all I got. It would take more than a dozen Chalnoth to bring me down.”

Jasmine rolled her eyes. “Yes, I’ve heard it all before. Fighting shoulder to shoulder with Klingon warriors, skipping across the River of Blood like it was a mere pond.”

“Why are you mocking me?”

“Isn’t it about time someone did? Knocking you off your pedestal might show you the views of people in the real world.”

“Is that so?”

“The universe doesn’t revolve around you Captain.”

“Really? Seemed that way to me,” he smirked.

Now Jasmine threw up her hands. “Of all the egotistical, insufferable beings I’ve ever met…”

“Don’t forget handsome,” Terrence interjected. “You do find me attractive don’t you? Are you really flustered because of that?”

“I’m even going to dignify that asinine come-on with a response,” Jasmine pressed the padd against his chest. “You can read this on your own.” She turned away from him and stomped toward the holodeck’s arch.

Glover tossed the padd into the artificial sand. “Jasmine?” He called out, using his command voice. The woman stopped instantly. She cocked her head around. Glover, momentarily at a loss for words, transfixed by the fire flashing in the woman’s amber eyes, finally got out, “Well…actually you did respond to my observation. By avoiding answering the question.”

She hissed before activating the door release. A pensive Lt. Dryer was standing in the door way, a bottle of wine in one hand and two glasses in the other. She gingerly held them up. “These are for you,” she squeaked, a pinched look on her face. “A gift from the Admiral.”

“I don’t want to spend another minute alone with this man, much less share a drink with him. The apple definitely fell far from the tree,” Jasmine said before storming out of the holodeck and down the corridor.

Dryer still held the bottle and glasses aloft. The young woman was clearly at a loss for words. “How about it sir?” She finally said, a smile of relief brightening her face.

“Some other time Nyota,” Glover said brushing by the woman. “But you can keep the holoprogram running if you wish. It would be nice if at least someone else got some enjoyment out of it besides my father.” He stalked out of the arch and down the hallway in the opposite direction of the retreating Lt. Mendes.
****
 
Re: Chapter Six

You do write Nyota well. :) And Jasmine and Terrence is an ill-starred romance. This is one of those stories that you really can get more and more out of with repeated readings.
 
Re: Chapter Six

DavidFalkayn said:
You do write Nyota well. :) And Jasmine and Terrence is an ill-starred romance. This is one of those stories that you really can get more and more out of with repeated readings.

Thank you Dave for lending me Nyota. She's a great character and she's added a lot of dimension to Captain Glover and the crew of the Cuffe.
 
Re: Chapter Six

****

USS Cuffe
(Captain’s Quarters)


Lt. Commander Pell Ojana stifled a yawn.

“Sorry about waking you up,” Glover said, an embarrassed grimace on his face. “Rough day?”

“The usual,” the auburn-haired Bajoran shrugged. “Obviously you’ve had a more hectic day than I have. I haven’t heard from you in weeks.” She slowly rubbed the sleepiness from her eyes.

“Sorry about that too,” The captain added. “Things have been busy around here.”

“I heard about Captain Diaz,” Pell said sympathetically. “Don’t take it personal.” Pell had also served under Diaz on the Cuffe, but she had been promoted the First Officer’s billet on the Chevalier shortly before Terrence’s arrival.

“You know it’s too late for that,” Glover said grimly. “The captain and I will cross swords again, and the next time will be different. But I really didn’t contact you to talk about that.”

“Really?” Pell leaned forward into her monitor’s sensor, fully awake. Her ridged nose crinkled, and her eyes lit up with curiosity. “So, what’s on your mind?”

The captain parted his lips, but found he couldn’t speak. Struggling to convert his thoughts to words, the captain tried another route. “I take it that you and Lt. Sandhurst are still an item?”

Pell’s glow quickly dampened. “Not…quite.”

“Finally came to your senses and realized you were too good for him?” Glover tried to say jovially, even though he knew that was how he felt deep down. Sandhurst was another Cuffe alum. He had served as acting Chief Engineer under Diaz when Terrence had been XO. He had never quite warmed to the man; never felt he had much of a backbone.

Though Sandhurst had acquitted himself fairly well in his final mission aboard the Cuffe, revealing a steeliness that showed the man had potential to be more.

“Were you really so concerned about my relationship with Donald that you called me in the dead of night watch?” Pell’s deep green eyes widened with disbelief.

“Well…you are my friend,” Glover said weakly.

“Sure that it isn’t something else?” Pell pursed her lips. “Donald told me all about the other Ojana from the Mirror Universe. He told me everything.”

Damn that man, Glover clenched his fist together. On Sandhurst’s last mission aboard the ship, the Cuffe had encountered a duplicate Pell from another quantum reality, a literal inverse version of the Ojana Terrence had known since he was a teenager.

And the woman, so like his friend, had stirred feelings inside Terrence that led him to partake in objectionable behavior, an embarrassing make out session that had been interrupted by Sandhurst. The engineer would also become involved with the Mirror Pell during her time aboard the ship.

Glover hadn’t known how to broach his behavior with the alternate Pell to his old friend, and he was hoping that Sandhurst would let the matter lie. But the man and his damnable need for full disclosure had made things more complicated than they needed to be.

Not wanting to relive the embarrassing episode, Glover pressed forward. “Actually Pell…I contacted you to discuss a woman…not you,” he added quickly.

Ojana regarded him silently for a few moments. Terrence began to fidget, not certain what the Bajoran was thinking. Would she press him for his accounting of his near tryst with her doppelganger? Would she force him to reveal his latent attraction for her? Would Pell discover, as Glover eventually had, that part of his animus for Sandhurst was born from jealousy over the special place the engineer held in Pell’s heart, a place higher than even their decades-long friendship?

Glover held his breath, feeling as if he was standing on a precipice, and on the verge of losing one of his closest friends. Pell’s brow beetled in concentration. She’s struggling with this too, the captain realized. Over a minute later, Pell’s expression lightened, and she smiled. “Who is she…this time?”

Terrence was glad that Pell had decided not to open a door he wasn’t sure they could close again. He sighed. “Her name is Jasmine. And right now I really, really need a woman’s advice…”
****


USS Cuffe
(Deck Nine, Corridor Ten)


Lt. Dryer tore down the corridor, oblivious to the startled onlookers she rushed past, and even those she bumped into. She pressed on, not even looking back. She wanted to keep running until she found somewhere she could hide for a decade or two, or perhaps until the furnace roared within her had been extinguished.

She burned with anger, embarrassment, and shame. Nyota couldn’t believe that she had actually lied to Captain Glover’s father, and then contemplated having a catfight with Lt. Mendes over the captain like he was a Tilarean rodent.

