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Fair Mirror: Space Seed

mari

Captain
Captain
Author's Note: This story is a sequel to my January challenge story, Fair Mirror, where the universe sustained a "chromosomal flip" sometime before the oldest members of the Enterprise crew were born -- thus, Kirk is a woman and Uhura is a man, etc. Sarek and Amanda, for whatever reason, decided to have a daughter and named her T'Sol. I may or may not do more of these stories, but I figured of all the TOS episodes, Space Seed really needed to be done. :biggrin:

Fair Mirror: Space Seed

Jamie Kirk leaned forward in her captain's chair, squinting at the blur on the forward viewscreen.

"We're coming up on it fast now, sir," Spinelli said.

"Hmm. T'Sol, any ideas on what it might be?"

The Vulcan science officer stepped down from her station to stand next to the captain's chair. "Unknown. Certainly not an Earth ship; no missions have flown in this region in years."

"Captain, we're receiving a transmission." Lieutenant Uhura's handsome dark face opened in surprise. "It's in Morse code!" He opened the channel to broadcast the syncopated rhythm on the bridge speakers. "C-Q, C-Q," Uhura translated.

"Yes, I understand it, Lieutenant," Kirk snapped. She slanted a look at T'Sol. "Want to re-evaluate the odds of it being an Earth ship?"

T'Sol raised an eyebrow. "I shall be... fascinated to learn its true origin."

Kirk flared her nostrils.

"On visual, sir," Spinelli called out. A dart-like ship appeared on the viewscreen.

"There's your answer, T'Sol. Very old, but an Earth vessel nonetheless. Almost like the DY-500 series."

"Much older," T'Sol corrected. "DY-100 class. They fell out of common use after the mid-1990s."

"A derelict, perhaps," Kirk mused, "still broadcasting on automatic after all these years."

"Or recycled by some alien race." T'Sol stepped back to her station to gather more information.

"Bridge to Sickbay," she said, snapping a switch on the arm of her chair.

"Sickbay, McCoy here," the doctor's bourbon-soaked accent replied.

"What do life science sensors have to say about that ship out there?"

"Picking up faint heartbeats, but nothing human, about four beats per minute. No indication of respiration. It may not even be safe for us to go over there."

Kirk flipped another switch. "Weapons status?"

"Deflectors on maximum, sir, and phasers manned."

T'Sol straightened from her scanner and interrupted. "Some sort of equipment functioning over there, Captain."

"All decks to full alert," Kirk ordered. "Pull up and pace it, Spinelli. I want to know what's over there."

*

Captain's Log, stardate 3141.9. We have been pacing the antiquated Earth ship for an hour, with no response from the presumed inhabitants. Their equipment appears to be operable, yet our hails go unanswered.

Leni McCoy strolled onto the bridge, taking her time in observing the crew at work. T'Sol was absorbed in her scanner, and Jamie Kirk was closing out a log entry. Everyone else was bent to their tasks, although Lieutenant Uhura waved a quick hello. They were still at alert, but had muted the alarms, which were more aggravating than anything else. At least, that's how Leni thought of them.

"Bones," Kirk beckoned. "Anything new?"

Leni joined the captain on the command deck and leaned back against the handrail. "Well, there's definitely a breathable atmosphere over there. Not sure who it's for, though, since our friends don't seem to be breathin' it. About sixty or seventy of 'em, near as we can tell."

"Aliens, then?"

"Possibly." She shrugged. "If they're not answering the phone, you might have to go over and find out why."

T'Sol, joining them, raised her eyebrow at the outdated turn of phrase, but restricted her comments to the matter at hand. "The vessel has, as the doctor might say, 'taken a beating', but with scanner enhancement I was able to make out a name. The S.S. Botany Bay."

Kirk brightened. "So you can check the registry."

"It is not listed," T'Sol said, shaking her head slightly. "However, records from that time period are fragmentary at best. It was near the end of the era of the so-called 'world wars'."

Leni and Jamie exchanged a look. "The Eugenics Wars," Leni said. "Dark, dark time... we've still got laws on the books to stop those sort of atrocities ever happening again."

"Humanity's attempt to improve the species through selective breeding," T'Sol began.

"Hmph," Leni interrupted. "As if Vulcans can say anything about selective breeding. Y'all may be secretive, but I know enough to know superior strength and intellect doesn't just crop up in an entire species at once."

"Touché, doctor."

"Besides which," she continued, warming to the idea of an intellectual scuffle, "it wasn't the entire race. It was a group of rogue scientists, mucking about in DNA before they had the full picture, thinkin' they were bein' logical--"

"You can hardly blame logic for the flawed actions of an emotional species," T'Sol interrupted.

Jamie's voice overrode them both. "Enough, ladies. As you were." She got up out of her chair. Leni recognized the signs of "too much talk, not enough action". "Helm, lock on with tractors."

"Locking on, aye."

"Ms. T'Sol, you have the bridge. Doctor, care to join me in a landing party?"

"Hey, when I said you could go visitin', I didn't mean you could take me along," Leni protested.

"And I didn't mean you had a choice," Kirk grinned, bowing the doctor ahead of her into the turbolift. As Leni held the door open, the captain spun back, her ponytail flying behind her. "I'll need someone familiar with late 20th century history. Call that historian down, we'll give him something to do for a change. What's his name, McGivers?" Kirk pronounced it phonetically, with a short i.

"Mac-guy-vers," T'Sol corrected.

Kirk nodded shortly as the turbolift closed on them. "And Scotty too!" She twisted the control and told the computer, "Deck Six."

Leni bided her time until Jamie relaxed back against the wall. "So, how're you feeling?"

Jamie shot a dirty look at her. "I feel fine."

"Just askin'." Leni tapped her toe briefly. "You sure you should go over there?"

"You just said it was safe."

"I just said there was breathable air. That's a whole different thing from safe, James, and you know it."

"I'll be fine." Jamie grinned wickedly. "Besides, you'll be right there to keep an eye on me."

"Your faith in me is... terrifying."

*

"The following personnel report to Transporter Room One: Engineer Scott, Lieutenant McGivers. Please acknowledge."

Daniel McGivers stopped in mid-brushstroke and pursed his lips. He was off-duty. Moreover, nobody had ever required his presence before, not a library specialist with a history degree focused on the late atomic age. Why on Earth now?

He set the brush down and reached over to his desktop terminal. "McGivers, on my way," he said, then switched the comm off. "I suppose you'll just have to wait for me to come back," he told the likeness of Arnold Schwarzenegger as Conan the Barbarian.

*

The away team beamed into an open area on the Botany Bay. Scott was headed for the nearest computer console almost before she was fully resolved. McCoy took a moment to shiver before cautiously looking around.

McGivers pirouetted slowly in the dimly lit chamber, taking in the glowing rows of glass-fronted cabinets. Each one held what appeared to be a human being.

"Bones, you've got to be kidding me," Kirk said.

"I tell you, I feel it every time you make me scatter my molecules across space," the doctor grumped. "There's gotta be a more civilized way to go from one place to another."

"You're just an old-fashioned girl, aren't you?" The captain turned to Scott. "Report, Scotty?"

"Definitely Earth-type, sir, an' definitely late twentieth century. Old-type atomic power, and the computers are run by... I think they called 'em transistors."

