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Geometries of Chance - ST: Gibraltar

Chapter 7

The description of the planet was very atmospheric. I know I've said it before but its one of the pleasures of reading your work; the Theatre of the Mind effect! :techman:

A sober and chilling world with an equally chilling secret hidden in its depths, and it looks like the away team are one step closer to it! :eek:
 
Chapter 8

The Prime number is Thirty One eh? I see... possibly.:shifty:

With only one survivor (so far) and one whose recollection of events may be garbled, I wonder if the barely contained rift is likely to cause problems? :rolleyes:

I'm slightly concerned at Sandhurst's jolly off to engineering during a rescue mission however. As a Captain, that should be the least of his concerns right now.

The plot thickens....
 
Chapter 9

Quite a grim incident from Pava's past there. Descending to his enemy's level seems the opposite of what to expect from a moral soldier whatever the circumstances and his justification of his actions leaves me wondering just how well I thought I might have know him. :(

The thought of such a small boarding party taking a starship does, on the surface seem a suicide mission, but with the enigma that is the Baron along I'm not so sure now.

More excellent intrigue, especially with Juneau showing up in the destroyed lab. I hate to say this but somebody ought to 'Section' her! :rolleyes:

Yea, once again I'm hooked and my own writing is on hold, damn you! :lol:
 
Chapter 9

Quite a grim incident from Pava's past there. Descending to his enemy's level seems the opposite of what to expect from a moral soldier whatever the circumstances and his justification of his actions leaves me wondering just how well I thought I might have know him. :(
There was very little morality to Lar'ragos in his earlier days, a fact that continues to haunt him centuries later.

The thought of such a small boarding party taking a starship does, on the surface seem a suicide mission, but with the enigma that is the Baron along I'm not so sure now.
The Baron may not have been created by man, but he most assuredly does have a plan! :evil:

More excellent intrigue, especially with Juneau showing up in the destroyed lab. I hate to say this but somebody ought to 'Section' her! :rolleyes:
Ouch! Ten demerits and no fruit cup for you, mate! :lol:

Yea, once again I'm hooked and my own writing is on hold, damn you! :lol:
Tee-hee!
 
Geometries of Chance - Chapter 10

Chapter 10

USS Sovereign
En-route from Sector 001 to the Pierosh star system, Warp 9.97


Temporal Investigations special agent and rapid response team leader Maya Ixis sat uncomfortably in the seat to the captain’s immediate right. She disliked being anchored to the bridge, and although she realized the logic behind having her at the captain’s disposal, she would have rather been training with her team on the holodeck in preparation for whatever awaited them on Pierosh II.

Captain Rixx, the Bolian starship commander, sat ramrod straight in his chair as he read the latest briefs from Gibraltar. “It appears the on-scene personnel are doing a solid job of reconnoitering the situation,” he assessed.

Ixis looked sidelong at the man, her expression carefully neutral. “Unfortunately, Captain, adequate isn’t even close to sufficient under the circumstances.” She modulated her tone to try and sound less confrontational, though Rixx gave no sign of being offended. “I’m sure they’re doing the best they can, but Gibraltar is an outdated escort ship with few scientific resources. If the situation on Pierosh II worsens, and I think that likely, they’re going to be in over their heads very quickly.”

Rixx set down his padd and focused his eerily serene gaze on the younger Efrosian woman. “I sincerely hope you are wrong, Agent Ixis. Even at maximum speed it will be another six days before we reach that system. Whatever is unfolding there may well have come to fruition before our arrival.” He turned back to the main viewscreen. “They are Starfleet. They will do their duty.”

Ixis exercised restraint and held her tongue. She was still certain that an inexperienced crew thrust into this scenario could only spell disaster. Looks as though we’ll find out soon enough, she reflected mordantly.

*****

Observation Lounge, Deck 2, USS Gibraltar
In geo-synchronous orbit of Pierosh II


Sandhurst had again assembled the senior staff in the briefing room. He hoped to pool his department heads’ skills and knowledge in order to get a clearer picture of what had happened at Pierosh II, and who or what might be responsible. Ramirez, Plazzi and Ashok had been recalled from the surface to attend, while the newly awakened Juneau had volunteered to stay behind and oversee the remaining surface teams.

The captain stared at the image on the briefing room’s wall-screen, a head shot of the scientist currently residing in Sickbay, one Dr. Stephen Benghazi. The image had been taken some five years earlier, and showed the countenance of a man who could perhaps be best described as driven. His receding gray hair was tied in a short ponytail, and his deeply set pale green eyes seemed to burn with an unnamed obsession.

As he craned his neck to look down the table at Plazzi, Sandhurst asked, “So what do we know about him, Elisto?”

Plazzi glanced up from the padd containing Benghazi’s biography. “To sum it up briefly, sir, he’s believed to have been born circa 2309 on the Crevanus colony. He was recovered as an orphaned survivor of the Tholian attack on that planet a year later, and no other family members could be located. Benghazi was adopted by a family on Alpha Centauri and was raised there. He apparently demonstrated an early aptitude for science and mathematics.” Elisto scrolled through the text as he mined only the most important bullet points from the story of the man’s life and accomplishments. “Graduated from Atramis University on Alpha Centauri and pursued his graduate and doctoral work at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology on Earth, earning dual doctorates in quantum mechanics and applied dimensional theory in 2341.”

The science officer quirked an eyebrow as he read. “Well, now this is interesting… it says here that he was later employed by the Daystrom Institute as a researcher into parallel dimensional theory. Eventually he transferred to the Vulcan Science Academy, where he taught for three years, until being recruited by the Starfleet Corps of Engineers to look into the viability of resurrecting the 23rd century Transwarp Propulsion Program. Apparently, the SCE later shut down that line of research after the underlying theory once again proved impractical.”

Plazzi briefly scanned the remaining text and set the padd down on the table. "He spent the next few decades bouncing from one project to another, serving largely in an administrative capacity while submitting over a dozen separate requests to the Federation Science Council for the authorization and resources to conduct research into ‘subspace inter-dimensional tunneling.’”

Sandhurst grunted sourly. “Looks as if he did an end run around the Science Council to put together his little experiment here.” He shook his head as he wondered aloud, “Am I the only one who thinks it’s a bit strange for someone whose background is in astrophysics and quantum mechanics to be heading up a meteorological survey?”

“It’s not terribly unusual, sir,” Plazzi replied. “It would appear that Dr. Benghazi was hired on, ostensibly, for his administrative experience in supervising scientific projects. His leadership credentials are as impressive as his academic ones.” The science officer directed a mischievous smile at Sandhurst. “It’s no stranger than an engineer by trade captaining a starship.”

The captain smirked and inclined his head as he conceded the point. “So, it appears we have a group of rogue Federation scientists hiding out here on Pierosh II, conducting unsanctioned research into breaching the walls between dimensions.” He looked to the assembled officers. “Everyone onboard with that?”

The others appeared to accept the premise, and Sandhurst leaned back in his chair. “I realize that this probably goes without saying, but I’m going to mention it anyway. That heat you’re feeling is the glare of the spotlight on us, and it’s going to be there for the duration of our time at this planet. Starfleet Command, the Science Council, and even Temporal Investigations are all clamoring for updates, and you can bet they’ll be scrutinizing every one of our reports with the proverbial microscope.”

Ramirez frowned, and the others didn’t appear any happier than she with this news.

The captain continued, “My point is that we need to make sure everything we send up the chain of command is as accurate as we can make it. Conjecture is fine on this end, but where your reports are concerned stick to what you can prove. Admirals, agency directors and ambassadors may well be making decisions that will effect a great many people based on our findings. So, check your figures, and make damned sure you can back up your hypotheses before filing your respective reports with Commander Ramirez and me.” He scanned the dour faces of his subordinates and then favored them with an ironic smile, “No pressure, though.”

His attempt at humor fell flat, so he looked to Taiee. “Doc, what’s Benghazi’s condition?”

Taiee was to-the-point. “He’s dying, sir.”

The captain’s eyes narrowed in frustration. “I take it there’s nothing that can be done for him?”

“No, sir. The EMH finally pinpointed the problem. It appears his DNA has been irrevocably warped somehow, likely a result of the energies accompanying the pulse that devastated the research station.” Taiee appeared disappointed, but her professional detachment held firm. “We attempted a genetic tissue graft from a few undamaged cell nuclei we found in his bone marrow, but it didn’t take. The damage appears to be too extensive. For now, all we can do is make him more comfortable until he dies.”

“Can we interrogate him?” This from Ramirez, who had remained silent until now.

Taiee cocked her head thoughtfully. “We’ve placed him in an induced coma for the time being. I suppose we could wake him, at this point with a terminal diagnosis it really wouldn’t make any difference. His neurographic scan didn’t indicate any serious neural degradation so far, so it’s possible he might be coherent enough to answer questions.”