She had really outdone herself, and she wasn’t sure how she could explain it to the captain or even to herself once the world slowed down enough for Nyota to come back to her senses.

A strong hand grasped her arm, stopping her momentum. The wine glasses in her hand fell on the floor. With a small growl, Dryer’s security training took over. She jabbed her forearm up against the assailant’s throat, driving the larger person against the wall.

“What are you doing Lieutenant?” A female voice shrieked.

“Let him go!” Cried another. Nyota shook her head, to clear the red veil that had suddenly encased her mind.

She stepped back immediately. “I’m so sorry!” Dryer apologized. Lt. Shane Hardcastle, Cuffe’s chief Flight Control Officer, was massaging his throat, gasping for air. She moved towards him to see if he was alright, but he waved her away. He inhaled several big gulps of air before the reddishness began to leave his face.

“That was some greeting,” he said, his voice raspy, one hand still rubbing his throat. “Been doing the Klingon calisthentics thing with the XO again?” He joked.
In his short time on the Cuffe, Dryer had become fast friends with Hardcastle. Though he was a flight jockey, they both shared a love of rigorous workouts and safeties-off holoprograms. After one exhilirating night of Parrises Squares they had shared more…but that had been a couple months ago.

Nyota noticed that the man wasn’t in uniform. He was wearing a tight fitting one piece that did justice to his toned, wiry form. A sweatband held his damp black hair out of his face, and he carried a racket. The security officer remembered that Shane had asked her to join him in a game of racquetball tonight, but Dryer had declined. She hadn’t been able to stop worrying about Jasmine, and she knew she couldn’t give Hardcastle the competition he craved. And he would’ve sensed that, asked her what was wrong, and Dryer might’ve told him. She didn’t want everyone to know she was an idiot.

Dryer didn’t know what to say to him, “No…I…”

“Are you alright sir?” One of the young women who had screamed before wrapped an arm around his shoulder. She was also dressed in work out clothes. Petty Officer Jean Hajar, Nyota recalled. The noncom was also one of the newer members of the Cuffe’s crew.

Captain Glover spoke very highly of the young woman. Nyota knew about Hajar’s tarnished past at Starfleet Academy, but she had worked with the captain to encourage any grumblers among the crew to give Hajar a second chance moreso for the captain’s benefit than Hajar’s.

Dryer was pricked with a thorn of envy at the closeness she sensed between Hardcastle and Hajar. She quickly chided herself. You can’t have all the men onboard, she reasoned. But Hajar seemed to occupy a special place for both of the men Nyota found interesting onboard, and the lieutenant had to be honest about not liking that. Hardcastle gently brushed Hajar’s arm off.

“I’m fine Jean,” he said. “Really.” The diminutive brunette stepped back a respectful distance.

“Lieutenant, I believe these are yours,” the other woman, Ensign Sophia Detmer, also donning a leotard-like outfit similar to Hardcastle’s, handed the lieutenant the wine glasses. They were unbroken.

“Th-thank you,” Dryer didn’t know what else to say.

“Hey, I see you’ve got some wine, two glasses,” Hardcastle said, his almond-shaped eyes sparking with curiosity, “Headed to a hot date?” Hardcastle, you have no idea, Nyota thought.

“Look Shane, I’m sorry, I really am, but I’ve got to go,” Nyota almost found herself pleading. Before he could reply, she whipped around and crashed right into Commander Kojo. “Oww!” She said, her head throbbing from connecting with the First Officer’s. Kojo stood still, completely unfazed.

“Lieutenant, you seem distressed,” Kojo’s voice was matter-of-fact, but her eyes burned with an almost scary intensity. There wasn’t much, or many people that unnerved Dryer these days, but Kojo was damn near at the top of that very short list.

“No, I’m fine…really,” Dryer tried to walk around the Kriosian.

“I didn’t dismiss you,” Kojo barked, planting Nyota to the floor. “I want to see you in my office.”

“Really Commander…” Dryer protested.

“Now!” Kojo stalked off, in the direction of her office. Before following her, Dryer glanced at Hardcastle, hoping he would intercede on her behalf. The pilot shrugged helplessly. At least he had enough common sense when to keep the safeties on, she realized.
---
 
Re: Chapter Six

---

USS Cuffe
(Hydroponics Lab)


Lt. Seb N’Saba growled softly with displeasure. He couldn’t believe that the soft swishing of the door alerted him to the human female standing at the threshold instead of her smell. He rubbed his artificial eyes. Was his sense of smell leaving him as well, he pondered, or had he been so engrossed in remembering his homeworld that it had caused him to be so lax?

“I didn’t mean to intrude,” the woman, N’Saba recalled her scent almost instantly, Lt. Mendes from DS5, said. “I can come back some other time.”

N’Saba turned around slowly, surprising himself with his response. “No, please…I could use the company.” He was even more displeased with himself when he saw the woman, her appearance turned into a strident array of reds and oranges by his implants. She was definitely unsettled about something, N’Saba could now even smell it in her scent. The tension was so thick on her skin that it should’ve sounded like a gong in N’Saba’s head.

“Well…all right,” the engineer walked slowly into the room.

“I can assure you that I’ve already had dinner tonight,” N’Saba flashed a fang-toothed grin. “I don’t bite.” Now that’s more like it, he thought with pride. The reds in the image spiked briefly.

An embarrassed, pained expression crossed the woman’s face. “No, please I didn’t mean to offend you.”

“It’s quite all right Lieutenant,” the Alshain paused for effect, “Mendes.” She nodded, and smiled. Human teeth were so blunt, and it made their smiles unappealing.

N’Saba sighed. Of course, with his disability he was no longer considered worthy of a mate. In addition, he was no longer considered a valued member of the Sept N’Saba clan, his deformity obscuring even the prestige of serving in Starfleet.

Despite the great strides his people had taken to erase the image that they were nothing more than feral savages, natural born predators that could truly be nothing more, the hunt still held a powerful cultural and psychological pull on the Alshain mind and worldview.

His ocular implants gave him the ability to see the electromagnetic spectrum, far beyond any ‘normal’ Alshain, but they also marked him as different, and that too often meant less than in the staid, stratified echelons of the Alshain nobility.

“So, you’re a fellow nature lover?” Mendes asked tentatively.

“Something like that,” N’Saba remarked. “This is the closest place aboard ship that reminds me of Alshain Proper. The holodeck can never replace the feeling and smell of real greenery.”

Mendes nodded. “I agree. I grew up on Pacifica, and the holoprogrammers have never gotten the roar of the oceans right for it either. When is the last time you were on your homeworld?” She added. “I haven’t seen Pacifica in quite some time.”