"Don't we have transistors?"

"Same name, similar purpose, totally different animal," Scott shook her head. Her freckled nose wrinkled. "Amazin' it lasted this long, but I suppose that's what it was built for. I'd love to take it down to parts and see how it works."

"Ha, maybe later," Kirk smiled.

"Captain, it's a sleeper ship," McGivers interrupted.

"Suspended animation?" she said, peering into the nearest bunk.

"Mm-hmm," the historian agreed. "Necessary because of the long travel time between planets, pre-warp. In fact, until around 2018 ships couldn't even reach near-relativistic speeds."

"And those had their own problems," McCoy added.

"Right. I've seen old photographs of these. They were usually timed to wake the crew when they reached their destination."

"So either they haven't reached their destination yet," the captain mused, "or they didn't have one set. Their automated call signal might support that theory. Do you suppose they're still alive, Bones?"

"After all this time?" she said. "Well, theoretically possible. Most of them have those absurdly slow heartbeats I picked up earlier. But that's no guarantee."

"I found the light switch," Scott called out, and suddenly the room was bright as daylight.

The bodies in the suspended animation chambers came into sharp relief, and McGivers gasped in surprise. "What beautiful people!" he said, walking around to get a better look.

"I've got a new reading, James," McCoy muttered. "Someone's breathing."

The very next bunk McGivers looked at contained a hawkish, tawny man -- and he was breathing. "Captain! Doctor!"

The two women hurried over, Scott just steps behind them, to crowd around the chamber. McGivers stared at the handsome man, barely listening to the others.

Kirk frowned. "Scotty, what did you do?"

"Beats me! The lights must've triggered something."

"Heartbeat's increasing, respiration beginning," McCoy said, running her scanner along the length of his body. "We might have a live one."

"None of the others are coming around," Scott said. "Perhaps he was programmed to be first."

"The leader?" Kirk said. Then, sharply, "Lieutenant! Could this man be the leader?"

McGivers jumped. "Oh, yes sir. The leader was often set to revive first, to decide whether conditions warranted revival of the others."

"His heartbeat is stabilizing now," McCoy reported. "He's breathing almost normally."

"He looks like a Sikh," McGivers murmured. "Northern Indian, Pakistani maybe." He refrained from commenting on the man's impressive musculature.

Scott had continued looking around at the others in the chamber. "They're all mixed types, black, white, Hispanic and all kinds of Asiatic. Amazin' cross-section of Earth."

"Uh-oh."

All eyes clapped onto the doctor. "What is it?" Kirk snapped.

"Something's going wrong in there. His heartbeat is dropping, respiration is -- well, look at him." The man was obviously struggling to breathe.

"Should we try to get him out?"

Scott dropped to one knee beside the others. "I've no idea how to open these bunks, Captain."

"If we don't get him out," McCoy said grimly, "he'll die within seconds."

Kirk swung the flashlight out of her toolbelt and slammed it into the glass -- which, fortunately, actually was glass and not some unbreakable material. She reached up inside and found the bunk locks, snapped them open, and pulled the door down. McGivers stepped up to help bring the man out into the freshly recycled air.

McCoy pushed the historian out of the way, digging through her medical kit at the same time and slapping monitors and stabilizers onto the man's chest. His long eyelashes fluttered, revealing a glimpse of golden-brown eyes. His mouth worked as he attempted to speak.

The captain leaned in, placing her ear directly next to the man's mouth. "How long?" she repeated. "How long have you been asleep?" The man nodded briefly, once. "About two centuries."

"That's enough talking," McCoy said, pushing Kirk away. "We have to get to sickbay."

Kirk nodded and flipped open her communicator. "Kirk to transporter room. Beam back Dr. McCoy and the patient next to her, and have a medical team meet them with a stretcher. Kirk out."

McGivers watched as the man and the doctor dissolved in a blur of sparkles, then turned to the captain. "What now, sir?"

Kirk appeared to think briefly about their next step. "Lieutenant, stay here and try to access their records, if there are any. I'd like a summary of everything you can find by next shift. Scotty, get a team over here to help him with the computers, and to learn as much as you can about the workings of this ship."

"Aye, sir," Scott said, turning away to bark orders into her communicator.

McGivers drifted over to the computer console at the back of the chamber. He already had an inkling what this ship was -- and he wasn't sure if he wanted his suspicions confirmed or not.
 
Captain's log, supplemental. We have been alongside the S.S. Botany Bay for ten hours now. A boarding party of engineering and medical specialists have completed their examination of the mysterious vessel. Attempts to revive other sleepers await our success or failure with the casualty already beamed over. Dr. McCoy is frankly amazed at his physical and recuperative power.

"Kirk to boarding party. Scotty, have you found any records?"

"Negative, Captain," the engineer replied. "No logs or records of any kind. They appear to have been in suspended animation when the ship took off. The medical team tells me twelve of the canisters malfunctioned, leaving 72 alive. Thirty are women."

"Kirk out." The captain paced briefly, then stepped up to talk to T'Sol. "Anything?"

"I find no record of an S.S. Botany Bay," the Vulcan reported. She turned to face Kirk. "However, it was a strange and violent time in your planet's history."

"Yes," Kirk mused, leaning against the rail. "We have a lot of unanswered questions about that period. Perhaps these survivors will be able to fill in some of the blanks."

"It does seem exceedingly odd, when you consider that there were very few DY-100 class ships built, and that their odds of reaching another star system on their primitive nuclear engines were ten thousand to one, that there are absolutely no records of the ship in the Earth databases." T'Sol's eyes narrowed in what Kirk knew to interpret as a frown. "One might think the launch would have been significant enough that someone recorded something about it."

"I've been thinking. Botany Bay is a port in Australia. It started out as a penal colony."

T'Sol raised an eyebrow. "If you're thinking that this ship was a penal deportation vessel, I must point out that that is illogical. Earth was quite violent at that time, on the verge of a Dark Age. A group of criminals would have been dealt with much more... expeditiously, than sending them out on an expensive sleeper ship."

"Yes, you have a point. So what's your theory?" Hazel eyes met brown in the pause, until T'Sol looked away.

"A theory would require some facts, Captain," the Vulcan demurred. "We have precious few of those at the moment."

"Does that irritate you, T'Sol?"

"Irritation? I am not capable of that emotion."

"Mm-hmm. My apologies. You suspect some danger, though?"

It never failed to amuse Kirk, the way Vulcans had perfected the "duh" look. T'Sol bent it on her now. "There is always danger in the unknown, Captain."

"All right. Helm, rig for towing and plot a course for Starbase Twelve. Best speed."

"Aye, sir," the helmsman responded.

"Work on getting your facts, T'Sol." Kirk strode over to the turbolift. "I'll be checking on our... guest."

*

Down in sickbay, the man from the sleeper ship was still asleep. His life signs, however, were not only stable, but better than most humans in perfect health. Dr. McCoy dismissed a medtech absentmindedly as she noted the latest readings.

"Will he live, Bones?"

The captain's voice startled the doctor, and she turned to look up at the taller woman. "Almost certainly."

"My compliments."