Sandhurst nodded favorably. “Okay, Ramirez and Taiee, I want you to oversee waking him and getting what information we c—“ The captain was drowned out in mid-sentence by the wail of an alarm.

“Intruder alert,” the computer announced. “Deck 1, main bridge.”

*****

Main Bridge, USS Gibraltar
In geo-synchronous orbit of Pierosh II


Petty Officer 1st Class Brazeal manned the aft auxiliary control station, which had been configured as a science console in order to watch for anomalous energy readings from the surface of the planet. What at first sounded vaguely like a malfunctioning air circulation pump grew into a bizarre cacophony; a pulsing, grinding screech that filled the bridge with discordant noise. Brazeal winced and covered his ears, then watched incredulously as he witnessed a black, two-dimensional rectangle appear to rise from the deck.

A burly, emerald complexioned Orion stepped through this window onto nothingness. Without warning or preamble, he raised a compact and lethal looking rifle and stitched a line of smoking holes through the back of the command chair. As the unfortunate occupant of that chair, Ensign Qawasimi’s chest exploded outward to spray the bridge well with gore as the young man toppled from the center seat and thudded lifelessly to the deck.

Ensign Browder at Operations had been trying to locate the source of the sound, and was unaware anything was amiss until he was showered with bits of the duty watch officer. Instinctively he grabbed the phaser positioned beneath his console and pivoted in his chair to find a gang of heavily armed Orions surging onto the bridge. He raised the phaser and got off a glancing stun shot at one of the attackers before another of the Orions shredded both Browder and his Ops board with a sustained burst of plasma jacketed slugs from his assault rifle.

The bridge devolved into a frenzied storm of action. Some officers and crew dove for cover as others tried valiantly to resist the sudden onslaught. Brett Lightner hit the deck as rounds hissed past his head and perforated the main viewscreen. He rolled under the console and fumbled for the phaser housed there as his mind reeled with the surreal speed of the attack. As he attempted to increase the weapon’s power setting with trembling hands, someone grabbed hold of his lower leg and dragged him out from under the station. Lightner flailed with the phaser, unable to even depress the trigger before he was struck full in the face with the muzzle of an Orion’s rifle that crushed his nose and shattered the orbital socket of his right eye.

Security Specialist Weatherly who manned the Tactical station had the presence of mind to initiate an emergency lockout of main computer functions on the bridge. He realized that he didn’t have time to reach for his weapon, and instead launched himself towards the nearest Orion. Weatherly delivered a solid elbow strike to the pirate's head that sent the attacker staggering against the bridge’s safety railing.

As Weatherly stooped to collect the Orion’s dropped rifle, he was unprepared for the sensation of Kutav’s wicked dueling blade as it sank into his back. Weatherly reflexively dropped the gun as his arms flailed beyond their natural ranges of motion and tried desperately to reach the killing implement lodged deep in his flesh. Kutav grabbed him roughly about the head with a muscular arm and pulled the knife from Weatherly’s back with his free hand. The ahmet yanked the young man’s head to one side and drew the blade across Weatherly’s throat, which ended their struggle in a pulsing cascade of the human’s lifeblood.

Amidst the chaos, Brazeal tapped his compin and announced an intruder alert which initiated a computer driven ship-wide alarm. He then sprinted for the nearest turbolift and actually made it into the lift car and announced his destination. Just as the doors began to close, one of the Orions tossed a plasma grenade into the lift that landed with a soft clunk on the carpet and rolled to a stop against Brazeal’s feet. He was immolated in his own self-contained crematorium en route to Deck 4.

The fight was brief yet bloody and culminated in five dead bridge crew and three more wounded. The Orions suffered only two of their number briefly dazed from the crew’s frantic defensive measures. Those Starfleet personnel captured in the attack were moved to the front of the bridge, forced to lay prone on the deck with their heads toward the now inoperative viewscreen. Two Orions stood over them and swept back and forth with their rifles, prepared to bring lethal force to bear on any unauthorized movement.

The way having been cleared, the Baron stepped out of the dark portal as the doorway vanished behind him. He moved immediately to the engineering console on the upper level as he reached into the folds of his cloak to produce the yellow, tear-drop shaped crystal.

Kutav approached and gestured to the darkened consoles throughout the bridge. “We have been locked out, Baron. What are your instructions?”

The Baron appeared calm and collected as he waved the crystal over the engineering board which inexplicably came to life. The display screens began to flicker through a litany of shipboard schematics so quickly that Kutav had to look away. The Baron rapidly set about disabling Gibraltar’s internal security systems. While he worked, he spared Kutav an irritated glance and growled, “Prepare yourself and ten of your men to be transported into main engineering. Take that section, but make certain to keep collateral damage at an absolute minimum.”

Kutav gave the Baron a skeptical look, then held up the sinister looking firearm he had provided them. “Your weapons have no stun setting. How do you suggest we do that?”

The Baron shrugged, already deeply engrossed in Gibraltar’s schematics. “Fight them hand-to-hand if need be, but if you damage the engineering systems I’ll have your head, and those of your men.”

Kutav resisted the urge to shoot his mysterious benefactor then and there. He surmised that the Baron was clever enough to have taken precautions to prevent such an obvious act of betrayal. He turned and barked out orders to his men, who scrambled to collect the Starfleet phasers scattered about the compartment.

After he gathered nine of his men around him, Kutav checked the setting on his phaser to ensure that it was on heavy stun. The Baron navigated his way through the ship’s systems until he located the command processor modules responsible for transporter control. He initiated a site-to-site transporter lock and beamed Kutav’s party into the ship’s engine room.

The Baron turned his attention next to subduing the remainder of the ship's crew before they had a chance to interfere with his plans.

*****

Sandhurst and the others leapt to their feet as the intruder alert sounded. The captain urgently prompted, “Computer, display visual recorder, main bridge!”

The viewscreen shifted from the picture of Dr. Benghazi to an image of the ship’s badly mauled bridge. The bodies of fellow crew littered the floor while heavily armed Orion pirates milled about the command center. Sandhurst was stunned, unable to grasp for the first few seconds how this had happened. The sight of dead crew finally spurred him to action. “Computer, raise shields.”

As the computer acknowledged the captain’s order, Ramirez reacted from years of security training. She instructed, “Computer, release anesthizine gas on Deck 1, main bridge. Seventy parts per million concentration.”

The computer’s feminine voice responded, “Unable to comply. Access to internal security subroutines has been restricted.”

Undeterred, she tried another avenue. “Computer, erect level ten containment fields around all persons on the main bridge.”

Again, the computer proved incapable of fulfilling the command. Ramirez swore formidably in Klingon as Sandhurst shot her a worried look, his expression tight with anger. “Commander, take a security team and get up there. Jefferies tube alpha-three will take you right up into the ready room. You can stage from there.”

Without taking the time to acknowledge the order, Ramirez sprinted out of the room as she tapped her compin and directed a security team to join her on Deck 2.

Sandhurst moved to the viewer and issued orders as he reconfigured the wall display into a ship’s systems control panel. “Taiee, get to Sickbay and prepare for incoming casualties. Plazzi, get down to the auxiliary control room and reroute command functions to that location.” The two officers rushed out as Ashok moved to the captain’s side. “Lieutenant, it looks as if they’re trying to hack into our control systems. You and I need to erect an adaptive firewall to prevent that, at least until Ramirez and her team can take back the bridge.”

“Aye, sir.” The large man set to work and tapped away at the screen as he moved to assist Sandhurst in blocking the enemy’s infiltration into their computers.

The computer’s voice issued forth again, and again it was the bearer of bad tidings. “Intruder alert,” it declared in its irritatingly calm tone, “Deck 15, main engineering.”

*****
 
Chapter 8

I'm slightly concerned at Sandhurst's jolly off to engineering during a rescue mission however. As a Captain, that should be the least of his concerns right now.
He had to get out of 'the office.' Too much brass crawling up his backside for his comfort. Besides, if something went sideways down on the planet and the captain was needed immediately, he can always site-to-site transport back to the bridge in about 15 seconds. :D
 
The man’s disturbing smile appeared again. “A storm is coming. To prevent our being swept away by it, you and your merry little band of pirates must steal a starship for me.”

Mmh, an oncoming storm. It's not the Oncoming Storm, though, is it? ;)

Wow, a lot is happening in those chapters.

The story from Pava's past was tough. You managed to convey the horror Jesbrok's people were facing with only a few, well chosen words.

I didn't see the development with Kuvat coming at all. I liked the insight we got into his thinking. I almost thought he'd be in for some sort of redemption, but apparently not.
Which brings me to the assault on the bridge. :eek: As you've introduced the characters so well, it was heartbreaking to see them picked off one by one.
On that note, I also really liked the scene with Shanthi and Sandhurst.
 