“Home?” N’Saba asked with feigned interest. He wanted to divert the flow of conversation away from Alshain Proper. The lupanoid had no interest in sharing his distress with others. He had so far been able to dance around the ship’s Counselor Ellan’s intrusive questioning, and his well-earned reputation for being prickly kept other crewmembers, even the captain, a safe distance away. “I’ve never been to Pacifica,” he deflected, though there was a genuine twinge of regret. It was the hunger to conquer the unknown that had led him to Starfleet. At first his Sept had not wanted him to leave, but the elders had become supportive when he proved himself a capable officer.

Ironically, now when he actually wanted to return home, he was denied. It was the way of the gods he supposed. N’Saba had asked their permission to travel among the stars. He hadn’t realized it would be a continual journey.

The engineer looked as wistful as N’Saba felt. “It is a wonderful place, very warm, temperate, and relaxing. I can’t believe I was in such a rush to join Starfleet sometimes and leave that paradise behind. I guess what they say about the grass being greener on the other side is true huh?”

N’Saba nodded, though he had no idea what idiotic human expression the woman was referring to. After spending years in Starfleet, N’Saba had learned not to question humans about their musings, but merely to let them voice them and move on to ramble about something else. “So…,” N’Saba struggled for something to say. He hated small talk, “How are you enjoying your stay aboard the Cuffe?”

“It’s…alright,” the woman ventured carefully, with another red spike that belied the coolness of her words.

“But I take it you are ready to return to DS5?” N’Saba asked.

“How did you know?” Mendes asked, surprised. N’Saba tapped his temple.

“I’m psychic. All Alshain are. It’s a state secret.”

Mendes chuckled. “I think you are toying with me. I don’t recall ever reading or hearing that.”

“We don’t like to share it. For once, we’ve actually decided not to crow about ourselves, why not let the Vulcans, Ullians, or Betazoids be the big telepaths in the quadrant.”

“Is that so?” Mendes laughed again. N’Saba focused the resolution of his implants, giving him a fairer approximation of Mendes’s appearance. He had to admit to himself that the woman was quite beautiful for a human, and her laughter was infectious.

He had been forced to restrict his amorous encounters to the holodeck, afraid that coupling with any species without at least the constitution or pain threshold of a Klingon would result in N’Saba being arraigned for murder. The Science Officer was almost tempted to flout fate with this human, but he held back. He could smell the scent of the captain on her. Mendes was already marked, and N’Saba knew the woman knew that, but she resisted for some reason. Humans and their foolish reactions and behaviors continued to stupefy him.

“Yes,” N’Saba said. “We are psychic,” he repeated. “And that leads me to ask you why aren’t you with Captain Glover instead of here with me in Hydroponics?” The woman’s image turned into a glob of red and orange, a blazing sun.

“I don’t know if you are telepathic or not,” Mendes said, an edge to her voice. “But that is none of your business…and how did you know that I had recently been around your captain?”

“Alshain aren’t really psychic,” N’Saba admitted. He tapped his snout. “But are senses are finely honed. Coupled with the advanced sight of my implants, my intelligence and intuitive abilities make me as perceptive as any natural born telepath.”

Mendes nodded. “I see, but it’s still none of your business.”

“As you wish,” N’Saba shrugged. “It’s strange that you would like to spend your night here in a lonely lab when you could be spending time with the Captain. It’s what he would prefer you know.”

“How would you know that?” Mendes asked incredulously. “The man can’t stand me.”

“The senses don’t lie. The captain does as good a job with distraction and diversion as you do. After all these years in the Federation, human mating rituals still amuse me. The Alshain are much more direct in their mating process.”

“Are you saying that Captain Glover is attracted to me?” The woman was stunned. “I don’t believe it.”

“Just like you are trying to convince yourself that you are not attracted to him.” N’Saba said.

“But…but he’s so conceited, and headstrong,” Mendes stammered.

“And that’s probably what you like about him,” N’Saba countered. “He’s strong, certain. Females of every species I’ve ever encountered find the confident males of their species the most appealing. Humans are no different, despite your beliefs otherwise.”

“He resorts to fighting instead of civilized debate,” Mendes continued to protest.

“He’s human,” N’Saba reasoned.

“What’s that got to do with anything?”

“Everything,” N’Saba sagely remarked.

“I don’t understand what you mean,” Mendes said. “And I don’t even know why I’m engaging in this conversation with you. I don’t even know you.”

“Which is probably best,” N’Saba replied. “It is often easier to accept the truth from a stranger than someone close to you.”

“There’s no truth here to accept,” Mendes retorted. N’Saba shrugged.

“Suit yourself Lt. Mendes. But there will come a time when you can’t flee your feelings, especially when you are meant to face them.”

“I don’t understand,” she began.

“I don’t either,” N’Saba cut her off. “I merely know this to be true because it’s happened to me, and it will again. That’s the way of the gods.”

“While I do believe there is a deeper meaning, a larger purpose to life I’m not so sure there is some grand plan or creator behind the scenes directing our actions or guiding our lives,” Mendes admitted. “Our lives are riddles for us to solve.”

“Perhaps because you feel that way because your trials haven’t tested you harshly enough,” N’Saba paused, blinking his ocular implants for emphasis. “But we often arrive at moments in our lives when we have nothing else but our deities to turn to. Hopefully your time of trial won’t cost you what it has me. And you will learn to heed their advice when they speak to your heart.” Before the human could reply, N’Saba added, “Please enjoy the plants,” before ambling out of the garden.
****


USS Cuffe
(Executive Officer’s Office)


Lt. Dryer felt like she was standing in the prinicpal’s office again, except she damn well knew that Mr. McAllister couldn’t rip your arm from your socket as easily as Commander Kojo could.

The commander plopped into her seat and nodded abruptly for Nyota to follow suit. The security officer sat down in the lone seat facing Kojo’s desk.

“Care for anything to drink?” Kojo asked. “Raktajino?” After Dryer nodded, a light twinkled in Kojo’s eyes. “Of course…I forgot the wine.” She tapped her desk, and Nyota reluctantly placed the wine and glasses on the nearly empty desktop. A small hologram of a Klingon male with a raised bat’leth was Kojo’s only concession to sentimentality. Dryer didn’t know all of the details, but she did know that the commander had once been married to a Klingon warrior killed decades before, which seemed impossible because of the commander’s youthful appearance. However, Nyota also knew that Kriosians were a long-lived species.

Kojo swiped the bottle, gave it a once over, her lip curling in distaste. “Too tame for me,” she muttered before placing it back in front of Dryer. “Do you know why you’re here Lieutenant?”

“Is that some kind of trick question sir?” Kojo frowned, her attractive, though hardened face darkening.

“I don’t play tricks,” she replied. “Answer the question.”

“I really don’t know sir,” Dryer ventured. “Would you care to enlighten me?”

“I don’t mince words either. If you want to be Captain Glover’s mate, then you must declare your intentions.”