McCoy's mouth quirked up. "Ha. I'm good, but not that good. No, there's something in this man that won't accept death. Look. His vitals are incredible. And even after two hundred years in suspended animation, his muscle tone is... well, he could probably lift you, me and half the engineering staff with one arm."

Kirk looked down at herself. "You sure about that?"

"You want me to put you on a diet again?"

"Uh, no thanks. So do you think he's one of those... genetically engineered humans?"

McCoy grimaced. "We'll see when he wakes up. If his mind matches his body..." She headed for her office, Kirk trailing behind, but they were stopped by Lieutenant McGivers.

"Doctor, will he live?" the historian asked, barely giving the two women a glance in favor of staring at the sleeping man.

"It appears he will, Lieutenant." She continued out of the room. Behind her, Kirk paused.

"I'd like to speak with you, Lieutenant."

McCoy busied herself with reports, looking uninterested while keeping an ear on the chewing-out that was certainly about to happen.

"If I asked you to rate your performance on the landing party today--"

McGivers, unwisely, interrupted the captain. "I know, sir, but I got so wrapped up in the history of--"

"The history?" Kirk asked sharply. "Lieutenant, I know you haven't had much opportunity to join landing parties before, but at any time the safety of the others, indeed the safety of the crew back on the ship, might depend on your ability to give me an answer quickly. To react quickly. If you can't do that--"

"I'm sorry, sir. I'll make a better effort next time."

"Damn straight you will. You certainly shouldn't get carried away by your attraction to someone."

"Professional attraction," McGivers protested. "I am a historian, and the late 20th century is my area of concentration. It will be delightful to converse with him."

"And you think that men were more rugged, more exciting in those times."

McGivers eyes shifted to one side, then back again. "Yes, sir. I think they were. I can't deny that's one reason for my interest in that time period."

"Good. I appreciate honesty in my officers, Mr. McGivers. It makes it easier to forgive mistakes."

"Yes, sir."

"Dismissed." Kirk watched as McGivers left sickbay, then leaned one hip against McCoy's desk.

"Pity you wasted your life on command, James," McCoy smirked. "You'd have made a fair psychologist."

"Fair? Hmph," she replied. "One thing I can't figure out, though. If McGivers is so fascinated by muscled savages, why the hell doesn't he lift weights? He's more slender than you."

The doctor grinned. "And that's why you're in command. McGivers doesn't want to be like those men. He wants to be dominated by that type."

"So I was right."

"Sure. But the irony is, a man like our friend in there would never be interested in someone like McGivers."

Kirk nodded in agreement. "Well, I'd better get back to the bridge."

"All right." McCoy returned to her work, adding a few notations, wondering if the lab results had come back yet. "Sickbay to lab. How'd those bios turn out?"

"All normal, Doctor."

"Thanks. McCoy out." Well. That didn't tell her anything more than she already knew. But she recorded it anyway, then got up to check on her patient.

He was, unsurprisingly, still asleep. She pulled up his eyelid to check pupil dilation--

--and suddenly his hand was around her throat, and a steel scalpel from the antique instrument collection was there as well.

She blinked back her surprise and stared down at him. "Well, either choke me or cut my throat, make up your mind."

"You speak English," the man said. "I thought it was a dream. Where am I?"

McCoy briefly attempted to pull away, but the man tightened his grip on her neck. "You're in bed, holding a knife to your doctor's throat," she hissed.

"Answer my question," he hissed back.

"It would be most effective if you would cut the carotid artery, just under the left ear." She brought a hand up and moved the knife to precisely the spot.

Apparently surprised, although showing no more of it than T'Sol would have, the man dropped both his hands and offered the scalpel to her, handle first. McCoy pocketed it. "You are a woman... a brave woman. I like that."

"Well, aren't you observant," McCoy said dryly. "You're aboard the U.S.S. Enterprise. Your vessel is in tow."

The man relaxed back against the pillows. "I heard a voice. It said I was asleep for two centuries?"

"That's correct."

"Where is your captain? I have many questions for him."

McCoy turned away and smirked. She pressed the intercom switch that went directly to the bridge.

Uhura answered, "Bridge."

"Please send the captain down. I have a patient here with many questions."

"Yes, doctor."

She pressed the button again, turning the comm off, then went back into the recovery room... to remove the display of antique medical instruments to a safer location.

*

McCoy and the stranger were staring each other down when Kirk returned to sickbay. Bemused, she went to his bedside to introduce herself.

"Jamie Kirk, commanding the U.S.S. Enterprise," she said.

The man cocked his head. "You are a woman as well. Are there no men on your ship?"

Kirk bristled. "Of course there are. Men and women are perfectly equal in this century. I just happen to be in charge here."

"I see."

"And your name?"

"I have a few questions, first. What is your heading?"

Ridiculous question. How could that have any meaning to someone from nearly 200 years ago? Kirk answered anyway. "We are headed to Starbase Twelve, in the Gamma 400 system."

The man was, finally, flustered. "And, um... my people?"

"Other than yourself, seventy-two may have survived. The other support canisters failed."

He frowned. "You will revive them."

"When we have reached Starbase Twelve. They have larger medical facilities than we do."

"I see."

"Do you, Mister..."

The man glared. "Khan is my name," he finally ground out.

"Khan. When did your vessel lift off? We know it had to be in the late 20th century--"

Khan abruptly turned pleading eyes on McCoy. "I grow fatigued, Doctor. Could we continue this... interrogation another time?"

"The questions I have are simple to answer, Mister Khan," Kirk overrode. "For example, the nature of your expedition--"

This time, McCoy interrupted. "Maybe later, James."

"I do wonder, Captain," Khan said, turning the charm on, "if I might have something to read. I was an engineer of sorts in my time. I'd be most interested in studying the technical manuals of your vessel."

"Of course," Kirk said, still looking at McCoy suspiciously. She and the doctor both knew the "recovering" patient wasn't the least bit fatigued -- the biosign readout above his bed was quite clear on that. "You have two centuries of catching up to do. Dr. McCoy can show you how to use the library computer."

"Thank you, Captain. You are very... cooperative."

*

Back on the bridge, Kirk had trouble shaking the feeling of suspicion she'd gotten about Khan. As she usually did with gut feelings, she decided to use T'Sol as a sounding board. The science officer was standing, looking at her upper monitor, so Kirk sat in the console chair and lounged back until T'Sol recognized her.

"Our guest seems to be quite bright, Captain. He has consumed much of the non-classified information on Constitution-class starships."

"Not exactly what I expected of a twentieth-century man," Kirk mused. She looked up at the Vulcan. "In your estimation, could he be the product of selective breeding?"

T'Sol sat back against her console, understanding that they might be in for a long discussion. "It is quite possible. His age would be correct. In 1993, a group of young supermen -- and by men I mean humans, there were certainly women involved as well -- seized power simultaneously across the globe."

"Hardly supermen," Kirk said, shaking her head. "They had flaws like anyone else, aggressive, arrogant, given to in-fighting..."

"Because the scientists who designed them overlooked one fact. Superior ability breeds superior ambition."

"I'm reminded of another truism: the higher you rise, the harder you fall," Kirk said. Her attention drifted to the starscape on the viewscreen, then back to T'Sol. "They created a group of Alexanders, of Napoleons. And then were surprised when they acted like Alexander and Napoleon."

