The DTI stories are actually running a bit behind compared to TNG and DS9. Time Lock takes place prior to The Fall. (Which does not mean that it's set in the Garden of Eden. Or on Humpty Dumpty's wall.)
Actually the Vemlar IV artifact and the Kyushu incident were something I came up with for The Buried Age, one of the incidents Picard read about in a Starfleet status report. I wanted to come up with something that sounded like it could've been the plot of a Star Trek: Kyushu episode -- because, again, I like to create the impression that there's a bigger universe, that the characters we focus on are not the only people who ever have adventures (and survive them). That passage in TBA was also where I first put forward the idea that the DTI had a top-secret storage facility for dangerous artifacts. So when I was compiling my list of all known artifacts in the Vault and realized this was one of them, I thought I could take the opportunity to flesh out my unseen "episode" a bit more.
There have been 4-6 of them per year in the past 3 years, if you mean the e-novellas in general.
Although possibly a figment of my imagination, was there perhaps a reference to Red Dwarf when it came to one of the artifacts in the vault?
Specifically about the time drive that came from over a million years hence?
Between this and Live by the Code, this is a lot of Denobulan culture. Did anything in particular prompt this, Christopher?
It would've been three million, but once I realized I could use it as more than an in-joke, I figured I should make the reference a bit less direct...
There's another Red Dwarf allusion hidden in there too, to one of their newer episodes.
The device which Daiyar stole is theoretically untraceable to the DTI. Is this meant as a nod to the Na'kuhl's "stealth time travel" from ENT?
The whole cast of characters, the setting, and the events of the story being only peripherally related to the main ST universe is BRILLIANT - and what I mean is, none of the traditional series regulars or ships or whatever has to be present, in order for ALL of that to be present as the warp, woof, and weave of the background of the story. Subtle details like the subspace field regulators worn on the arms, the mention of Voyager’s experience in Parallax...all display an unparalleled affection for and knowledge of the Trek universe that, respectfully, I’ve only seen you, Chris Bennett, exercise with such effortlessness, fastidiousness, and cleverness...OK, maybe the Reeves-Stevenses in their so-called “Shatnerverse” novels come close, but that series is its own unique universe and clearly focused its lens on Kirk and Company.
I’ve got a few questions - why not have all the temporal artifacts been simply destroyed? That would preclude their theft AND ensure none of them get used to disturb the timeline any further. And why stockpile them in only one place?
When do the annotations come out?
Is the sphere in D7 a reference to Seven Days? LOVED that show. It was such a fun way to just accept the idea of a Reset Button and OWN it and use it EVERY SINGLE WEEK. Way to subvert the misuse of that trope.![]()
Thanks again for this series, Christopher Bennett!!!![]()
Wow, thanks!
They're not destroyed because the Federation values science. It's a civilization that recognizes that knowledge is a source of danger, but also of great benefits. We didn't deal with the danger of fire by outlawing it, but by learning more about it, figuring out how to control it, and developing better safeguards against its risks. How can the DTI, or Starfleet, learn to detect, control, or contain temporal hazards if they don't fully understand how they work and what they do? (The Centers for Disease Control maintain samples of deadly diseases so they can study ways of treating or preventing them.)
Also, some of these devices are so powerful and poorly understood that there's no way of knowing if they even could be safely destroyed. Destroying them might unleash something even worse. Plus, some of them may be the property of entities in the future who might show up to reclaim them someday, once civilization has advanced enough to be ready for them.
As for stockpiling them in one place, the end of the story did suggest that they were beginning to reconsider that policy.
Probably not long.
No, it's a reference to the time kettles from Isaac Asimov's The End of Eternity, which is a real time-travel classic.
I was never much of a fan of Seven Days. I thought it was pretty ridiculous that such massive, cataclysmic threats suddenly started happening on a weekly basis the moment they started using a technology that could undo them. If threats of such magnitude were so routine, then the whole world should've already been destroyed long before. It also just wasn't a very good show.
Thanks for the praise! Now go post it on Amazon, please -- the more reviews a book gets there (good, bad, or indifferent), the better for its visibility.
One weird thing while reading this book: I kept picturing Daiyar as being the same species as Jaylah, even though that's totally not how she was described. I'm guessing it has something to do with the similarity of their names.
Just out of curiosity, is the USS Khatami named after fictional Atish Khatami, or real-life Mohammad Khatami?
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.