Blood drained from Dryer’s face. For a few seconds she could only work her lips, unable to speak. “That’s not true…how could…”

Kojo smiled. “You can learn a lot working out with a person. Especially a person seeking to become closer to Captain Glover through an association with me.”

“That-that wasn’t what the calisthenics training was about at all,” Nyota lied.

“Maybe not now, but in the beginning it was. Only males are so obtuse that they can’t see what’s right in front of him. Though Captain Glover seemed oblivious to your presence I noticed you hanging around quite a bit whenever the captain and I practiced with bat’leths or Mok’bara. You were smart enough to know I would never accept you joining in unless you had proven yourself to me.” The commander paused, waiting for a response. Nyota kept her mouth shut. “So, I speak the truth?”

Dryer felt like a jerk, but she nodded. “Humans amaze me. Why do you resort to such subterfuge? Life is too short. When Kojo first saw me, he declared his desire to mate with me.” The commander glanced down at the hologram, giving Dryer enough time to erase the unsettled look off her face. “But he had to earn my respect first. Do you truly think the captain will respect a woman that acts in such a subterranean manner? The captain respects forthrightness.”

“Commander…” Dryer choose her words carefully. “I really appreciate you taking time out of your schedule…”

“But this is none of my business right?” Kojo’s smile was predacious.

Yes, Nyota thought, but what she said was, “No, I value your opinion.”

“If that is so, then you will do as I recommend. It will make your life a lot easier.”

“I’ll…uh…take that under advisement.” Dryer said, sidling out of the chair.

“See that you do,” Kojo replied. “Dismissed.”
---
 
Re: Chapter Six

---


USS Cuffe
(Captain’s Quarters)
Three hours later…


Captain Terrence Glover sat at his desk, rereading the first paragraph of the latest warp core realignment report for the third time. He couldn’t get Jasmine off his mind. He had tried to drown her out by working the midnight oil.

Since talking with Pell, the captain had reread the security and tactical reports twice, had checked with the conn officer several times regarding the status of Gamma Shift, each time getting the same bored reply.

Eventually, Terrence gave up. He put the padd back on his deck, went to the replicator in his cabin’s tiny kitchenette area, and ordered a mug of Meridor. He stood by his view port and gazed at the stars streaking by.

The captain hated not being productive, but even more so Terrence couldn’t fathom his attraction to the glacial Lt. Mendes. Her physical beauty was an obvious attraction, and his father had glowed enough about her engineering talent that Glover appreciated her competence.

But the woman treated him so coldly and unfairly accused him of being a damn near ruffian that he just couldn’t figure out why she had taken over his thoughts.

Perhaps it some kind of mind control device she’s cooked up to torture me, he thought in half-jest. Maybe she’s gotten hold to one of those Ferengi thoughtmakers, he wondered. Perhaps I should have Meldin search her room.

“That would really make her go supernova,” Glover laughed, briefly imagining Jasmine stalking down the corridor in search of him, with more bloodlust in her eyes than a band of Klingon marauders.

On his say back to the replicator for his third Meridor, Glover’s door chimed softly. The captain froze, hoping and dreading that Mendes was on the other side of the door. “Enter,” he said with a slight tremble in his voice.

“May I come in?” Lt. Dryer asked, still in possession of the bottle of wine and glasses.

“I think the Apnex Sea would’ve been a more scenic place to imbibe,” Glover remarked.

“It’s no fun drinking alone,” Dryer said. Glover held up his empty mug.

“Understood.” The captain gestured for the woman to enter while he ordered another lager.

“What’s that?” Dryer asked, setting down the bottle and glasses on the small coffee table by the Aaamazzarite sofa. She lay back against the couch, sinking into the amber-colored bio-fibers.

“Meridor,” Glover said. “A little taste I acquired the last time we were on DS5.”

“She’s on your mind, isn’t she?” Dryer said flatly, the corner of her eyes crinkling.

“Who?” The captain said coyly.

“Permission to speak freely sir?” Dryer asked. She began to stand up, but Glover waved for her to remain sitting.

“Granted,” he said tersely.

“I don’t know what you see in her,” Nyota said. I don’t either, Glover thought.

But he said, “I don’t see how my relationship with Lt. Mendes is any concern of yours.”

“In all honesty, how could you say that? After what you and I have experienced,” The security officer’s voice was laced with hurt. Glover winced.

“I didn’t mean it like that Nyota,” he said softly. “But you know that our relationship is over.”

“Why?” She asked, her voice rising in pitch. “I thought things were going good for us…until the Ice Queen.”

His throat drying, Glover downed the rest of the thick Meridor, forcing back a gag response. He waited a few seconds to make certain his stomach wouldn’t retaliate for the strong brew he had just sent its way. Satisfied that he wouldn’t vomit, the captain finally said. “This has nothing to do with Jasmine. I told you several months ago that it was unseemly for me to be carrying on with a member of the crew, an officer under my command. I’m the captain and I’ve got to keep a certain level of distance from the crew.”

“Well, that didn’t stop you from bedding Captain Scott or Dr. Chace,” Dryer said hotly. Glover’s temperature rose at the dig. Though Glover hadn’t cared about propriety at the time, he realized he had crossed a line with both Captain Scott, his CO on the Renegade, and Dr. Nya Chace, the former CMO on the Cuffe. And Terrence had paid a personal price for both dalliances.

Scott, the first love of his life, had nearly been killed when an alien parasite took control of her body. The violation had caused irreparable damage to their relationship. But Terrence’s affair with the married Dr. Chace had been even more devastating. The woman had terminated the fetus they had created, Terrence’s child, before leaving the ship and reuniting with her husband on Trill. The loss of his unborn child was a tragedy that Glover didn’t think he would ever truly overcome.

“That’s a low blow,” he said quietly, his voice hardening, “Totally uncalled for.”

“I’m sorry,” Dryer said seconds later, realizing that mentioning Dr. Chace also brought back memories of how they parted. “I didn’t mean…”

Glover shook his head sadly. “It’s over between us Nyota, plain and simple. I thought you were dating Lt. Hardcastle?”

“Dating’s too strong a word for it. We just hang out together sometimes,” Dryer declared. Glover rolled his eyes.

“Sounds like dating to me Nyota,” he jokingly remarked.

“It’s nothing…serious,” Dryer declared.

“It could be,” Glover said, his tone and bearing at the moment reminding him of his father. “Shane’s a good man. You two would make a nice couple.”

“ ‘Nice couple’”, Dryer teased. “You sound like my father.”

“I’m old enough to be your father,” Glover replied.

“You’re not that old sir, only a decade or so ahead of me,” Dryer smiled.

“So, you’re actually keeping count?,” the captain asked, mockingly aghast.

“Only so I could make sure I had a birthday gift ready for you,” Dryer remarked.