T'Sol quirked an eyebrow in acknowledgement of humanity's lack of foresight. "I've collected a list of names and made some counts. By my estimate, there were some 80 or 90 of these young supermen unaccounted for when the dust settled."

Kirk's eyes narrowed. "I've never heard that in my history courses."

"Would you tell a war-weary planet that some eighty Napoleons might still be alive?"

*

Khan was lounging on his bed, nearly done with his study of warp physics, when a slight, red-headed young man came in and interrupted him. "Yes?"

"I'm Lieutenant Daniel McGivers. Ship's historian," he said.

Khan frowned. "Ah, yes. They told me you would have some questions for me. So many questions."

"I'm not interested in all the military things, your ship, those things the captain is interested in," McGivers said, perching on the other bed in the room. "I'm interested in you... personally."

"Are you, now?" Khan asked, his attention already wandering. What a strange century this was, with women commanding space vessels, and men mincing about timidly in their wake. He was not certain he liked it here. Although, there was one thing he did like about this time, this place...

McGivers had asked him some question or another, and was now waiting patiently for the answer.

"I am tired," Khan announced. "I would prefer to talk about this later."

"If you're concerned that I'll tell the captain who you are, I--"

Khan quelled the historian with a sharp look. Who he was -- what did this boy know? What had he said just now? "And why should your captain be so concerned with who I am?" he asked coolly.

"Well, I -- I suppose the statute of limitations has run out, but certainly Khan Noonien Singh would still be considered a threat by the authorities--"

"Leave me now," Khan ordered. "Say nothing, and I will request your presence when it is required again."

McGivers nodded mutely, taking the order to say nothing literally. He backed out of the room.

Khan wondered if there were any others on this starship who recognized him. No matter: he would make his plan. But for now... "Doctor!" he shouted.

McCoy came grumbling into the room a moment later. "What? Bored again?"

"Yes," Khan said, turning his full, benevolent attention on the doctor. Unfortunately, she was strangely immune to his charm. "Doctor, why do you wear your hair so tightly braided? It is uncomplimentary."

"It's also regulation for a medical officer, practical, and none of your damn business." She turned to leave again. "I'm busy. If you actually need something, ring for an orderly."

Khan slipped off the bed and behind the doctor, steering her toward a mirror on the wall. Holding one of her arms tightly, so she couldn't easily escape him, he brought his other hand up and removed as many of the pins holding her braided bun in place. The thick, dark locks tumbled down around her shoulders, softening the angles of her face, although not the glare she was giving him. He sifted his fingers through the plaits, unbraiding them, and finally satisfied said, "See? Much nicer. So soft."

"Looks kinda like yours," McCoy snorted. "Let go of me already."

Having seen what he wanted to see, he let her go. "Do stop by again, Doctor. I have benefited greatly from your... ministrations."

"Uh-huh."

He watched her leave, pondering how much he liked a true challenge, and how to include this remarkable woman in his plans for the near future.
 
Leni McCoy pulled her hair back in a tight ponytail, not having the patience to braid her hair again. It was bad enough having to do it once a day; doing it twice because she'd been manhandled by a patient was out of the question. The ponytail would have to do, even if they were having a fancy-dress dinner.

In honor of the patient who had manhandled her.

Not bothering to cover up her irritated sigh, Leni tweaked the high collar on her dress uniform and headed down the hall to the turbolift. A few moments later, she was entering the captain's mess.

Kirk, Spock, Uhura and a few others were already there, Uhura flirting with some goldskirt.

Leni glanced at the table. "Wow, you broke out the colored cubes and the Andorian prosciutto. Are we expecting a fleet admiral?"

"Now, Bones," Jamie said mildly. "It was Lieutenant McGivers' idea. To welcome Khan to our century." Jamie gestured her aside, away from the others. "Just how strongly is he attracted to him?"

"You mean, is his attraction going to interfere with his ability to do his job?"

The captain frowned. "Yes, of course. I'm certainly not interested in either one of them personally."

"Not Khan? He does have a sort of... magnetism about him." Leni reflected. "Kind of like you. People can't help but be attracted to him."

"What has he got in common with me?" Jamie asked, a bit too defensively.

"Well, it's not your pretty hazel eyes," Leni smirked. "It's charisma, James. The reason anyone on this crew will follow your orders without question, or will jump in front of a phaser blast to protect you."

"You and T'Sol never follow my orders without question," Jamie pointed out.

"We're immune to you. She's Vulcan, and I'm a bitch." Leni grinned.

"And are you immune to Khan, too?"

The doctor nodded. "He tried to turn the charm on with me this afternoon. Tried to flatter me -- pulled my hair out of its braids."

"I noticed you were copping my style."

"Yeah, well, it was faster than re-braiding. Anyway, I think he's taking me as a challenge. What a pain in the ass." Leni narrowed her eyes. "Getting back to what we were talking about initially: I do think McGivers could be distracted from his job, particularly since his job is to interview the man he's attracted to. Second, James, and I only ask this because I care... are you feeling any attraction to him?"

The captain's eyes wandered around the room for a moment. "I don't trust him further than I can throw him, and I have a bad feeling about him... but yes, if I'm going to be honest, I'm sexually attracted to him."

"Well, nothing to be ashamed about. He is good looking," Leni shrugged. "Just make sure your gut and your brain stay in charge, not your... lady parts."

"You're a doctor and that's the best term you can come up with?" Jamie laughed.

"I'm a polite southern gal first and a doctor second. So shut the hell up."

*

Khan had left his newly assigned guest quarters with plenty of time to find his way to the captain's mess. He had the floor plans of this starship memorized already; the only variable was the availability of their turbo-elevators. He had also left time to seek out the boy historian, a mission made easier by a passing yeoman's eagerness to escort him directly to McGivers' door.

The lieutenant looked surprised, yet appropriately pleased to see Khan enter his quarters unannounced. The small room, smaller than Khan's own, was littered with sketches, paintings, busts and such, of bold men from Earth's history.

"Fascinating. A hobby of yours?" he asked as the young man gaped. He took his time poking through the varied artwork. "Richard the Lionhearted, Napoleon -- interesting choice, he had a weak chin and was quite short -- and who is this man?" Khan indicated a man in a military uniform.

"He was a bit after your time," McGivers said, finding his voice. "His name was Green--"

But Khan had moved on, flipping the cover off a canvas to find an image of himself, in a Sikh turban on a blood red ground. "Not bad. I am honored."

"I'm glad." The historian stood a bit taller as Khan approached him and stood intimidatingly close.

At least, Khan had expected the boy to be intimidated. He had not expected what actually happened, which was McGivers throwing his arms around Khan's shoulders and kissing him hard on the mouth.

Stunned, it took him a moment to shake off the assault, and when he shoved McGivers, the historian stumbled roughly into the wall behind him.

Khan regained his equilibrium first. "Men, such as I, may take what we want. But you..." He wiped his mouth with the back of his hand. "I would not suggest attempting that again."

McGivers nodded silently, cowering against the wall like a kicked dog.

