While I've hit a bit of a wall in "Blood Cries", I decided to work on this story here as it's plot contains an element that is very important in "Blood Cries." Don't worry, I haven't abandoned or forgotten "Blood Cries"--it's just that between my block and real life, I haven't been able to get much done on it. Hopefully that will change this summer. Anyway, this is a short story that gives us a closer look at Terrence Lawford, the Lexington's navigator.
“Assume standard orbit, Ms. Bathory.” Commodore Robert Wesley ordered as the image of the barren near-waterless world, Eleuthra IV grew larger in the Lexington’s viewscreen.
“Aye, Sir.” Aliz Bathory, the Lexington’s pixyish Hungarian helmsman acknowledged as she smoothly slipped the Constitution class into orbit. “Standard orbit achieved.”
“Class L planet…” Lieutenant Commander Talana Zha’Thara reported, her face covered by the scanning visor she was currently hunched over, “…with water mostly confined to the polar regions. Approximate age—eight billion years. Animal and plant life present. No sign of active sentient life. Scratch that…” the Andorian science officer interjected, her antennae twitching as the commodore leaned forward slightly in his seat, “I’m picking up faint power readings near the north polar region apparently coming from deep underground just below what appear to be ruins.”
“Interesting…” Wesley drawled, hiding his excitement. “Is protective gear required for a landing party, Ms. Zha’Thara?”
“Hmmm…I’d suggest parkas…it gets pretty cold when the sun goes down in that area—for humans and Vulcans that is,” Talana replied, her scanning visor conveniently hiding the smirk on her face, “And it probably wouldn’t be a bad idea for the landing party to receive tri-ox injections as the oxygen content is somewhat less than Earth normal.”
“All right…” Robert decided as he turned to the burly Russian who served as his first officer, “Commander…you’ll lead the landing party.”
“Da, Commodore.” Alexei Kuznetsov acknowledged in a deep voice, “Lieutenant Commander…” he instructed, addressing Talana, “…you will accompany as will you Mr. Lawford.” The Bear further directed, addressing the ship’s navigator, “You need more experience planet-side.” Speaking once again to the commodore, Alexei requested, “I’d like to have Dr. Vincent on the landing party as well.”
“All right. Sounds like you’ve picked a good team, Commander.” Wesley declared, “You beam down in one hour.”
*********************************************************************
Materializing on the planet’s surface, the first thing that struck the landing party was the chill. Tightening the neck of his parka as the wind whistled about them, Dr. Vincent grumbled, “Damn. It’s colder than a witch’s…”
“Ha!” Alexei laughed, “It’s perfect! Just like Irkutsk!”
“It does feel good.” Talana, wearing parka, boots, thick blue shirt and pants in lieu of the standard female mini-dress, grinned as she reveled in the chilly clime.
“It would to you.” Lawford jibed, “You Andorians are used to the cold.”
“Poor pinkskin…” The lovely Andorian teased, only to be abruptly cut off by the burly Russian in command.
“Enough.” The Bear rumbled, “We’re here to do a job, not stand around freezing our asses off. Lieutenant Commander…what are you reading.”
“Right.” A chagrined Talana replied as she took out her tricorder. Her eyes falling on the ruins nearby, she reported back, pointing at a series of tumbled down columns and what looked like they might once have been steps. “I’m picking up faint signals coming from those ruins over there.”
“The same that you picked up on the Lexington?” Kuznetsov asked.
Nodding her head, the lovely Andorian answered back, “Yes, Sir. The exact same.”
“Then, that’s where we go.” The burly Russian declared as the cold air condensed around his warm breath, “Let’s move!”
**********************************************************************
These ruins are OLD! The Andorian science officer thought excitedly to herself as her antennae twitched. Approaching a column, Talana gasped in awe as her eyes took in the intricately carved patterns around the thick circular base.
“Takes your breath away, doesn’t it?”
Smiling as she recognized Dr. Vincent’s New England twang, Talana answered back as she began to take readings with her tricorder, “It sure does, Charles.” Shaking her head in disbelief, the blue-skinned Andorian exclaimed in a voice filled with awe, “If these readings are correct, then what we’re looking at here is over three billion years old!”