The man’s disturbing smile appeared again. “A storm is coming. To prevent our being swept away by it, you and your merry little band of pirates must steal a starship for me.”

Mmh, an oncoming storm. It's not the Oncoming Storm, though, is it? ;)
There are storms, and then there are storms... :devil:

Wow, a lot is happening in those chapters.

The story from Pava's past was tough. You managed to convey the horror Jesbrok's people were facing with only a few, well chosen words.
Their fate was indeed horrific. People in as much pain, and struggling with as much anger as Lar'ragos can be dangerous to everyone around them, as that scene demonstrates.

I didn't see the development with Kuvat coming at all. I liked the insight we got into his thinking. I almost thought he'd be in for some sort of redemption, but apparently not.
Kutav is a complex fellow, but he's first and foremost a survivor.
Which brings me to the assault on the bridge. :eek: As you've introduced the characters so well, it was heartbreaking to see them picked off one by one.
It was actually hard to write, as I'd previously had greater plans for some of those characters. But the Orions forced the writer's hand, as it were.
On that note, I also really liked the scene with Shanthi and Sandhurst.
Thanks, I really like that little scene quite a bit myself. :)
 
Geometries of Chance - Chapter 12

Chapter 12

Observation Lounge, Deck 2 - USS Gibraltar
In geo-synchronous orbit of Pierosh II


Cascading lines of datacode descended across the display, graphic representations of the struggle being waged for control of Gibraltar’s main computer. Sandhurst fought mightily and used every trick he knew to erect successive barriers of defense in the face of this technological onslaught.

In the wake of repeated Borg attacks on the Federation, Starfleet’s computer encryptions had grown more formidable by several orders of magnitude in less than a decade. All those advances proved unable to stop the invasive program that plowed through layer after layer of cyber-barricades as if they didn’t exist. Sandhurst was forced to choose between systems, gambling on what would best help Ramirez and her team regain control of the bridge. He called to Ashok as the first hints of desperation crept into his voice. “Lieutenant, I’m about thirty seconds from losing subspace communications. I need you send out a message that will alert both Starfleet Command and our away team to our situation.”

“Aye, sir.”

His fingers worked furiously as Sandhurst struggled to compartmentalize and isolate those systems already compromised by the invasive programming. If he could just hold out a little longer… He broke stride just long enough to tap his compin. “Sandhurst to Ramirez. Whatever you’re going to do, do it quickly.”

He took the absence of a reply as an ominous sign. The captain addressed the chief engineer once again. “Ashok, when you’re done sending the message, ready our log buoy for launch.”

The Bolian’s only response was an unreadable grunt

*****

Pierosh II
Meteorological Research Station Aristotle


Olivia Juneau stood and observed the portal as her mind churned with helpless frustration. A brief communiqué from Ashok had announced that Gibraltar was under attack by an unknown foe, and that Juneau should prepare the surface team for an assault should the ship and crew be overcome.

She had coordinated her efforts with Master Chief Tark, and the two had managed to assemble a layered defense of the facility. The chronometric radiation generated by the portal would prevent the enemy from beaming into their midst, and would force any aggressors to fight their way into the basement complex from the surface.

Tark watched Juneau warily as he finalized his arrangements for an ambush of any would-be enemy near the main entrance to the facility. From what little interaction he’d had with the junior lieutenant prior to this mission, Tark knew her to be immature, indecisive, and a poor leader with sub-standard interpersonal skills. None of those were accurate descriptions of the woman who now stood before him. In the face of a dire situation, she had proven calm, collected, and had displayed a grasp of small unit combat tactics that far surpassed anything she might have learned in Starfleet Academy. Perhaps her time away from the ship had served her in particularly good stead, but Tark was still suspicious.

At the moment he had nothing but simple misgivings, and there was no plausible way to confront a superior for being too professional. In the face of a possible attack from orbit, the master chief had other more pressing issues with which to deal. But he would be watching…

*****

Ready Room, Deck 1 - USS Gibraltar


Liana Ramirez crouched on the floor of the ready room. She knelt over a large duffel bag filled with photon grenades. With her were Petty Officer 2nd Class Saihra Dunleavy and four others from the security division. There was no time to plan a stealthy entry onto the bridge, as she was sure the enemy were likely equipped with sensor devices that would soon alert them to the security team’s presence. Ramirez quickly outlined her assault plan to the others in a subdued whisper as she drew imaginary diagrams in the air with her finger to illustrate how they would breach the bridge.

Each team member took a photon grenade in one hand, primed it for a stun discharge, and hefted their compact Type-III ‘pug’ style phaser rifles. Ramirez activated the door, and as it swooshed open she and the others lobbed their grenades onto the bridge. They detonated in quick succession, bathing the command center in overlapping fields of concussive stun energy.

Ramirez entered first to take aim at a staggering Orion who had braced himself against the command chair to keep from toppling over. The exec was impressed, the charge on the grenades should have been sufficient to render a Vulcan sehlat unconscious, yet this man was still on his feet. Her heavy stun beam caught him mid-torso, and she drew it up his body, which launched him up and over the safety railing and splayed him across an auxiliary console on the upper deck. Dazed and reeling, the other Orions were in no condition to offer much resistance, and the security team made short work of them with precise blasts of phaser energy.

As she turned to confirm her section of the bridge was clear and secure, Ramirez unexpectedly came face to face with the man they had recovered from the surface, Dr. Stephen Benghazi. He stood silently at the engineering console, apparently unaffected by the stun grenades. The man turned an agitated expression on her as he waved some manner of yellow crystal above the workstation. She raised her rifle at him. “Doctor, don’t move.”

The crystal flashed brightly in response, and the status-ready light on Ramirez’s rifle winked out. She depressed the trigger which elicited only a hollow click from the weapon. As she hefted the rifle, she thought to herself that the situation felt strangely familiar. Ramirez swung the weapon butt-first at the cloak-draped figure in front of her.

The older man blocked her strike with fluid ease as he swept down with his left arm to redirect the momentum of Ramirez’s makeshift club. He raised the crystal in his other hand, and a pencil-thin beam of red light lanced from the facets of the device. The beam sliced cleanly through Ramirez’s left arm before piercing the neck of Security Specialist Rulgt who was standing behind her on the lower deck. Momentarily stunned, Ramirez heard Rulgt collapse to the floor, gurgling frantically.

Dunleavy vaulted the safety railing and drove her feet into the man’s midsection. He was knocked against the console, but as she regained her footing and moved to strike him, he brought his hands up to parry her blows and Dunleavy ended up grappling furiously with him.

Her left arm now numb and hanging uselessly at her side, Ramirez used Dunleavy’s distraction to her advantage. She side-stepped to her right and brought the rifle up one-handed to club her attacker across the temple with it as the man struggled with the security specialist. He grunted as much in surprise as pain, and replied by delivering a palm-heel strike that caught the petty officer squarely in the face and snapped Dunleavy’s head back. As she stumbled backwards into the railing, he brought the same hand in close to his chest, and then lashed out with it to land a vicious backhand to the side of Ramirez’s head that sent the commander crashing to the deck.

The other security personnel moved to encircle the deceptively aged looking man, extremely conscious of the fact that while he was obviously armed, their phasers had been effectively neutralized. Apparently eager to avoid further unpleasantness, he turned and raised the crystal, which opened a dark doorway in the air at the back of the bridge.

The man had nearly reached the portal when the muzzle of the Orion rifle roared. The plasma jacketed bullet slammed into the man’s left shoulder blade and spun him around in an almost graceful pirouette. The yellow crystal tumbled to the deck as it slipped from his slackening grip. He sank to his knees, his lips moving soundlessly for the briefest moment before he pitched forward face first onto the floor. The portal collapsed silently as the crystal dimmed.

His lower face awash in blood and his right eye swollen completely shut, Brett Lightner sagged against the shattered console behind him and eased the cumbersome assault rifle to the floor. He thought idly that it should have proved a more difficult shot as he slid slowly towards the deck. As he fought to remain conscious Lightner decided that his ambiguity towards his current posting might just be coming to an end.

*****

Main Engineering, Deck 15 - USS Gibraltar

“Fall back! Fall back!”

Phaser beams sliced through the air around him as Ahmet Kutav backed out of the engine room as he laid down suppressive fire while trying desperately to herd the five remaining stragglers from his assault squad to someplace safer. The attack on Engineering had been an abysmal failure, with many of his team cut down in the first moments by pre-positioned security personnel who had already been alerted to the presence of intruders onboard.