Khan shook his head. "This century... so strange. I will not deny that we had... people, such as you, in our time. It weakened society. Made the world an easy target for my kind. I see that, in my absence, the world has continued on in its weakness and depravations. A pity. We offered so much more..." He trailed off, until his internal clock reminded him that they were expected elsewhere. "Come. You will show me to the captain's mess."

*

"Forgive my curiosity, Mister Khan," Kirk said, leaning back in her chair as the culinary crewmen circled the table pouring a blue Andorian port. "My officers are anxious to know more about your extraordinary journey."

"And how you kept it out of the history books," T'Sol added.

"Adventure," Khan shrugged. "There was little else left on Earth."

"Save the war to end tyranny." T'Sol, to Kirk's left, stared calmly across the table at Khan. "Many found that to be a noble effort."

"You see tyranny, I see the unification of humanity." Khan still seemed uncomfortable around T'Sol, or perhaps it was just the female hierarchy on the ship. He had focused most of his attention on McCoy during dinner, to her chagrin, and Kirk and T'Sol had been content to let him do so.

But now, T'Sol pressed her case. "United, sir, like a team of animals under one yoke?"

Khan stared at Kirk, who gazed back calmly, refusing to interject.

He seemed to gather his thoughts, then struck back. "I believe I know something more of those years than you do, madam. It was a time of great dreams, great aspiration."

"Under dozens of petty dictatorships," T'Sol said.

"One man would have ruled eventually. And think of our accomplishments as a new Rome, under its Caesar."

"Rome fell," T'Sol said flatly.

Khan dismissed the Vulcan woman and focused on Kirk. "You are an excellent tactician, Captain. You let your subordinate attack... while you sit back and watch for weakness."

Kirk smiled gently. "I promised my doctor I'd avoid stress."

"Ah, the lovely Doctor McCoy," Khan said, grinning predatorily down the table at the doctor, who scowled back at him. "I would, indeed, follow her orders."

Somehow, Kirk thought, I doubt you mean that literally. "You seem to think in military terms, Mister Khan. But this is a social occasion."

Khan sipped his digestif. "Social occasions, Captain, are just war concealed. Many prefer it open. More honest."

Sharply, Kirk said, "You fled. Why? Were you afraid?"

"Afraid? I have never been afraid."

"But you left at precisely the time the world needed courage."

"The world needed order!" Khan thumped his fist against the table, making the glasses of port jump. McCoy discreetly rescued and downed hers. "And we offered it!"

A stillness fell over the table. Kirk's face offered as much emotion as T'Sol's when she said, quietly, "We?"

Khan visibly drew back from his slip, sipped his drink again, and whispered softly. "Excellent... excellent." He seemed to be reassessing Kirk as an opponent. "I grow fatigued again," he announced. "With your permission, madam Captain, I shall retire to my quarters. Doctor, will you escort me?"

Kirk stood as Khan did, barely tilting her head the one inch necessary to meet his eyes. "I need to speak to Doctor McCoy," she said. "Mister McGivers can see you back to your room." Her hazel eyes snapped onto McGivers, who was scrambling up from his seat.

Khan nodded once, shortly, and headed for the door. "Good evening ladies. Gentlemen."

*

McGivers followed Khan into his quarters when they arrived, although hesitantly so. Khan looked at him as if baffled that the historian was still on his heels.

"What is it?"

"I -- I wanted to apologize. They had no right to treat you that way," McGivers stammered.

"It is understandable. I am something of a mystery to them." McGivers squirmed under Khan's gaze a moment longer. "You may go," Khan said, as if to a dim child.

"If there's anything I can do--"

Khan laughed. "You? You are useless to me. You are weak, unintelligent, not very attractive, you hold no power on this ship. What would I need you for? Get out."

Stunned into silence for the second time that night, McGivers skittered out into the hallway. When the door had closed behind him, he leaned against the bulkhead to catch his breath.

Nobody had ever called him useless before. Certainly, there wasn't much call for his services as an historian on this starship, or on any starship. Most of his shifts were spent reshelving tapes and the few print books in the ship's library. But to hear it spoken aloud, in so many words, and additionally to have his intelligence and appearance insulted... well, it was crushing.

Normally after such a resounding rejection, McGivers would have cried in his bed for a few days, then buried himself in research to numb the hurt. But crying would just reinforce Khan's allegation of weakness, and research no longer held much interest for him. Not the sort of research he usually did.

At a loss, he proceeded toward his own quarters. By the time he'd gotten there, the shock and sadness had transformed into anger, to rage.

He'd show that overblown tyrant who was weak. He had everything he needed to get Khan tossed out an airlock. He just had to make his case to the captain...

*

The next morning, McGivers stood nervously before an audience of Captain Kirk, Commander T'Sol, Doctor McCoy, and Chief Engineer Scott. With a handheld controller, he displayed a security tape image of Khan from his time in sickbay. "This is Khan, as we know him today."

The captain had already read his report; McGivers now was being given the opportunity to make his case before the other senior staff. He thumbed the controller and an historical photograph appeared on the wall screen.

"This is Khan Noonien Singh. From 1992 through 1996, the absolute ruler of more than a quarter of Earth, from Asia to the Middle East."

T'Sol raised an eyebrow. "Why did my library search not find this information, Lieutenant?"

"This is from my personal collection, sir," McGivers answered. "Largely print sources. It took me a while to find and compile the information."

"The last of the tyrants to be overthrown," McCoy interjected. "I remember that. But our history books in school didn't have photographs."

"Mine either," Scott agreed. "The classes were supposed to divert us from repeating history. But I always had a sneaking admiration for this one. Even without seeing a picture of him in that paramilitary uniform."

"He was the best of the tyrants," Kirk said, nodding slowly. "And the most dangerous. They were supermen, in a sense. Stronger, faster, smarter than the average man."

"Why do humans continually romanticize dictators--"

"T'Sol," Kirk interrupted, "we humans do have a streak of barbarism in us. Appalling, I'm sure, but there nonetheless."

"There were no massacres under his rule," Scott said.

"And no wars," McCoy added.

McGivers wasn't sure he should interrupt, but felt compelled to qualify that with, "Until the rebellion that took him down."

"Why!" T'Sol exclaimed, appalled.

The other senior officers chuckled. "You misunderstand, Commander," Kirk said. "We can admire the man's accomplishments while condemning his methods."

"Illogical," T'Sol sniffed.

"Of course." Kirk reached over and flipped the comm switch on the table. "This is the captain. Put a twenty-four hour security detail on Mister Khan's quarters, effective immediately." She nodded at McGivers. "Thank you for your diligence, Lieutenant."

*

Khan was in a meditative pose at his desk, working out the details of his plan, when Kirk strode in unannounced. He looked up after a moment and acknowledged the woman who had arrogantly seated herself across from him.

"I am sorry, Captain. I was... lost in thought." He gestured to the door. "My door: locked from the outside, a guard posted?"

"Unusual treatment for Khan Noonien Singh?" Kirk said, her flat Midwestern voice grating on his ears.

He controlled his reaction. "Excellent. You have determined my identity with your computers."

"No, actually. Lieutenant McGivers has an extensive personal collection of antique books." The captain eyed him. "I'd like those answers now. First, the purpose of your starflight."

Khan sighed. These women were tenacious, he would grant them that. "Precisely what I have already told you, Captain. There was nothing left for us on Earth. On a new world, we would have adventure. We would have challenges. I cannot expect you to understand."