“Really?” Glover said, intrigued. “You were really going to give me a present?”

“Yes,” Dryer sighed. “But I guess I’ll just have to find out when Lt. Hardcastle’s birthday is.”

“Perhaps you should,” Terrence nodded approvingly. “I’m sure he will be pleased.”

Nyota stood up slowly. “How can you be sure he’ll like it?” A devilish smile crept across her face, “Without trying it out first.” The woman slipped out of her Tholian blouse, the sheer, violet garment floating to the floor below her. Glover gaped at the woman’s bare, well-defined torso. “You think he’ll like this?” She asked innocently, batting her eyelashes.

Glover nodded, unable to speak.

“I’m not sure,” Dryer pouted, and she began sliding out of her pants. In seconds she stood before Glover completely naked, the bulkhead lights casting her dark skin in a warm, sensuous glow. “Now that you’ve seen the total package, you think Shane will approve?”

“Damn him,” Glover said, placing the empty mug loudly on the coffee table before he wrapped Dryer in a strong embrace. The young woman didn’t resist.

If this didn’t take his thoughts off of Jasmine Mendes, nothing would Terrence realized as he kissed Nyota and began running his hands along her glorious form, kneading and massaging her at various spots, thrilled by her accompanying moans.

Why he had attempted to turn down Nyota, a good woman who cared for him, who damn near worshipped him for the Vulcan-like Jasmine was beyond him. Then again, maybe that was the whole point, an errant thought surfaced in the back of his consciousness, but Glover didn’t care to ponder it at the moment. He had better things to occupy his mind.
****


USS Cuffe
(Captain’s Quarters)
0700 Hours


“I need an antioxidant,” Glover placed a hand against his throbbing head. The captain sat up in the bed, readjusting the tangled sheets as he propped his back against the headboard.

“What you need is an injection of common sense,” Adm. Glover glared down at him. Lt. Dryer, wrapped in a towel, stood agape in the doorway to the refresher. “Just what’s going on here?” The admiral demanded.

“Dad,” Glover said slowly, his mouth arid. “Wha-what are you doing here? At this time of morning?”

“I came by to see if you wanted to have breakfast, and discuss our route through the Neutral Zone,” Samson said. “When you didn’t answer, I used my personal code to enter. I expected to perhaps catch you coming out of the shower, not Lt. Dryer,” he stared at her. “I don’t understand. I thought you were Jasmine’s friend?” The older man’s expression was a mixture of confusion and hurt.

Dryer looked away from him and then stared down at the carpet in front of her. Captain Glover laughed. “Friends? That’s a good one Dad. Nyota likes Lt. Mendes about as much as I do.”

“I-I think I should go,” Dryer said quietly.

“Yes, I think you should,” Samson said sternly.

“Hold on,” Captain Glover snapped. “Dad, you might have operational authority during this mission, but you don’t have the right to tell anyone to enter or leave my quarters!” Glover slid across the bed, wrapping a sheet around him as he left the bed and walked over to the now trembling Dryer.

“It’s okay,” he said, grasping the woman’s shoulders. “You can stay if you want.”

“No,” Nyota shook her head, “I really should go. I’ve go on duty in about twenty minutes.”

“Okay,” Terrence said quietly. He released her, and the woman made a wide berth around the fuming Admiral as she retrieved her clothing. She quickly hurried back to the lavatory.

“What’s going on here?” Samson asked again.

“Dad, I don’t have to explain myself to you,” Glover said. “I’m an adult, and so is Nyota. What we do on our off time is our business.”

“But what about Jasmine?”

“What about her? Really Dad, I don’t see what’s so special about the woman. She acts like she can’t even stand to be in the same sector with me.”

“That’s not necessarily a strange thing. Both Cardassian and Klingon courting rituals are often confrontational,” Samson offered.

“Thanks for the xeno-sociology lesson,” Terrence quipped. “But I don’t see how it applies.”

“I’m just trying to tell you that Jasmine’s bark is worse than her bite.”

“You’re a mind reader now?”

“No, just a student of people,” Samson remarked.

“And all this time I just thought you were merely a Romulan scholar.”

“Don’t be flippant with me son,” the admiral chided.

“My apologies sir,” Glover said. The refresher door swished open and Lt. Dryer hurried from the room, not making eye contact with either man. After she was gone, Glover said. “Your behavior towards Lt. Dryer was really uncalled for.”

“She lied to me last night,” Samson remarked. “She said that she was Jasmine’s friend, and she even tricked me into having her deliver this wine,” he paused to point at the empty, overturned bottle still on the coffee table. “I bet she sabotaged your evening in the holodeck.”

“She did deliver the wine, and walked right in on Jasmine and I arguing. Nyota came by a few hours later to check up on me, and one thing led to another. We had previously been involved.”

“I see,” Samson nodded. “Do you love her?”

“Hold on Dad,” Glover stepped back. “Don’t be in such a rush to marry me off okay.”

“You can’t keep gallivanting about,” Samson said. “Marriage will do wonders for you disposition.”

“Yeah, right,” Terrence said. “I think I’m pretty well disposed right now.”

“Exposed is more like it,” Samson said. Glover followed his father’s eyes to his hand cinching the sheet around his waist.

“I’ll be back in a nanosecond,” Glover said, dipping into the refresher. He came out in a dark gray bathrobe. “Are you through reading me the riot act, or do you want to put me over your knee or ground me now?”

“Ha,” Samson snorted. “I’m sorry if I stepped out of bounds, but that Lt. Dryer’s deception incensed me.”

“She’s really a good person,” Terrence said. “I’m sure she had a reason to do what she did.”

“Yes, to keep you and Jasmine apart. Just like this little rendezvous last night,” the admiral chucked a thumb at the bed. “But I know I’m right about you and Jasmine, you two and Dryer know that as well. You can fight it all you want, but it won’t do you any good.”

Terrence rolled his eyes. “Okay Dad, whatever.” He lightly touched his father’s elbow and guided him into the kitchenette. After the admiral sat down, Glover went to the alcove where the replicator was located. “What’ll have? I’m in the mood for ful medames and laxoox.”
****
 
Re: Chapter Six

Nyota Dyer is wonderfully wicked, I love it. And Terrance Glover is extremely full of himself. I now think that the humbling he will eventually receive will do him good to grow as a person. I do hope that you will have a chance to develop his and all your other characters beyond this story and the ones you have already written. Because if there is one thing you do very well, sir, it’s characters. What am I saying? You do everything very well …
 
Re: Chapter Six

I am enjoying this rewrite. Nyota's claws came out in fine fashion here, she is a cool character. To echo CeJay, you're doing a wonderful job setting up Terrance for his eventual humbling--he's very much a multi-dimensional character. And Yenta Daddy Glover does not like it when his plans are being messed with, does he? :) And again, I like what you're doing with Kojo here--she's starting to really come into her own.