As he moved into the corridor, the air around him sizzled with phaser pulses criss-crossing the intersection. A discharge that was most certainly not set to stun singed his hair and blistered his face as it flashed past. He recoiled as the nearest of his men was vaporized where he stood. Kutav flung himself flat against the wall and tossed a plasma grenade in the direction of the heaviest fire. The explosion buffeted him as he sought escape through a maintenance access hatch and dragged one of his men through the ridiculously tight aperture with him.

As they scrambled through the confusing warren of interconnecting crawl-ways, Kutav reflected that these men and women were obviously not the preening, egotistical Starfleeters of his youth. These were the hardened veterans of the most destructive war the quadrant had ever seen. More than ever he now regretted the fool’s pact he’d made with the Baron. He feared he would be hunted down like an animal and killed here in the dark bowels of a Federation starship. It was truly not the preferred fate of a merchant prince of Rigel; not a death worthy of an Orion pirate.

*****

The attack on Gibraltar’s systems had ended. They had been only minutes away from losing life-support, and the magnetic fields encasing the ship’s anti-matter stores had begun to fluctuate troublingly. Communications were out, internal defensive systems were offline, and both shields and weapons were inoperative.

A runner from the security detail had arrived to inform Sandhurst and Ashok that the bridge had been stormed and secured, and security teams were chasing down the remaining Orions who had been repulsed in Engineering. The prisoners were on their way to the brig. Casualties were significant, and the wounded were being moved to Sickbay

Captain Sandhurst backed away from the reconfigured viewer and leaned against the table as his adrenaline surge abated and his legs threatened to give way. He offered a nod to the Bolian engineer. “Good work, Lieutenant.”

Ashok gave him an impenetrable look. After a long moment, the large man was moved to speak. “How did you manage to keep ahead of that viral cascade, sir?”

Sandhurst stood and tugged at his uniform jacket while he worked to compose himself. “I didn’t, Lieutenant. All I managed were some tricks with smoke and mirrors to alter the pathways along which the virus was attacking. We nearly lost anti-matter containment as a result, despite the fact that wasn’t originally one of the targeted systems.”

Ashok remained unconvinced. “You saved the ship.” It sounded more like an accusation than a compliment.

Sandhurst made for the exit and shook his head. “No, Mister Ashok. Ramirez and her team saved the ship. We just bought them some time.” He paused at the threshold. “Get down to auxiliary control. I’ll need you and Commander Plazzi to restore the computer from the protected backups in the core.”

Strangely reticent, Ashok murmured, “Aye, sir,” and fell into step behind his captain.

*****

The creature watched and waited, safely ensconced in the gravity well of the nearly lifeless planet. It had regained much of the strength sapped from it by the subspace convulsions, and though it was inexorably anchored to the world below it had begun to stretch out with its senses again to study the universe that surrounded it.

It had been observing the orbiting starship, but now the presence of The One prevented it from considering the vessel available prey. It turned its gaze inward towards the planet, sensing foreign life there that could perhaps meet its immediate needs. It gathered itself together and descended.


*****

Taiee estimated the ambient noise level in Sickbay was hovering at about seventy decibels. The screams and moans of the wounded competed with shouted instructions from the medical staff who endeavored to save them. Nurses and medical technicians raced between biobeds, suturing wounds, transfusing fluids, and dispensing a host of analgesics and antibiotics to the injured.

The computer attack on the ship had rendered the two medical holograms inoperative, and Taiee found herself forced to cope without their invaluable aid. She was no stranger to triage and combat medicine, but making life and death decisions about people with whom she served never got any easier. She stepped away from the bed containing Engineering Specialist Moira Mattis, a young woman to whom Taiee had become both close friend and confidant in recent weeks. But Moira was beyond her help, the victim of savage burns from a plasma grenade detonation just outside the engine room. Taiee would grieve for her friend later and curse her own inability to treat Moira’s wounds, but now was the time for cold, clinical decisiveness.

Sandhurst waded into the chaos as he followed two crew carrying Ensign Qawasimi’s body into Sickbay on a litter. He steeled himself against the sight of his people, broken and bleeding and beyond his help. He navigated his way through the jostling crowd of medical staff, but stopped short at the sight of Dr. Benghazi resting peacefully atop an examination bed within one of Sickbay’s isolation wards. Sandhurst grabbed a nearby engineering crewman by the arm and spun him around as he inquired briskly, “I was told Dr. Benghazi participated in the attack on the bridge?”

The young man, nearly overwrought with emotion at the loss of a comrade, strove to pull himself together long enough to answer the captain. “Sir, not that man.” He pointed to a figure currently lying on a bed flanked by two armed guards. “The person you want is there.”

Sandhurst made a beeline for the biobed, his mind at first refusing to believe the image being relayed from his eyes. The gray haired figure on the bed was a nearly identical twin to Benghazi. He lacked only the doctor’s receding hairline and a few of the character lines around the man’s eyes.

A med-tech studied the readings on a medical tricorder as he passed the sensor wand over the mysterious doppelganger’s body.

“A Changeling?” were the first words out of Sandhurst’s mouth.

The tech frowned as he returned the sensor device to its housing within the tricorder. “No, sir. We’ve already drawn and analyzed his blood. He’s not human, but he’s no shapeshifter.”

Sandhurst noticed the hastily applied pressure dressing on the man’s through-and-through bullet wound, now soaked dark crimson. “What species?”

“I couldn’t tell you, Captain. His biology doesn’t match anything in our database.” The med-tech pointed to a viewer extending down from the ceiling which displayed an internal scan of the man’s torso. “He’s got some pretty exotic organ structures and his blood chemistry is especially unique.” The man looked perplexed. “He’s got a binary cardiovascular system, and the computer can’t make heads or tails of his DNA sequencing.”

The captain studied the man briefly as his mind raced to try and place this new piece of the puzzle. He eyed the man’s biometric readouts on the bed’s headboard display and took note of the fluctuating readings. “What’s his condition?”

“Not good.” The tech swept a dermal regenerator over the man’s wound, but stopped after the device trilled a warning klaxon. He replaced the instrument on the equipment tray beside the bed and gave Sandhurst a pained expression. “I’m sorry, sir. The damage is too extensive for this gear.” He looked past the captain to where Taiee was fighting to revive a crewmember who had slipped into cardiac arrest. “Hopefully the lieutenant can do more to help him.”

The words were barely out of the young man’s mouth when Sandhurst moved away and strode over to stand beside Taiee. Her medical smock was streaked with the mingled hues of blood from multiple species, and Taiee refused to spare the captain even the quickest glance as she directed yet another pulse from the cardio-stimulator into her patient’s chest. “What do you need, sir?”

“The prisoner is dying, Lieutenant. I need you to stabilize him.”

Her reply was voiced more tolerantly than even she had expected. “I’m busy at the moment, sir, but I’ll certainly take a look at him as soon as we get more of our people triaged.”

Sandhurst’s voice lowered and took on a steely quality that Taiee hadn’t heard before. “This man might hold the answers to what’s been happening here. He might know why we were attacked, and if more of the same are forthcoming.”

Taiee increased the joules output on the cardio-stimulator and gave the woman on the bed a jolt sufficient to make her whole body shudder. “So you want me to cease my efforts to revive this person so I can treat one of the men responsible for her injuries?”

His reply seemed to freeze the air in their vicinity. “Yes.”

In response, Taiee tossed the stimulator noisily onto the equipment tray and shouldered past Sandhurst to head for the Baron’s bedside. “Fine. I’m sure you’ll do me the honor of calling time of death for Crewman Eravine, Captain.”

Sandhurst watched her go, then forced himself to look into the slackened face of the woman on the examination table. He surprised himself when his voice failed to crack with the words, “Of course, Doc…”

*****
 
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Just a typical day at the office for the good folks of the Gibraltar. :eek: Good Lord! You sure know how to write a scene of utter chaos. I've got a feeling sickbay is going to run out of band-aids. At least Ensign Lightner seems to be having fun. And Chief Tark is no fool - his instincts serve him well (though he has no idea what's going on in Juneau's noggin.)

At least there is a lull in the fighting (temporary, no doubt) that allows the reader to catch his breath, but there are plenty of ominous clouds on the horizon. Maybe the environmental crew can through some sand on the deck to prevent any nasty falls - wouldn't want anyone slipping in all that blood and gore. Safety first, you know. ;)

And Sandhurst begins his turn to the dark side. :evil: Yes, I did just say that - am I wrong? We'll see.

Awesome stuff.
 
Just a typical day at the office for the good folks of the Gibraltar. :eek: Good Lord! You sure know how to write a scene of utter chaos. I've got a feeling sickbay is going to run out of band-aids. At least Ensign Lightner seems to be having fun. And Chief Tark is no fool - his instincts serve him well (though he has no idea what's going on in Juneau's noggin.)
I wouldn't exactly say Lightner is having fun... but the young man got the job done.