"Why? Because I'm not the product of a selective breeding program?"

"While I do not doubt your... abilities, Captain," Khan said, coating the word with enough suggestion to make Kirk's temper flare visibly in her eyes, "you are quite obviously inferior. Weaker, less intelligent. In fact, I am surprised at how little humans have evolved in two centuries. Certainly you have made technological advancements, but you have also become dependent on technology to do your work. You have become complacent. It is remarkable how little man himself has changed. Or woman," he nodded.

Kirk raised a calm eyebrow, evoking her alien first officer, and said, "We consider that a good thing."

Khan focused his eyes on the woman, all charm gone, intimidation in its place. "Believe what you will, Captain. I believe we shall do well in this century."

Abruptly, Kirk stood.

"Do you have any further questions at this time, Captain?"

"No," she ground out. "They've all been answered."

Khan sat back in his chair and watched the captain storm out. He had, indeed, rattled her. That was good. Frightened women made mistakes... and mistakes would make opportunities for him.
 
McCoy was still in a good mood from horrifying T'Sol at the staff meeting earlier, so she wasn't that annoyed when she was called down to Khan's quarters for a "medical emergency". She suspected he just wanted to try to seduce her again.

She was, much to her irritation, very wrong.

"All right, what's your prob--"

Khan yanked her to his chest and held something sharp to her neck. "Security guard--you will allow me to proceed to the transporter room, or the doctor will need a doctor of her own."

"What the hell?" McCoy sputtered. "Is this any way to treat a woman you have a crush on? Good Lord, am I glad men learned how to behave properly over the last two hundred years. Maybe we can get you remedial lessons."

"Be quiet," Khan spat. He reached out and cuffed the guard with his free hand, dropping him to the deck like a stone. She hoped the man would wake up quickly and skedaddle himself to a comm panel to alert the bridge.

"And just where did you get a weapon--this time?"

"They served me steak for lunch. Nobody counts the silver around here, I see."

McCoy wanted to roll her eyes, but was too busy concentrating on walking without having a steak knife go through her jugular. They got to the transporter room in what she figured to be record time, even though Khan stopped to relieve a passing ensign of his phaser. The technician on duty gaped at them--didn't try to rescue her or anything, just stood there and goggled until Khan snapped, "You will transport us to my ship."

He didn't even have to add "or the doctor gets it" this time, McCoy thought bitterly. She was not liking being a hostage. Probably commented on her need as a doctor to be in control of everything, especially her own self.

She was released long enough to stand on the transporter pad, and before she could get together the wherewithal to jump off it, they were rematerializing on the Botany Bay.

Khan immediately started flipping switches on his ship's computer interface, stirring his comrades from their slumber. "Do keep an eye on them, Doctor. I would not want any of my people to have as long a recovery time as I did."

"Uh-huh," McCoy muttered, internally cursing herself for taking the Hippocratic Oath so seriously. If someone did start to fail, super-human threat to Enterprise or not, she'd feel obliged to save them.

As it happened, however, they all started to awaken without any problems; the chambers unlocked and popped open as they were supposed to, and several dozen people were suddenly filling the room, stretching and sleepily asking Khan for a status update.

He filled them in, passing out uniforms to the men, greeting them by name. McCoy quietly moved among them, ignoring their curious gazes while she scanned the lot of them and compared their vital signs to the baselines she'd taken from Khan. They were all exceptional, as she had expected.

It wasn't until Khan had taken aside his second-in-command, Joaquin, and several other of the men for a quick mission briefing, that McCoy noticed the women were all still wearing the gold bikini-and-fishnet outfits they had been sleeping in.

She fastened her gaze on the nearest woman, a pale woman with light eyes and a dark, lacquered bob. "Don't you get uniforms, too?"

The woman's eyes opened wide. "These are our uniforms!"

"You're supposed to fight and take over a starship in that?" McCoy scoffed. At least her own duty uniform looked like one, and the skirt had shorts underneath for modesty. She could probably grab the net this woman was wearing and twist it up so she couldn't move!

"We have superior strength and intellect, the same as the men. It does not matter what we wear, except that we can also use our superior sexual appeal to subdue men," the woman explained.

McCoy snorted. "We don't need to do that in this century. We're all equals."

"We are equals as well," the woman said coldly.

"Oh, so is that why all the men are over there taking orders, and all the women are over here fixin' their hair? All the men on top and all the women on the bottom. Is that right?" McCoy was primed for a filibuster now. "That doesn't sound like equality to me. Hell, it doesn't even sound like a good orgy."

"Pardon me!" the woman scowled.

"I'm Doctor McCoy, by the way," she said, backing off to wait for another chance to criticize these augments.

"My name is Kati. I am the director of the female hierarchy."

"See, you just admitted you're not equal! You're segregated!" McCoy exploded.

Kati gave her a dirty look, then turned away to correspond with another woman.

McCoy kept thinking. The women were obviously considered inferior. It wasn't just the way Khan had treated her -- he considered her inferior for other reasons. But these were augment women, and look, he was coming up and patting Kati on the shoulder like a pet, not like a woman he trusted to be in charge of anything. The other men were treating the women similarly.

So how could she use this to her advantage? Could she get the women to rebel and demand equal treatment? Could she convince them it was better to be considered equal with non-augments than considered inequal to male augments?

But already, Khan was grasping her arm and drawing her back to the beam-in point, to return to Enterprise. Plotting would just have to wait.

*

Kirk was on the bridge, composing a log update in her head before committing it to the recorder, when the bosun's whistle sounded. Uhura was conferring with T'Sol, so she thumbed the switch on her armchair console, answering, "Bridge."

"Security, Captain. Khan's escaped."

"Uhura, sound the alert," Kirk snapped. The klaxons began whooping. "Security--when? Where is he?"

"Transporter room breaking in on emergency channel, sir," Uhura interrupted.

"Technician Dillard here, sir. Khan and Doctor McCoy beamed over to the Botany Bay about ten minutes ago."

"Ten minutes--!" Kirk sputtered. "What the hell--"

"He stunned me, sir. I have no idea how he timed it, but they did get beamed over successfully. After that, I blacked out."

"Damn it. Get them back here."

"The transporter just activated itself--" The technician broke off. The next sound to come over the channel was the whir of a phaser, and a dull thud.

"Uhura--"

"The channel was closed at the source, Captain."

Kirk vaulted out of her chair and headed for the turbolift. It didn't open.

T'Sol stabbed her console. "Turbo-elevators are inoperative, Captain. Jammed."

Out of the corner of her eye, Kirk saw the bridge atmospheric controls blinking wildly out of order. She ran down to the panel to stabilize them. "T'Sol! The atmospheric controls are cut off."

The Vulcan rushed down to look for herself. "They've been cut off at main engineering."

"Uhura, get me engineering."

"Regular lines are jammed, sir. Try the direct line from the engineering console."

Impatiently, the captain slammed her fist onto the switch. "Engineering. Scotty, are you there?"

"Captain!" Scott shouted. "Khan--"

*

The stocky female engineer dove for the console, shouting, "Captain!" Khan signaled to Joaquin to immobilize her. "Khan--" she yelled, just as Joaquin yanked her backward and pressed the two pressure points on her neck that would knock her out.