Very well done!
 
Re: Chapter Four

TheLoneRedshirt said:
Thanks, DarKush. I hope to begin to incorporate other ships and characters in future stories, with permission and an opportunity to preview, of course. Likewise, if you ever have the need for a small border cutter and her crew, let me know.

For now, I'm enjoying getting to know your characters. Leva intrigues me a great deal - one of my favorite characters in this universe.

'Course I'm wondering what's scared the living daylights out of T'Prell!

Sorry I missed this post. LoneRedshirt-can I call you Red for short? :lol: I'm glad you're liking the story and I hope you enjoy the rest.

Leva is a very cool character. He's CeJay's creation and CeJay was gracious enough to let me borrow him for a while and to add a little to his backstory. CeJay also let me borrow Amaya Donners. Dnoth let me borrow Zo'Kama Do'matar, DavidFalkayn let me borrow Captain Shelby, and Donald Sandhurst of course is a creation of Gibraltar's.

If you ever want to use DT characters, or work on joint projects just let me know.
 
Re: Chapter Six

CeJay and Dave,

I'm very glad you guys are enjoying this story the second time around. Nyota is a great character and I have to thank Dave again for allowing me so much leeway with her. She's such an easy character for me to write for.

Dave,

I'm glad you're liking what I'm doing with Kojo. The first time around, I didn't have a real idea about what to do with her character. At least she has more definition in this story than the first.

CeJay,

As Terrence Glover's #1 Fan I take offense that you consider that Terrence is full of himself. :lol: Stars burn brightly. That's the nature of things. I think that sounds like something Terrence might say.
 
Re: Chapter Six

Ok, I'm caught up again.

I'm lovin' the love triangle you have going. I almost want to root for Nyota and Terrence to get together.

I like the development of Samson, ...I don't think I'd care for the man, though. :)

Looking forward to more!
 
Re: Chapter Seven

****

CHAPTER SEVEN

Tal Shiar Headquarters
(Romulus)


“I strongly urge you to reconsider,” Captain Viredis’s nasally voice irritated her, but it was a small price to pay for the valuable information the promising young officer had secured. “The Dromorn could be in the Aranthka system well before Domna arrives. We could retrieve the prisoners and have their Right of Statements ready for the communication nets before Volok realized he had been duped.”

Chairwoman Spuria Helanor smiled sweetly, pleased with the man’s exuberance. She couldn’t help but find his enthusiasm infectious. Their business often required a cold, detached demeanor, but Helanor hoped that Viredis never became as dry as her deputy Koval. The man had definitely lost the exhilarating thrill of protecting the Empire. It was all about power and position for him. Helanor sought those things not by choice, but because of necessity.

“No, I have need for you and the Dromorn elsewhere, Commander Sarpan will handle this. I think it will be a welcome retribution.” Sarpan had been her mentor when she had first joined the Tal Shiar. Despite the man’s glittering record, the one stain on his career had been his failure to detect Ousanas Dar’s nascent treachery while the two both served together on the Chula. Helanor thought it would be fitting for Sarpan to capture Dar, erasing his most lasting mistake. Of course she knew that General Volok’s trap largely sprang from his desire for revenge, but for Helanor it wasn’t about vengeance at all. It was partly about balance-Dar had besmirched Sarpan’s reputation and now Dar would be the cause of removing that taint.

Also, it was about the survival of the Tal Shiar. If Volok’s plan succeeded, Praetor Javel would likely move to dismantle the intelligence agency. Such a move would concentrate too much power in the hands of the military. The rule of the Senate would effectively be over. “The Mellori has already been dispatched.” Despite the recent failures the agency had endured, the Tal Shiar was still a necessary check on the overarching power of both the Senate and the Imperial Fleet.

Viredis’s thin lips drew into a tight line at the news. He bowed his head curtly. The man also had the foresight to know when he had lost the argument. “I await your instructions,” he said. Helanor transmitted her orders via her secure link to the Dromorn.

“Jolan tru,” she said crisply, deactivating the link. Helanor took a moment to compose herself before opening a new link. Praetor Quintus Javel’s long, patrician face appeared on the screen. Helanor dipped her head in a gesture of respect. “Praetor,” she greeted the man.

“Yes,” he said sharply, with the right air of imperiousness this time. He’s been practicing, Helanor realized, her left eyebrow rising up. She said so, causing Javel to laugh. “Actually I have. I’m not quite as good as the Empress though, nor my predecessor,” the man admitted.

“You are far better than that old set’leth,” Helanor remarked with a smile of her own. The Tal Shiar spymaster had known Javel for decades. In the near incestuous world of the Romulan elite, that wasn’t so strange or coincidental. Shortly after her graduation from the Intelligence Academy, Helanor had been chosen as the Proconsul’s intelligence aide for the Continuing Committee.

Javel was one of the legal intercessors in the Proconsul’s office at that time. He had never been much for ceremony even then. In fact it was those rustic qualities that had made him an appealing choice for Praetor. He wasn’t one of the gray, sterile creatures that had inhabited the perch of power for far too long.

He was a reformer at heart, but not a foolish extremist like the re-unificationists. Javel wanted to modernize the Romulan system, to make it competitive with the Federation, the Klingons, Cardassians, and now the Dominion. Most of the Romulan populace and elite had so far gone along with his modernization plans, except for Javel’s call for greater rights for the Remans.

Javel held a great fascination for the wraith-like slaves that toiled in the dilithium mines of Remus and across the empire. He believed they could be turned into an effective military force, a more willing ally that could create a buffer between the empire and her enemies.

Such thoughts evoked memories of the Earth-Romulan War, which many still believed had been lost by placing too much trust in the Reman soldiers on the front lines. The Reman revolt at Cheron had turned the war conclusively against the Star Empire, and the Remans had rightly born the cost of their ancestors’ transgression ever since.

Helanor felt that the Imperial Fleet’s rampant militarism was more of a threat to the empire’s long-term health than the assimilation of the Remans into Romulan society. But due to the debacle at Omarion, Helanor wasn’t able to utilize her usual leverage to sway the Senate and the Romulan people to support Javel’s initiative.

“You have news I suppose?” Javel asked.

“Yes. Our best estimates place that Dar and Flavius’s kin crash landed somewhere in the Aranthka system, after their botched escape.”

Javel’s eyebrows beetled. “There’s only one planet capable of sustaining life in that system if I recall: Aranthka IX.” He grimaced. “They’re probably dead already. Why should you and Volok shed Romulan blood over the bones of traitors?”