At least there is a lull in the fighting (temporary, no doubt) that allows the reader to catch his breath, but there are plenty of ominous clouds on the horizon. Maybe the environmental crew can through some sand on the deck to prevent any nasty falls - wouldn't want anyone slipping in all that blood and gore. Safety first, you know. ;)
You know, that could be a series in and of itself... Gibraltar HazMat Crew, The First with the Worst, aka Blood, Guts, and Dismembered Butts. :p

Thanks again for the commentary, especially the second time around! :)
 
Chapter 10

Nifty piece of technology the Baron has there, and decidedly bad news for the crew of the Gibraltar.:evil:

It would seem that Ixis was right that the on-site crew would be in over their heads, though I'm sure she hasn't figured the mysterious Baron into her equations. (Though don't hold me to that prediction!):rolleyes:

The Baron's disregard for life is apparent in his supplying of weapons that have just one function, to kill. I'm afraid I don't like him very much.:(
 
Chapter 11

A deepening mystery. Who is this apparent duplicate of Benghazi? (Or vice versa) The real one seems human enough, yet his 'twin' most definitely isn't.:confused:

The team on the surface look set to become the next victims of the trapped being and they have no way to detect or prevent it!:eek:

What a choice for Sandhurst to have to force on his young intern. That was quite a shocking scene excellently portrayed.:(

PS What's with Ashok? Hmmmm.:shifty:
 
Chapter 12

Call me old fashioned here, but Plazzi's decision to finally call time on his Starfleet career (and his reasons for doing so) are occurring at a time when death seems to be stalking the crew of the Gibraltar. To quote some scruffy looking etc etc "I've got a bad feeling about this.":(

Pava's past continues to unfold and intrigue, especially (as Nellit states) he picks one hell of a time to find his moral compass. The timing might have been bad for the Trabe, but overdue for Pava.:techman:

And now its raining blood? Oh my...:wtf:
 
Chapter 10

Nifty piece of technology the Baron has there, and decidedly bad news for the crew of the Gibraltar.:evil:
The Baron has many toys, nearly all of them dangerous.

It would seem that Ixis was right that the on-site crew would be in over their heads, though I'm sure she hasn't figured the mysterious Baron into her equations. (Though don't hold me to that prediction!):rolleyes:
Nobody could have predicted as unaccountable a variable as the Baron.

The Baron's disregard for life is apparent in his supplying of weapons that have just one function, to kill. I'm afraid I don't like him very much.:(
I think the crew of Gibraltar is right there with you on that assessment.
 
Chapter 12

Call me old fashioned here, but Plazzi's decision to finally call time on his Starfleet career (and his reasons for doing so) are occurring at a time when death seems to be stalking the crew of the Gibraltar. To quote some scruffy looking etc etc "I've got a bad feeling about this.":(

Pava's past continues to unfold and intrigue, especially (as Nellit states) he picks one hell of a time to find his moral compass. The timing might have been bad for the Trabe, but overdue for Pava.:techman:

And now its raining blood? Oh my...:wtf:
Thanks for the commentary, but I think you may have skipped ahead a little bit. No spoilers for other folks, please! ;)

EDIT: Whoops! I guess it would help if I didn't mislabel the chapters, wouldn't it? :lol: The last chapter should have been labeled Chapter 11, not Chapter 12. The next chapter is the actual Chapter 12. :scream:
 
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Geometries of Chance - Chapter 12

The real Chapter 12 :p

Ahmet Kutav punched the control interface in aggravation, but accomplished little more than bruising his fist. He and his last remaining crewman, Mutwen, had scrambled to stay ahead of the security teams hunting them throughout the Jefferies tubes on Deck 12. Kutav’s attempt to access the ship’s systems via an LCARS panel in the tube junction had proven futile; he had never possessed whichever gene regulated technical savvy. Now they were simply stalling for time, attempting to delay their inevitable capture by a vengeful ship’s crew.

He had been betrayed. First by whatever malignant force had spurred him to attack the Federation starship with Sethret, and then by the Baron. The man had obviously overestimated his ability to thwart Gibraltar’s defenses. Kutav had wrongly identified the man as being powerful and dangerous, and having been duped by a fool was not improving the ahmet’s mood any.

Kutav felt the air shift, the breath of a cool breeze whispering past him. He whirled around and brought up his rifle, only to find himself facing a familiar black portal. It was exactly the type he had used to board the ship in the assault on the bridge. Kutav grabbed Mutwen by the shoulder and rushed towards the now wavering apparition. The two passed through it and into a large, dimly lit compartment.

In the middle of the sizable room stood an octagonal control dais which served as a central focus to a space that appeared more museum than command center. Large, swirling arches of intertwining metal spiraled up from floor to ceiling, encircling the control table like some kind of psychotic rendition of Stonehenge. Exotic looking alien artifacts stood atop pedestals scattered throughout the compartment, bathed in pools of light from above.

A man stood at the improbable looking control station. He was a human male of small stature, clad in what to Kutav’s eyes appeared to be some manner of formal human attire from ages past. He had medium length brown hair, parted in the middle, and wore glass-lens spectacles that gave him a strange, anachronistic appearance. The man did not seem the slightest bit surprised at their arrival.

A polite smile took shape on the man’s thin lips and he inclined his head in greeting. “Ahmet Kutav, welcome back. I’m pleased to see you’ve survived the mission unscathed.”

Kutav was flummoxed. “Who are you?” It was meant more as challenge than query, but the Orion was still reeling from recent events, and his own voice sounded damnably tremulous to him.

“I am Parlan,” the man answered simply. “I am servant to the Baron, and steward of his vessel in his absence.”

Now certain of the man’s affiliations, Kutav raised his rifle menacingly. Mutwen followed his lead and also took aim at the man as he moved to flank the thin human. Kutav raged at Parlan, venting his frustration and loss, “What was that? Were my men and I sent in there simply to die?”

Parlan turned to face Kutav fully, unfazed by the ahmet’s mounting anger. “Hardly. Your mission proved a resounding success. You are to be congratulated.”

That proved too much for Kutav to take. He rushed the man as he wielded the rifle like a cudgel. A forcefield of some kind repelled Kutav who reeled backwards an instant before he landed his blow. The big Orion staggered clumsily and crashed into a display pedestal as Mutwen opened fire with his assault weapon. The field rippled as ricochets snapped and whizzed throughout the compartment but Parlan remained otherwise unaffected.

His anger and aggression having come to nothing, Kutav waved off Mutwen as the man began to load a fresh magazine into the smoking rifle. “Enough.” As he pulled himself back to his feet, the ahmet looked again to the implacable Parlan. “What now, human? Will you kill us too, and finish the job?”

“Nothing of the sort,” Parlan smirked. “Nor should you be unduly grieved by the capture of your crew.” He paused to toggle some switches on the archaic control console. “Thanks to your efforts, the starship will soon be ours to command. Your people will be liberated once we’ve moved to seize it.”

Kutav looked away as he digested this. “Where is the Baron?”

“He too was taken prisoner aboard the starship.”

Kutav’s head snapped around to examine Parlan carefully. “And why do you not seem overly concerned by this turn of events?”

“He is in less danger than you might imagine.” Parlan pulled a small lever on the control dais which opened a doorway leading to a long corridor. “Now, if you’ll come with me, I will provide you with some refreshment and show you to your sleeping arrangements.”

Still unconvinced, Kutav hesitated before following Parlan through the doorway. "If you’re now capable of taking over the starship, what was the point of our attack?”

The lithe man turned back and directed a patient smile at the Orion captain. “You provided a splendid diversion, Ahmet.”

*****

Ready Room - USS Gibraltar
In geo-synchronous orbit of Pierosh II


Sandhurst sat behind his desk in the small compartment where he conferred with Ramirez, Plazzi, and Ashok. The two department heads sat in the chairs opposite the captain, while the XO occupied the couch along the far wall.

Ramirez’s injured arm was suspended in a sling, but apart from that she seemed none the worse for wear from the brutal fight on the bridge. The final tally from the Orion assault on Gibraltar was eight dead, fifteen others injured, three of them critically. On the other side of the ready room door, engineering teams scrambled to patch the damaged bridge back together.

As he cast a glance across at Ramirez, Sandhurst asked, “Anything from the Orions so far?”

The exec frowned, clearly displeased with the meager results from her interrogations. “Not much, I’m afraid. All we’ve been able to get from them is the fact that they call the Benghazi double ‘the Baron’ and that they staged the assault from his ship.” She shifted uncomfortably, then moved to tighten the strap on her sling. “To be honest, they know at worst they’re looking at a few years in a cushy Federation penal settlement, so we don’t have a lot of leverage to encourage cooperation.”