"What's going on down there?" Kirk demanded.

Khan leaned on the console. "She's not able to answer you at the moment, Captain. Your ship is mine. I have shut off the life support system to your bridge and locked down all of your exits. I am willing to negotiate."

"We do not negotiate with terrorists." More quietly, presumably to her second-in-command, Kirk said, "Flood all decks with neural gas."

"Impossible," the Vulcan replied. "Intruder control systems are inoperative."

"I was very thorough in my study of your technical manuals, Captain," Khan interrupted, amused. "Perhaps I shall leave you to discover the extent of my exceptional planning skills."

He closed the channel, smiling smugly, and prepared to convince the captain of his... superior intentions.

*

"Get a message out to Starbase 12," Kirk ordered.

"Every channel is jammed, sir," Uhura reported.

T'Sol looked over from the environmental monitors. "Captain, we have perhaps an hour before we all suffocate."

Kirk nodded. "Keep working on alternatives. There are alternatives, people. We know this ship better than Khan. Let's prove it."
 
Stardate 3142.8. Khan and his men have taken my ship, discarding their own worthless vessel. Only moments of air left now. Commendations recommended for Lieutenant Uhura, Technicians First Class Thule and Harrison... Lieutenant Spinelli... and, of course, Commander T'Sol. I take full responsibility... I take full...

Dr. McCoy watched, her anger building, as Jamie passed out and fell from her chair to the floor.

"You ass," she growled at Khan. "You've not only killed the bridge crew, but an innocent child as well."

"What innocent child?" Khan frowned across the conference table. They had been holed up in this room, monitoring the bridge, for the past hour--Khan, Joaquin, Kati and Leni. The other members of Khan's group were holding the rest of the ship hostage.

Leni hated to answer him, hated that she'd said anything at all. Especially since nobody but herself, Jamie, and T'Sol had known about this until now. But she couldn't let this pass, especially since it looked like the bastard might actually feel regret.

"Jamie Kirk is--was pregnant. Only a few months along. She wasn't showing yet." She turned up the glare, focusing her grief into rage. "That baby was the last thing this universe had of a beautiful friendship--something I'm sure you know nothing about. She was a miracle, a blasted miracle, and--" She broke off with a sob, turning away to look out the porthole, remembering the awful day that child had been conceived.

"I... did not know," Khan said softly. "Joaquin, restore life support to the bridge. Bring the crew here, except for the captain. She and the doctor may go to sickbay."

Leni whirled around. "They're dead, what difference does that make now?"

"I never intended to kill them, Doctor," Khan chided gently. "I need them to run this ship. As soon as oxygen is restored, they will rouse. Kati, take the doctor to sickbay."

"Of course, Khan. Doctor, please come along," Kati said, linking arms with her. "We'll take care of your captain, and her baby, too."

"You're insane, is what you are," Leni spat over her shoulder, just before the doors closed behind her.

*

The crew sat, lining the walls of the conference room, a handful of augments holding them at phaser-point. T'Sol, Scott, Uhura and Spinelli stared down Khan as one; from the opposite wall, McGivers and several lower officers and NCOs glared.

"Oh, do not look at me like that," Khan said, pacing before them. "No one among you has been injured. Your captain is, I am sure, making a full recovery in sickbay as we speak. It is only your doctor's overwrought concern for her that keeps them both from joining us now." He clasped his hands. "My benevolence shall continue. Join me, and you shall be treated well. There is a place for each of you--experts in your chosen fields, knowledgeable about this century in ways my people cannot yet be. And when the new order is established, your children will be our children as well. Within one generation, all of humanity will be equal."

"You do not appear to have thought this out well," T'Sol interrupted. "If all men are supermen, who will be left for you to rule?"

Khan narrowed his eyes on her. "I should think that would be obvious, alien. We shall conquer... you."

The crew exploded in shouts of appalled protest, until Khan's men brought their phase pistols to bear. Still, only T'Sol remained truly calm.

Khan sighed. "I see I made one tactical error. By allowing you to suffocate, together, on the bridge, I have forged a bond among you. This shall be broken. As your command structure is largely female," he said, grimacing, "and as we have far more use for your females' reproductive capabilities... We shall begin by eliminating your male crew members first." He nodded at Joaquin, who pulled Uhura out of his seat and pulled him out of the room.

"And you will watch them suffer," Khan continued. "Lieutenant McGivers."

The boy blinked at him, startled.

"I am willing to forgive you for alerting your captain to my identity. Oh yes, I know it was you. In fact," he said, keeping his face carefully neutral, "if you assist me now, I may be willing to provide you with what you... most desire. Activate the viewing screen."

McGivers clearly was torn, his emotions playing out over his face. To give in to his longest-held desire, or to remain loyal to his captain and crewmates... Eventually, as Khan had hoped, desire won out. Of course, Khan had no intention of rewarding this weak fool, but he could be useful for now.

The lieutenant moved over to the viewer controls and turned on the screen at the end of the room. Joaquin was seen shoving Uhura into the medical decompression chamber, then turning it on. Gasps of horror filled the room.

"As the doctor is not here to explain, I shall. You will watch as each of your men slowly suffocates. Additionally, decompression will cause the body to swell most uncomfortably. I expect it will be difficult for you to watch." Khan smiled. "After vacuum is achieved, he will remain conscious for approximately ten seconds. After that, he will have less than ninety seconds to live."

As they watched, the vacuum indicator next to the chamber lit up. Uhura sagged against the viewing window, his face puffy, then collapsed unconscious out of sight.

"There's no reason I need to watch this, is there?" McGivers asked nervously.

Khan scoffed. "I did not expect any better of you. Go."

McGivers scurried out of the room.

"It is not too late!" Khan declared. "If any one of you joins me, I shall let him live!"

Stony silence met his demand.

"Useless," he scowled. The screen flickered and went blank. "Who can restore the signal?" Again, he was met by silence. "It does not matter. He is dead. Take that one next." His finger pointed at Yeoman Rand. The tall, blond yeoman stood calmly and walked out ahead of the similar-looking augment.

*

In sickbay, Leni McCoy pretended to tend to Jamie Kirk and her unborn child. The "women's director", Kati, held a phaser loosely in her hand as she guarded the entrance to the hyperbaric chamber room, where McCoy knew they were slowly killing Lieutenant Uhura.

"We have to do something," Kirk hissed.

"She has a phaser, James. We'd just get ourselves stunned and then we'd be even more useless than we are now."

"And we can't bring her over to our side?"

McCoy rolled her eyes. "Believe me, I've been trying ever since she woke up. Some women just don't want to be respected."

The outer door opened, and Lieutenant McGivers came in, unescorted.

"What are you doing here?" Kirk said, getting off the bed.

"I'm sorry, Captain," the historian said. "Khan promised me everything I wanted if I joined him. It seemed like a sensible choice." He glanced at Kati. "He asked me to come down and relieve Ms. Kati. You're needed upstairs, ma'am."

Kati looked at him suspiciously, but having been trained to obey men, she handed over her phaser and headed for the door.

She was halfway there when she was stunned and fell to the floor.