“Ousanas Dar has proven himself very resourceful over the years. I speculate that he has entered Romulan space several times since his defection, and each time crossing back into Federation space unscathed. I want to see his corpse and have it verified by genetic scan before I’m willing to accept the fact of his death.”

“The Aranthkans don’t leave much behind, if my foremother’s tales are to be believed,” Javel replied.

“If that is the case, then my agents will dissect them to get the confirmation I desire. They are well trained,” Helanor said with pride.

“I’m well aware of how well trained the Tal Shiar are,” Javel said. “And if you are successful in capturing a Starfleet Admiral, it will go a long way to restoring the Tal Shiar’s reputation, and in sustaining my support.”

“That is my objective Praetor,” Helanor said. “ ‘A satisfied Praetor is a satisfied Empire’, isn’t that how the saying goes?”

Javel laughed. “No, it’s ‘A satisfied people is a satisfied Empire.’ Seldar’s Collected Works I believe. But you know that already don’t you?”

Helanor smiled. “Of course I do.”

The Praetor sighed. “I do so enjoy these games with you Spuria.” He paused, a dark expression shadowing his face. “I would hate for them to end. Make sure they don’t.” He closed the link before Helanor could respond.
****


Mentarii Prime
(Romulan Space)


“You have served the Imperial Fleet well Subcommander Hesporian,” Volok smiled wanly at the young soldier on his small viewer. “I didn’t realize that the Praetor was so firmly in league with Chairmwoman Helanor. I thought he supported my plan?” He absently scratched his chin.

“The Praetor is an erratic sort,” Hesporian replied with an arrogant sneer. “First, this business about Reman suffrage, then his embarrassing attempt to integrate Remans into the Praetorian Guard.”

“If I do recall, the Reman in question saved the Praetor’s life from assassins,” the general replied.

Hesporian grunted. “A wasted gesture it appears, because both that Reman and the Praetor have forgotten the natural order of things. The Remans were perfectly happy in their substation until this talk of emancipation began stirring them up. Perhaps it would’ve been poetic justice if Reman assassins had cut down the Praetor.”

“Watch your tongue,” Volok hissed. “The Praetor is still our leader!” No matter how duplicitous and misguided he might be, the general thought privately. The sneer quickly left the young man’s face.

“Of course Sir,” Hesporian squeaked, a contrite expression on his face. “It is my speculation that the Praetor will still support the military’s absorption of the Tal Shiar, granted we can retrieve the prisoners, and capture the Starfleet Admiral, before the Tal Shiar.”

Volok nodded. “A prudent observation,” he remarked. “I will do all that I can to make certain that scenario becomes reality. It’s time for my contingency plan.”
****
 
Re: Chapter Six

Dnoth said:
Ok, I'm caught up again.

I'm lovin' the love triangle you have going. I almost want to root for Nyota and Terrence to get together.

I like the development of Samson, ...I don't think I'd care for the man, though. :)

Looking forward to more!

Dnoth,

Glad that you caught up. Also glad that you're enjoying the series. Yeah, I like Nyota and Glover too. Sort of wished I had 'met' Dave earlier. But Jasmine's not really too bad once you get to know her. Same with Samson.
 
Re: Chapter Seven

****

Aranthka IX
(Romulan Space)


T’Prell had barely got the warning out before her pursuers burst through the thick foliage, a blinding, swirling crimson mass of chitin, mandibles, and pincers, slashing and skewering from the almost all directions.

The Vulcan took aim at one of the insectoid-like creatures that had dropped from the trees onto a screaming Senator Telaan. But Lieutenant Commander Leva quickly tackled the assailant before it could assault the senator. Leva and the beast were tumbling madly on the jungle floor, struggling for position. T’Prell tried to take aim at the creature, but a searing pain flared in her shoulder.

She dropped her phaser in shock, her eyes riveted to the fountain of green blood sprouting out of her shoulder. A chitin pincer was rooted in her shoulder. She tried to pull it out while simultaneously swirling on her attacker. All she saw was baleful, yellow compound eyes, before her world went black.
****


So’Dan Leva smiled with grim satisfaction as his fist splintered the helmet-like mask covering the face of Senator Telaan’s would be attacker. He ignored the pain that juddered from his fist up his arm from the force of his punch.

The attack had come so furiously that Leva had first thought their assailants were some type of insectoids. But during his tussle on the thick, canopied jungle floor, he realized very quickly that he was fighting a humanoid, outfitted in some time of armor that resembled an insect.

The half-Romulan pulled at the mask, wanting to see exactly who or what they were up against. He gasped when he finally wrenched off the helmet, but before he could process the revelation, hot agony raked across the back of his neck, and then he felt nothing.
****


Narvek pushed his mother behind him, where Shanra already quaked. The creatures encircled him, claws and mandibles clacking. Now that the din of the initial attack had abated somewhat, the young Decurion could see that these were humanoids dressed in insect-like garb. For what reason or purpose he didn’t know, nor care. His entire universe, past and future, existed right behind him, and he would do everything within his power to prevent them from being harmed.

He waved his honor blade at the encroaching horde. He knew it wasn’t sufficient, and so did they. Yet, they hesitated. Narvek wasn’t sure why. A soft whine drew his attention, distracting him.

Telaan screamed, and Narvek whipped around, momentarily forgetting the insect-men. Shanra held a disruptor: At him.

“What?” He asked thickly, confused. “I don’t understand.”

“I don’t either,” Shanra said quietly, tears running down her cheeks. “But this wasn’t part of the deal. I’m sorry…and I love you.” She fired.
****
 
Re: Chapter Seven

****

USS Cuffe
(Romulan Neutral Zone)
Stardate: 488338.6


“Take us in,” Captain Glover said tightly to Lt. Hardcastle at the helm. He sat up in his command chair as the Cuffe crossed the invisible barrier separating Federation and Romulan space. A second later, the bridge dimmed a garish red and a klaxon sounded. “Cut that alarm,” Glover ordered Lt. Meldin.

As soon as the klaxon was turned off and the bridge’s lighting returned to normal, the captain swiveled in his seat to look at his father. The man was standing beside him in the command well. “You sure you’ve got the right codes to cover our entry into Romulan space?” He said soft enough for only the admiral to hear. “And to the supposed crash site?”

Adm. Glover nodded. “I’ve got some good sources inside the Empire. If I thought they had been compromised I wouldn’t be attempting this incursion…or risking our lives.”

“That’s good enough for me,” Glover said. He opened a channel on his chair’s armrest.

“Engineering, Rojas,” Commander Rojas said cheerfully.

“Pedro, ramp us up to Warp Nine.”

“You got it.” Glover closed the link.

“Mr. Hardcastle?” When the fresh-faced young man looked back at him, Glover felt a pinch of shame for his blithe dismissal of the man’s likely feelings for Nyota. But he betrayed none of his embarrassment in his voice or bearing. “What is our ETA to the Aranthka system?”