“And what about Dr. Benghazi?”

Ramirez shook her head. “Unfortunately, Benghazi’s condition has continued to deteriorate. We might have been able to revive him for questioning prior to the attack, but no longer.”

Plazzi sat with his ubiquitous padd in hand. Sandhurst turned to him next. “And what do we have on this ‘Baron?’”

The science officer referenced the padd and recited, “Taiee reports his condition has stabilized, and he’ll likely regain consciousness within the next few hours. We’re still unable to identify his species, but we have determined that he’s not from our time/space continuum.”

Sandhurst sat forward in his chair, his curiosity piqued. “How do we know that, Elisto?”

“The Baron’s quantum resonance doesn’t match that of our universe, Captain.” Plazzi brought his eyes up from the padd to meet the captain’s. “All matter generated in a particular dimension resonates at a specific frequency unique to that universe. He obviously originates from a different reality than the one we know.”

Ramirez looked contemplative as something occurred to her. “If I may, sir?” Sandhurst nodded, and Ramirez continued. “Elisto, do we have readings on the quantum resonance of the Q-particles emitted from the portal?”

Plazzi glanced over his shoulder at the exec. “We do.”

“How closely do they match the Baron’s resonance?”

The science officer tapped at his padd, running a quick comparison. He quirked an eyebrow and gave Ramirez an appreciative look. “They match exactly, Commander.”

“So, now we know that our new friend is from wherever the other end of that wormhole leads to.” Sandhurst nodded approvingly. “Okay, we’re making some progress.”

Sandhurst addressed Ashok and queried, “Any luck locating the Baron’s ship?”

The Bolian was his usual stoic self. “No, sir. We’ve scanned the system repeatedly and have yet to find any indicators of a spacecraft.”

Sandhurst addressed both men, “Anything yet on his hand device?”

Ashok spoke first, “Again, no success yet, sir. Scans indicate a complex crystalline structure, but no obvious data storage or computational components. It appears to be a highly advanced piece of technology.”

Plazzi added, “Crew had observed him using it both as a computer interface as well as a weapon, but it now seems to be completely inert.”

“Alright.” Sandhurst sat forward to brace his elbows atop the desk. “I think it’s time for me to meet this Baron.” To Ramirez he instructed, “Have Taiee alert me when he regains consciousness. Continue your interrogations of the Orion prisoners, Commander. I’d like to know what their relationship is with the Baron.”

“Aye, sir.”

“Thank you all, you’re dismissed.”

The others filed out, but Plazzi lagged behind, clearly wanting to address something in private.

Sandhurst looked up. “You need to speak with me, Elisto?”

The older man looked uneasy. “Yes, sir.” He took a breath. “Captain, I realize now probably isn’t the best time to address this, but it’s come to my attention that within a month or two the Federation Security Council will likely repeal the stop-loss order and end the call-up of the Reserves. I just wanted to give you some lead time to find a replacement, as I’ll be resigning at that time.”

The captain looked surprised. “I’m sorry to hear that. You’re a valuable member of this crew, and your years of experience have been enormously helpful.”

“Thank you, sir.” Plazzi shifted nervously. “I’ve got a wife, three children, and four grandkids. Before they reactivated my commission during the war, I hadn’t been in a uniform in nearly two decades. I feel I’ve done my duty, and to be perfectly honest, sir, at this stage in my life this job’s too damn dangerous.” He looked pained and added, “I just can’t shake the feeling that if I stay, sooner or later my number’s going to come up.”

Sandhurst smiled as he stood. “No explanation is necessary. You’ve more than met your obligations, Elisto. As far as I’m concerned, the Federation owes you and the other Reservists a debt of gratitude.” He extended a hand to the scientist. “You give me the word when it’s your time, and I’ll have you at the nearest starbase so fast you’ll think we’ve broken the Warp 10 barrier.”

Plazzi shook his hand gratefully as he returned the smile. “Thank you, Captain.”

*****

Royal 51st Forward Combat Hospital
Planet Makshar, Trabe Confederacy
Delta Quadrant
Circa 1994 A.D., Terran Calendar

So much for the privileges of command, Subahdar-Major Lar'ragos thought mordantly as he counted the ceiling tiles for the umpteenth time. Pava's hospital bed was only one among dozens, arranged within flimsy pre-fab buildings designed more for logistical necessity than the comfort of the patients.

They had been ambushed. It hadn't even been that well organized an attack, really, but it had been effective enough to shoot down one of his insertion team's two heavily armored skimmers. They crashed in the stinking, hellish bogs outside of the capitol city. In the dead of night, the injured survivors had slogged through marshes of chest-high water, cloying mud, razor-grass, and colonies of sting-beetles, all the while locked in a running skirmish with Trabe guard units.

The Trabe themselves were only middling soldiers, vacuous nobility playing at army life. Their Kazon vassals, however, were another matter entirely. The barbarian tribesman had been enslaved by the Trabe generations ago, and were used as both an involuntary labor force and as front line shock troops. The Kazon hunting parties had pursued the Hekosian team relentlessly, and only their amateurish Trabe leadership had allowed Lar'ragos' people to eventually outmaneuver their enemy.

Now Lar'ragos waited. It wouldn't be long until the commandant's internal security apparatchiks arrived to take him into custody. He had disobeyed orders after all. Without prior approval Pava had scrubbed the original insertion plan and changed targets in mid-mission. As a result he'd led his team right over a previously unknown Trabe firebase.

The airlock door at the far end of the medical ward cycled open, admitting Na-Vizier Nellit. Lar'ragos' old protégé looked unaccountably dashing in his formal dress uniform, his red baldric complementing his dark blue tunic which was adorned with medals, ribbons, and the accouterments of royalty. Nellit scanned the rows of beds, finally setting his gaze on Lar'ragos.

He pulled up a stool to Pava's bedside, then removed his campaign hat and tucked it neatly under one arm as he sat. Nellit cleared his throat and glanced around to assure their relative privacy. "Major, you're looking well, considering the extent of your injuries."

Lar'ragos smiled, drinking in the irony of the moment. "Yes, sir. Thank you, sir."

Nellit leaned in closer and his expression grew hard. Voice barely above a whisper, the nobleman hissed, "Ten dead, seven more wounded? What the hell were you thinking, Pava?"

Lar'ragos tried to shrug, but his bandages wouldn't allow it. "I made a command decision, sir. I'm certain you're familiar with the necessity of changing—"

"Do not exercise that attitude with me, Major! You are speaking with a crown prince of the realm; one who has the power bury you so deeply no one would ever think to find you." Even without his innate senses, Lar’ragos could tell Nellit was deadly serious; it was in his eyes.

Pava's jaw muscles twitched. "You sent me to blow up a school."

Nellit's head dropped in exasperation. "Not just any school, and you know it. It was the Trabe's top military academy."

Bile rose in Lar'ragos' throat, "Semantics. Our righteous sovereign, your uncle, ordered us to kill innocent children."

Nellit raised his head and gave Lar'ragos a disbelieving look. "And when has that ever stopped you before?" He gestured to their surroundings. "We're on the cusp of victory here, Pava! The Trabe Confederacy is the last obstacle to the Empire controlling everything within sixty lightyears of the homeworld." He rubbed his face with one hand, his exasperation cracking his reserved noble façade. "Everything we've fought for, sacrificed for in the past fifteen years… it's all come to a head. If you'd successfully planted explosive devices of Kazon design, it might have caused a rift between them and the Trabe."

Pava turned his head away; his El Aurian bred principles warred with his sense of duty.

"Gods, man, you were the one who taught me to harden my heart in preparation for what our duty required of us. I wouldn't be the man I am today without your iron will to guide and mold me." Nellit sighed, pushing back from the bed in frustration. "You've picked one hell of a time to find your moral compass." The airlock cycled again, and two field medics entered carrying an empty litter between them. The prince glanced up at them, then turned back to Lar'ragos. "I can't protect you any more, Pava. Even my influence has its limits. Commandant Shuvan's drafting an arrest order for you as we speak. A perfunctory tribunal should take perhaps a day at most, and then you'll be shot."

Lar'ragos turned his head to meet Nellit's eyes. "I'd often wondered how this would end. I suppose it's long past time for me to join my family." As ridiculous as it seemed, he found himself fighting back tears, "You don't know, Nellit. You'll only have to live a lifetime with the burdens of what we've done. I might have suffered those memories for millennia."

Nellit gestured the medics over, who then transferred Lar'ragos onto the litter. As they did so, the prince smiled darkly. "You're not going to get off that easily, old friend. I owe you my life a dozen times over. Lest you forget, I always pay my debts."

As the medics carried Lar'ragos to an awaiting transport, Nellit offered him a final salute. "I shall reluctantly inform the commandant of your unfortunate escape. It's been an honor serving with you."