Joaquin, hearing the phaser whine, rushed in from the decompression chamber, but he also dropped to the floor as McGivers whirled and fired on him.

"Tie them up," Kirk ordered, dashing to the decompression room on McCoy's heels.

"Got him just in time," the doctor gasped, reversing the switches and restoring atmosphere and pressure to the chamber. "We're lucky. Joaquin didn't lock the final seal on the door. Sloppy work, but it just might have saved Uhura."

Phaser fire drew their attention back to main sickbay. "Stay here and help Uhura," Kirk said, peering out the door. "I'll be right back."

The captain dove into the fray. McGivers had been stunned by one of Khan's men, but Yeoman Rand was scuffling with the man and he had dropped the phaser. As the Nordic augment attempted to wrap his hands around Rand's throat, Kirk came up from behind and karate chopped the man on the bundle of nerves at the base of his neck. He collapsed, and Rand staggered back, gasping for air.

"Thanks, Captain," he said, swallowing hard. "I was going in next. Is Uhura--"

"I'm fine," the communications officer said, joining them, dogged by the doctor.

"I'd hardly say you're fine," McCoy countered. "But you'll live. And the swelling should go down soon."

"Rand, secure that man," Kirk said, flexing her fist. "You and Uhura will stay here and take care of McGivers. Doctor, come with me."

"What? Why do I have to--"

"Because Khan will listen to you."

"And if he doesn't?"

Kirk smiled. "Oh, I think he will. There should be a functioning intruder control panel just down the hall. We're gonna gas every deck but this one."

*

In the conference room, not having successfully raised Joaquin or Kati, Khan was rapidly flipping through channels attempting to raise any of his people. "Rodriguez? Ling! MacPherson! Anyone, report status!"

A steady hiss interrupted his anger, drawing his eye to the cloud of fog streaming out of an upper vent. Anesthetic gas.

He covered his mouth and ran out of the room, as his men and the Enterprise crew succumbed.

*

Kirk dashed down the corridor, where the gas was already dissipating. Scotty was leaning against a wall, coughing but still conscious.

"Where's Khan?" she demanded.

"He ran out--" Scotty coughed again. "Dunno where--" She coughed one last time, and slumped to the ground.

Kirk darted across the hall and hit a comm panel. "Doctor, update."

"We've flooded everywhere except Engineering. Someone just cut off that line."

"Then that's where I'm going. Meet me there."

*

"Dammit, James," McCoy muttered. "Always puttin' yourself in unnecessary danger. If we live through this, I'm gonna kill you myself." She attached a medipouch to her belt and put a couple useful hypos in it. "I'll be back," she told Rand and Uhura. "Don't get into any more firefights while I'm gone."

*

Khan was monitoring communications from Engineering, and so he knew that Kirk was coming down to confront him. He also knew that, remarkably, the Enterprise crew were rousing before his own people. It was a regrettable vulnerability. But his plans had changed; none of that mattered at the moment.

Kirk burst into the engine room, phaser in hand, and Khan rose to greet her. His hand shot out, grasped her wrist, removed the phaser. Crushed it. A silly display of physical strength, but it did keep her from being any threat at all.

The stubborn woman twisted out of his grasp and dove for the control console. It took almost no energy for Khan to block her path. He pointed to a flashing light on the wall.

"If I am correct, this indicates an overload in progress," he said coldly. "Your ship flares up like an exploding sun within minutes."

Silently, Kirk flew at him, her manicured fingernails extended toward his face like the talons of a hawk. He pushed her away, dodged to the middle of the room, but she came at him again, again. She attempted a flying kick, he ducked and she flew past him into the grate wall behind.

Amused, he turned and watched her catch her breath. "Do you honestly believe you, an inferior, pregnant female, can defeat me in unarmed combat?"

"No," Kirk shook her head, gasping. Her ponytail was rapidly coming undone, golden-brown strands falling around her face becomingly. "But my crew can."

"But your crew isn't here," Khan said. "It's just you and me."

"And me," McCoy said, popping up behind him and slamming a hypospray into his neck.

Khan collapsed with a deck-shaking thud.

"Excellent timing," Kirk said. She staggered over to the console and deactivated the warp core. The alarms stopped beeping and flashing, and she slumped over, exhausted.

McCoy shook her head. "You just sit there and rest a minute. Don't worry about a thing. I'll tie up the loose ends."

Kirk laughed weakly. "Thanks, Bones."
 
Captain's Log, stardate 3143.3. Control of the Enterprise has been regained. I wish my next decisions were no more difficult. Khan and his people, what a waste to put them in a reorientation center...

"Record tapes are engaged and ready, Captain," Uhura said. His features were back to normal, as if he'd never nearly died in a decompression chamber.

Kirk nodded and struck the bell before her. T'Sol, Scotty and McCoy were also seated at the table; Khan stood before them with a full security team arrayed behind.

"This hearing is now in session. Under the authority vested in me by Starfleet Command..." Kirk paused, bracing herself. "I declare all charges against Khan Noonien Singh dropped."

"Captain!" McCoy spluttered. "You may have the authority but what on Earth--"

Kirk talked over her. "T'Sol, I believe our current heading takes us past the Ceti Alpha star system?"

"You are correct, Captain," T'Sol said. Kirk could see the questioning look in her eyes, as well. "The fifth planet is habitable, if somewhat savage and inhospitable."

"But no more so than Botany Bay, Australia, was at first." She regarded Khan. "Those men tamed a continent. I suppose you can handle an entire planet?"

"Of course, Captain," Khan said, the picture of calm. "Have you ever read Milton?"

Kirk smiled slightly. "Yes. I have."

"In the end, Captain, you have given me what I wanted. A world to win, an empire to build." He glanced at McCoy. "Perhaps not everything I wanted, but maybe that will come in time."

McCoy snorted dubiously.

"This hearing is closed," Kirk said, nodding at the guards to remove Khan to the brig.

Everyone left, save the senior officers. Scotty leaned on the end of the table and looked down at them all. "Shame to admit it, but I'm not up on Milton. What was Khan talking about?"

"The statement Lucifer made when he fell into the pit: 'It is better to rule in hell than serve in heaven.'" Kirk grinned. "That wasn't required reading in Scottish high schools?"

"Ach," Scott grimaced. "I never paid that much attention in literature. There were always more interesting classes, like warp physics."

"Jamie's a bit of a nerd when it comes to books," McCoy said, elbowing the captain. "But I can't figure why you're letting Khan go, James."

"Even our best psychiatrists would never have managed to rehabilitate him," she said. "But if that planet doesn't outright kill him, maybe it'll mellow out him and his people, before any of us ever have to see them again."

"T'Sol, what do you think?" McCoy asked. "You're off in your own little world there--"

"Hardly, Doctor," T'Sol sniffed. "I was merely considering: It would be interesting to return to that world in a hundred years, and learn what crop had sprung from the seed you planted today, Captain."

"Yes, T'Sol," Kirk said, standing up and gesturing for them all to join her. "I'm certain it would."
 
Very nice...I love seeing how even with similar character traits, the decision-making processes and the outcomes are so different because of the gender flip. THIS show I'd watch!
 
Excellent adaptation. I could "see" the story unfold. And good call not making The Lt follow Khan as she did in the original.
 
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