Hardcastle glanced back at his console before speaking. “Sir, we should arrive in the Aranthka system in fifteen hours.”

“Good work,” Glover said unnecessarily. Hardcastle grinned, blushing slightly.

“Well…thank you sir…but it was more the computer than me.” Behind Glover at the Science terminal, Lt. N’Saba loudly snorted. The captain ignored him.

“Commander Kojo,” he said, swiveling in her direction. The Kriosian perched on her seat on the upper deck, a tense and expectant expression on her face.

“Yes sir?”

“I want you to begin another round of battle drills. I want the crew sharp,” Glover said. The woman smiled. A warrior born, practice was foreplay for her. Glover noticed out of the corner of his eye a few grimaces and frowns from some of the bridge crew.

The captain had pushed them hard in the past week, determined that they be well prepared for anything the Romulans might throw at them. He had promised them, and himself, that the Cuffe would not suffer the same fate as the Lacaille.

“I’ll begin immediately sir,” she said with relish.

“Good,” the captain said, rising out of his seat. “I’ll be in my ready room. You have the conn.”
****


IRC K’Met
(Romulan Neutral Zone)

“The Starship Cuffe has crossed the barrier,” Subcommander Avita informed her superior. “Shall I engage?”

“Don’t be too eager,” her superior admonished. “Your orders are to follow the starship only. Maintain your cloak and do not engage the Federation vessel unless you receive a commandment from me, and me only.”

Avita nodded her assent, “Understood.”
****
 
Re: Chapter Seven

Great chapter!

I'm trying to figure out if the 'insect people' are natives or not. I'll find out, I guess. :)
 
Re: Chapter Seven

Very nicely done. You do an excellent job in fleshing out the Romulans, giving them just the right mixture of affection, cruelty, and intrigue that make them so fascinating.
 
Re: Chapter Seven

Dnoth and Dave,

Thank you both for your comments. Dnoth, you'll find out pretty soon about the origin of the insect people, and Dave I'm glad you like my take on the Romulans. The Romulans are one of my favorite Star Trek races so hopefully I can do them proud.
 
Re: Chapter Eight

****

CHAPTER EIGHT


IRW Mellori
(Aranthka System)


Commander Tremellus Sarpan sat on the edge of his seat. The command chair was situated in the aft portion of the bridge, where he could keep an eye on everything that occurred there. At the moment, his eyes were riveted to the main viewer. He knew it was unseemly to be seen so on edge by his very observant crew, but Sarpan no longer cared.

The Mellori had entered the Aranthka system less than an hour ago, and would soon arrive at their destination. He hoped it wouldn’t be too late. He turned slightly in his chair to glance at the sensor technician sitting in an alcove to his left.

“Lieutenant Numa, have you received any other coded messages since the last one?” He asked, though he knew the answer.

“No sir,” the husky young officer replied quickly. Sarpan hadn’t expected a different answer. If there had been, Numa would be a pile of ash for disobeying his previous order to immediately report any communiqués from their contact on Aranthka IX.

The last garbled message had unsettled him. Things had seemed to take a turn for the worst. After his chief Xenobiology Officer had informed him about the inhabitants on Aranthka IX, Sarpan’s trepidation had only festered for the last several hours. He had to reach Dar; he had to capture him before the Aranthkans were finished with him. The old Tal Shiar agent hoped to at least recover Dar with most of his body parts intact. Bringing home a corpse wouldn’t be as handsomely rewarded as a live traitor that could stand trial and be executed publicly. He would be damned if he let Aranthkan savages spoil his chance at redemption. He flipped a toggle on his armrest. “More power to engines,” he grated. “Our quarry is just over the horizon.”

****

IRW Invidious
(Aranthka System)


“Commander,” the Decurion paused, confusion rife on her face, “Long-range sensors have just detected another warbird has entered the system, on an approach vector.”

Prius Domna shot out of his seat, his face flushed green with anger. The commander stalked over to the helm, almost pushing the woman from her seat so that he could look at the information himself. The raptor with two worlds in its talons, a symbol for all Romulan military vessels, was moving rapidly across the small terminal’s screen.

“Put the image on the main viewer,” he commanded. The Decurion said slowly, “The ship isn’t in range yet sir.”

“We will arrive at Aranthka IX before them?” He asked, shifting his jaw impatiently as the woman checked her instruments.

“Yes sir,” she said after a few seconds. “We will arrive thirty minutes before them.”

“Damn,” Domna cursed as he stomped back to his command chair. Standing in front of it, he stabbed a button on his armrest. “Engineering.”

“Commander Domna,” the Chief Engineer Dhaka replied.

“Is your primary assistant present?” Domna asked.

“Yes Commander, Lieutenant Lukath is present.”

“Excellent, Lieutenant Lukath can you hear me?”

“Yes Commander.” The adjunct said crisply.

“Perfect…I want you to take Chief Engineer Dhaka’s sidearm and then execute him with it.”

“Sir?” Lukath squeaked.

“Question my orders again and I will ascertain if your prime assistant is present.” Domna warned.

“Of course,” Lukath gulped.

“What have I done?” Dhaka asked with surprising calm. “I have been loyal. I have followed orders.”

“I’ve never said you didn’t,” Domna riposted. “But your repair schedule delayed us from arriving at Aranthka IX for several additional hours, and that is unacceptable. Lt. Lukath, I’m waiting.”

Domna smiled when he heard the sound of a disruptor, and then a heavy thud. Lukath spoke again a few seconds later. “It is done sir. Chief Engineer Dhaka has been executed.”

The commander nodded with satisfaction. Dhaka had passed beyond the veil, quietly and without struggle, which fortified Domna’s belief that he had made the right decision. He didn’t trust someone who wasn’t willing to fight to the end. “You’ve performed your first task as Chief Engineer with promptness and distinction. Make sure that is a standard you maintain.” After toggling off the switch, Domna gazed around the bridge, looking for any signs of disapproval for his summary execution of the former chief engineer.

He smirked when he saw that the bridge officers continued with their duties as if nothing had happened. One good thing about living under the million eyes of the Tal Shiar was that it had thickened the Romulan hide. Romulans were almost Vulcan-like in their ability to hide their emotions, cloak their thoughts, or desensitize themselves to the pain of others.

“I won’t let anyone deny me my prize!” He declared loudly, to no one and everyone at the same time. “Subcommander Talveth, prepare a shuttle. I will personally lead a landing party to the surface.”

“At once commander,” Talveth, at her standing console, immediately set to work at her console.

“Once I leave the ship you are in command. I want you to cloak Invidious and try to ascertain the motives and loyalties of our unsuspected intruder.” He pointed at the screen. “Use whatever force necessary to do so.”
****
 
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