Pava raised one hand with great effort, calling out… but the airfield was gone – he blinked – the glare of Sickbay’s overhead lights startled him.

A nurse called Taiee over to Lar’ragos’ bedside. She gave him a subdued smile. “So there you are, Pava. We wondered when you were coming back. How was the trip?”

*****

Pierosh II
Meteorological Research Station Aristotle


Juneau sprinted towards the entrance to the building with two armed crew nipping at her heels. Their footfalls thundered through the empty labs and living quarters as they scrambled to respond to their comrade’s call. It wasn’t the fact that Tark had requested Juneau’s immediate presence outside that spurred their pace, but the fact that the old curmudgeon had actually sounded rattled.

She drew her phaser as she approached the doors the away team had breached days earlier. Juneau slowed and motioned for her escorts to do the same. As she paused at the threshold to reconnoiter, Juneau was met with the unexpected sight of Tark and one of his security people standing idly on the outside steps. They sheltered under the parsteel awning from the rain that pattered noisily against its metal surface. A quick tricorder sweep confirmed nothing appeared amiss, and with her curiosity outweighing her irritation, the junior lieutenant stepped out to join them. “Something wrong, Master Chief?”

Only once she had moved out from the dimly lit entryway did she notice that the hair, faces, and field jackets of both men were wet, soaked a deep burgundy. She stepped closer. “What is that?”

Tark gestured numbly to the vacant panorama. “Rain.”

“I don’t understa—“ Juneau trailed off as she eyed the open tricorder in the Tellarite’s hand.

The master chief’s voice was tight, a hoarse echo of his usual timbre. “Blood, Lieutenant. It’s raining blood.”

Juneau focused on the surrounding vista. She had to squint in the fading twilight to discern that the sea of rocks was in fact awash in a field of red. “That’s… not possible.”

Tark raised his tricorder; the scanning display clearly read the precipitation as an amalgam of humanoid blood types. Juneau’s alter ego quickly assessed that the species represented in the mixed blood types were identical to the racial cross-section of Gibraltar’s crew.

She was momentarily speechless. Neither her training, nor her augmented intellect could help her process what was most certainly an illusion. “This has to be some kind of projection. Holographic, or perhaps direct telepathic manipulation?” Juneau wished she sounded more certain. Regardless, they would have to act. “Alright, gentlemen, let’s get inside. Help me seal up this door.”

All three of them flinched simultaneously as Juneau’s compin chirped. She tapped it as she shepherded the two men back inside. “Juneau here, go.”

“Dunleavy here, sir. You’d better get down here. Something just emerged from the portal.”

*****
 
My bad mate! :alienblush:Yes I got ahead there but the comments stand! ;)

More excellent writing. :techman:

I'm taking a week out for health reasons, but my laptop goes with me! :cool:
 
Well, I also read ahead up to the end of chapter 15 because your story is such a (virtual) page-turner.
But my feeling when I read chapter 12 was a bad one regarding Plazzi. Only a few weeks away from retirement? You're dead meat. ;)
Loved the sequence with Kuvat and Parlan and the apt description of the Baron's ship's interior.
The resolution to Pava's story was great, too. He did chose a bad moment to develop a conscience, didn't he? But I'm glad he did.
 
Geometries of Chance - Chapter 13

Sickbay, USS Gibraltar
In geo-synchronous orbit of Pierosh II


Upon first arriving in Sickbay, Sandhurst had met briefly with the newly awakened Lar’ragos, who seemed to be recovering quickly from his inexplicable three-day coma. The lieutenant was mortified that he’d been unconscious during the Orion boarding incident, but Sandhurst had reassured him that the security teams had responded superbly, due in no small part to their intensive holo-sim training regimen.

The captain approached the guarded isolation ward and nodded to the security specialist standing watch outside the door. “I’ll speak with him alone.”

The Baron appeared to be sleeping beneath the restraining field that fixed him to the bio-bed. He opened his eyes, however, in response to the door cycling. Sandhurst approached and pulled a chair over to take a seat next to the immobilized man. He had decided to forgo any theatrical attempts at intimidation. If the Baron had half as much intelligence as Sandhurst credited him, he would easily see through the captain’s threats. Such tactics would only serve to undermine his credibility.

“I’m Donald Sandhurst, captain of the Federation starship Gibraltar.”

The Baron watched him impassively and remained silent.

“We know you only as ‘the Baron,’ by way of your Orion accomplices. Might I inquire as to your proper name and where your barony is located?”

After a long moment, the man responded, “My actual title is closer to that of Lord than Baron, but for the time being, the latter will suffice.” He offered a knowing smile. “And my domain is a great distance from here, Captain.”

Sandhurst nodded. “I’ll begin by telling you that at present you’re facing eleven different counts of serious felony crimes against this vessel and its crew. Your cooperation in our ongoing investigation might serve to reduce some of those charges. I can’t make any promises, though, as prosecution of such crimes is decided by our civilian government.”

The Baron sneered, “You would charge me for trying to undo the crimes of your people?”

Sandhurst studied the man for a long moment as he ran his tongue across the back of his teeth. Calm and controlled, the Baron exuded a casual arrogance that the captain found unsettling. No, that wasn’t quite it. He’s in control, or he thinks he is, Sandhurst assessed. The man was lashed to a bio-bed in a locked room, and yet apparently felt that he was fully in command of his situation and surroundings. He was either completely mad, or ridiculously dangerous. Perhaps he’s both, Sandhurst mused.

“And what crimes would those be?”

The Baron shot Sandhurst a disbelieving look and said, “Your crew has been to the surface, you’ve seen it for yourselves. Those fools down there went diving in waters so deep and dark they couldn’t begin to understand.” His expression shifted to one of disdain. “Do not think me the idiot, Captain. Your own people did this, and your kinsmen will surely suffer the consequences.”

Sandhurst frowned as he wondered if the Baron did in fact know of Benghazi’s activities, or if the man was merely fishing for information. “Perhaps you should tell me what, specifically, we’re talking about?”

“Those careless simpletons thought to command energies they could neither contain nor control. They blindly opened a conduit into another reality, and in so doing they’ve unleashed the dragon!” The Baron delivered the rebuke with conviction as his eyes flamed.

In response, Sandhurst quirked a dubious eyebrow and replied, “I’m going to assume you’re speaking metaphorically.”

The Baron seethed while he thrashed against the restraining field. “Of course I am, you dolt!” Then, as if exercising pure force of will, the Baron appeared to compel himself to relax. “Forgive me, Captain. I have been given a terrible task to perform, and the weight of it upon me is considerable.”

The captain scratched his chin idly and folded his arms across his chest. “Baron, you’re speaking in riddles. I’d much prefer you explain the circumstances as plainly as possible.”

The prisoner closed his eyes briefly and took a deep breath. Once he had centered himself, he began, “The scientists who opened that conduit have inadvertently tunneled into a prison, Captain. It was a very unique construct, a pocket dimension created explicitly to contain a being of unbelievable destructive power.” The Baron craned his neck and his eyes fought to lock and hold Sandhurst’s. “That creature has partially emerged into your universe, though it remains tethered to its containment vessel by a proverbial thread that is decaying even now. If you fail to act, an entity that annihilated seventeen star systems before it was imprisoned will be let loose upon your universe.”

Sandhurst felt a tightening in his stomach. He didn’t want to believe the Baron’s words, but on some primal level, he did. He consciously controlled his movements to prevent himself from fidgeting as he sought clarification. “What is your relationship to the creature?”

“I was sent here to capture it and return it to its prison.”

“Sent by whom?”

The Baron rolled his eyes, his frustration palpable. “A league of advanced races cooperated to create the containment dimension. I am an agent of one of those species.”

Sandhurst stood slowly as he pushed the chair back. “If you are some kind of peace officer or bounty hunter whose goals are recovery of this ‘fugitive,’ how do you explain your unwarranted attack on my crew?”

“Unwarranted? Not from my vantage point, Captain. Until I’d accessed your computer database, I believed your people had done this deliberately. For all I knew, you planned to try and capture the entity and use it against your Federation’s enemies.” The Baron shifted uncomfortably under the restraining field. “The Orions accused your ship of having fired on them with a subspace explosive.”

His expression soured and Sandhurst fumed, “No. The subspace weapon belonged to the Orions themselves. They initiated an unprovoked attack on my ship. The experiments you speak of were unauthorized. Such activities are expressly forbidden by our government.” He decided to give the Baron the benefit of the doubt, and Sandhurst asked, “We have personnel on the surface. How much danger are they in?”

“Impossible to say.” An ironic smile flitted across the older man’s features. “In my present circumstances, I’m obviously unable to track where and what it is.”

“How do you mean… ‘what it is?’”

“It’s an omnimorphic entity, Captain. It can be whatever it desires. Matter, energy… nothing is beyond its capabilities.”

“I see,” Sandhurst replied coolly. On the inside he was in turmoil. He weighed the unconfirmed dangers possibly facing his crew against his distrust of the Baron. “One final question.” Sandhurst moved to a control interface and downloaded an image into the room’s holo-emitter. A one-quarter size holographic image of Dr. Benghazi appeared in the air above the bio-bed, rotating slowly. “Do you recognize this man?”

The Baron grunted noncommittally, then noted, “He looks very much like me. Who is this?”

“Dr. Stephen Benghazi, the scientist in charge of the project that opened the wormhole on the surface.”

From beneath the restraining field, the Baron chuckled wryly. “Fascinating. Are you familiar with the theory of alternate parallel realities, Captain Sandhurst?”

“Somewhat,” Sandhurst allowed as he observed the man closely while wishing he had Lar’ragos’ unconventional abilities.

“Identical individuals can exist in parallel realities. How ironic that my counterpart in this universe shares my vocation.”

Sandhurst intoned soberly, “Indeed.” He deactivated the image. The man had at least given the appearance of being candid, so Sandhurst decided to roll the dice with another query. “Where is your ship, Baron?”

The enigmatic traveler responded with a question of his own. “How long must I remain confined in this manner?”

“Until our medical department informs me that your injures have healed sufficiently. Then you’ll be moved to our brig.”

The Baron smiled humorlessly. “In which case, I’m afraid I must withhold any further cooperation. I am not your enemy; in fact, I may be your only hope. As long as you continue to treat me like some petty criminal, you’re endangering yourselves as well as the rest of your galaxy.”

Sandhurst moved to the exit and signaled the security officer on the other side to open it. “I appreciate what assistance you’ve shown me so far, Baron. We will, of course, have further questions.” With that, Sandhurst left. He moved into the adjoining exam room, where Ramirez and Taiee had watched the exchange on a monitor. Sandhurst looked to his exec. “Thoughts, Commander?”

Ramirez pursed her lips thoughtfully before replying. “Is it just me, or does this guy sound like a villain from a particularly bad holo-novel?” She smirked at Sandhurst. “Pity he doesn’t have a mustache to twirl while he spins his lies.”

Sandhurst cocked his head. “I’m not so sure he is lying. Not about everything, anyway.” He leaned against a bio-bed to rub the bridge of his nose tiredly. “If this ‘dragon’ exists as he claims, it could wreak unbelievable havoc. That’s not exactly the kind of trouble the Federation or Cardassia needs right now.” Turning to Taiee, he inquired, “What about his claim that Benghazi’s his counterpart in our universe?”

The nurse practitioner was still behaving frostily towards the captain, but she made a concerted effort to bolster her professional demeanor. “Complete crap, sir. Our friend the Baron, despite his appearance, isn’t even remotely human.” She directed their attention to a display screen at a nearby workstation. “And to make matters worse, the EMH has found genetic irregularities in Benghazi’s DNA unrelated to the energy discharge on the surface.”

A DNA double-helix appeared onscreen, sections of which were highlighted in flashing primary colors. “These segments normally control physical appearance characteristics in humanoids. These highlighted sections are areas where specific alterations have been made to his genetic code.” Taiee turned to face the captain. “It’s very good work, better than Federation medical science is currently capable of. However, it created what amounts to areas of weakness in his genome. This may be why he proved so susceptible to the EM pulse and chronometric radiation on the surface.”

Sandhurst squinted as he tried to make sense of this. “And this means…”

Ramirez was quicker on the draw. “Meaning, sir, that someone deliberately altered Benghazi’s DNA so that he would physically resemble the Baron.”

Taiee smiled at Ramirez. “Well, look at the brain on Liana.”

The XO gave the Chief Medical Officer a mock glare that turned into a smirk.

Sandhurst looked skeptical. “That doesn’t make any sense, Doc. Benghazi’s sixty-seven years old. He’s lived his entire life in the Federation. Benghazi and the Baron are the same age. Perhaps someone altered both of them to resemble one another?”

Taiee shook her head emphatically. “The Baron’s DNA is obviously non-terrestrial, but I’ve detected no similar genetic anomalies. And we’re only assuming that their ages are approximate. I’ve no way to judge the Baron’s true age until I get a better understanding of his physiology.”

The captain still looked unconvinced. “So you’re saying that sixty-eight years ago, someone altered the genetics of a human embryo to make it look like the Baron? And then that embryo grew up to be Stephen Benghazi? A man who just happens to become a researcher into interdimensional physics?” He felt a headache coming on. “Isn’t that far too convoluted to be believable?”

“No.”

The three officers turned simultaneously to see the source of the refutation. Pava Lar’ragos leaned unsteadily against the doorframe, clad in his patient gown. He inclined his head towards the isolation ward. “Our new friend in there… he’s a time traveler.”

*****

Pierosh II
Meteorological Research Station Aristotle
Sub-Level 4


Dunleavy stood behind the transparent aluminum viewing partition as she kept an eye on their visitor below. The glowing orange orb measured some two meters in diameter. It had emerged from the mouth of the portal moments earlier, and was now hovering a few meters from the open maw.

She glanced back at Science Specialist Vandermere and asked, “What do you think, life form or probe?”

Without looking up from her tricorder, Vandermere assessed, “My guess would be probe. It’s transmitting some form of poloron beam back through the aperture.”

“Sending telemetry back to its base?” Dunleavy posited.

“That’s as good a theory as any.”

As Juneau and her entourage rushed into the lab, the sphere emitted three fan-shaped fields of amber light that swept the perimeter of the lower chamber on multiple axis.

Juneau joined Dunleavy at the viewport while the blood drenched Tark drew startled looks from the others as he set about double-checking the laboratory’s security measures.

The old non-com called to Juneau, “The door leading to the portal chamber is secured, Lieutenant.”

Eyes still fixed on the bright sphere, Juneau replied, “Thank you, Master Chief.” Then to Vandermere, “Is it scanning?”

“Yes, sir. Broad-spectrum sensor sweeps of its environment. Intensity of the poloron beam has increased ten-fold.”

Without warning, the sphere shot up into the air and came to a stop directly in front of the viewing partition. The assembled crowd stepped back, their movement accompanied by a chorus of gasps.

The sphere drifted forward to pass through the partition effortlessly. Tark took aim with his phaser rifle as he growled, “Everybody back! Head for the surface!”

Dunleavy turned to run, but was instead enveloped in a golden beam of light from the sphere and vanished.

Tark pulled his trigger and sent pulse after pulse of phaser energy into the sphere to no effect. He was joined by the other security officer, whose constant beam from his hand phaser had no better luck.

The remaining Starfleet personnel scrambled to exit the room as they tripped over one another and created general pandemonium. Juneau executed a tactical step-slide backwards, slowly backing away as she kept her phaser trained on the object. “Chief, cease fire! We haven’t even tried communicating with the thing!”

Over the steady thump of his discharging rifle, Tark shouted, “Oh, I think it’s getting the message!” Something shoved the barrel of his rifle skyward at the same time Tark was swept off his feet to land crumpled in an angry pile on the floor. He gaped open-mouthed at the sight of Juneau standing above him, his rifle in her hand. She raised her eyebrows, and bore the expression of a displeased parent. “Perhaps you misunderstood me, Master Chief. I ordered you to cease fire.” She dropped the rifle and Tark caught it fumblingly. “In most circles that phrase is commonly accepted as meaning ‘stop shooting right the hell now.’”

Juneau looked up just in time to see the sphere backtrack along its original path as it retreated through the viewport and down into the lower chamber. She raced to the window only to witness it pass through the roiling blue event horizon of the portal. A bedraggled looking Tark joined her to emit a grunt of displeasure as he watched the sphere vanish.

As she looked over at the old warhorse, Juneau commented, “At least now we know it goes both ways, eh?”

*****

Meteorological Research Station Aristotle
Level 1


Security Specialist Eric Stins tried to keep his hand from shaking as he drew his phaser’s beam down the seam of the entrance doors to weld them together. Whatever nightmarish thing lay on the other side howled and pounded on the doors with a strength that was most certainly preternatural.

The door’s seam glowed an angry red as Stins and Petty Officer O’Shae backed away. Stins looked at his comrade. “First it starts raining blood outside, and now we’ve got some kind of giant beast trying to force its way in.” He shook his head. “Commander Plazzi told me this planet is a lifeless rock, except for moss.” Wide eyed, he looked at O’Shae beseechingly. “Does that sound like moss to you?”

Rather than answer what was a decidedly rhetorical question, O’Shae tapped his compin. “Away team to Gibraltar, we have an emergency…”

*****
 
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