“Three billion years?” Lawford gasped in awe. “Life was just beginning on Earth at about that time.”
“Kinda humbling, isn’t it, Kid?” Charles remarked, “To discover that as far as the universe is concerned, we’re nothing but momentary blips. These people lived, built, and died just as the first amino acids were coming together to form the first primitive one-celled animals back on Earth and now they’re gone.” Shaking his head, the doctor mused, “And one day billions of years from now maybe someone will be poking around a bunch of ruins on Earth going gaga over how old they are…”
“Perhaps.” Alexei replied, “Perhaps not. But what I want to know…” the Russian commander asked, shaking his head in disbelief, “Is how? How are these ruins still even standing after all this time? Erosion should have worn them away a long time ago.”
“Tell that to them.” Talana quipped, her sly humor beginning to return. Her smile fading away, she explained, “This column is not made of any substance known to us. Whatever the material is, it’s durable enough to withstand the effects of over five billion years of wind and…” she noted, pointing towards what looked like an ancient dried lake bed, “…water erosion.”
“What I want to know…” Lieutenant Lawford interjected as he pointed at the bas relief etchings at the base of the column, “…is what they used to carve those figures?”
“I’d say it would have to be a very powerful cutting beam.” Alexei concluded with a shrug of his shoulders.
“Or something even harder than the material that made up the column.” Talana demurred as she knelt down next to the base of the column, “Harder and able to keep a sharp edge. Hopefully we’ll be able to find a smaller fragment of the same material that can be brought back to the ship and analyzed.” Closely examining the carved etchings on the bottom, Talana gasped in a soft voice, “Hmmm…that’s interesting…”
“What, Lieutenant Commander?” The Bear asked as he bent down to get a closer look.
“Some of these figures…like this one…” Talana replied, pointing at what appeared to be a representation of something reptilian, “…are also on the database that we got from the anomaly.”
“Do you think the people who built that station might have come from here?” Terrence inquired as he hugged himself in an effort to stay warm as the wind whipped around the landing party.
“Can’t say one way or the other.” The lovely Andorian answered back, “Not without collecting a lot more evidence.” As she moved her hands about the base, Talana felt the faintest of movements. “That’s interesting…” Rotating the base slightly, she frowned as nothing seemed to happen. “Maybe if I rotate it further…” she speculated as she rotated it ninety degrees.
“Still nothing.” Alexei noted dryly as his eyes quickly scanned the surrounding area. “Maybe it was purely decorative?”
“Or it might have served as part of a calendar or dating system?” Lawford offered, “Like what the Mayans on Earth used to do…”
“Possibly…” Talana allowed, “Or it might be just a piece of something bigger,” she averred as she took one more set of readings with her tricorder, “I’d recommend that we move on.”
“Where next?” Terrence asked with a grin, “Hopefully some place with heating.”
“How about over there?” Talana replied, pointing towards another set of ruins about fifty yards to the east. “That structure over there…the one that looks like it might have been a temple or something similar. If we’re lucky, we might find a records cache more or less intact.”
“I cannot see how anything recorded on any known media could survive such a long period of time.” Alexei remarked dubiously.
“The ruins survived…” Talana pointed out, “So did those etchings. Perhaps they found a way to record data that can survive billions of years. Besides…” she shrugged her shoulders, “…what else can we do?”
“We can go back to the ship and hit the coffee mess…” Charles groused, flashing an ironic grin.
“Since we’re here anyway…” Alexei decided, ignoring the doctor’s flippant comment, “We might as well check out. Let’s go.”
The wind seemed to whistle a mournful, funereal tune as the landing party approached the temple ruins. The group ascended the cracked, ancient steps wordlessly, until, upon reaching the summit, they encountered a sight that brought a smile of appreciation to the face of the Andorian science officer. As she saw the dull orange K-class sun Eleuthra hanging in the sky, seemingly supported by one of the columns, she remarked in a quiet voice, “Isn’t it beautiful?”
“Da…” Kuznetsov replied in a gruff tone, “It’s beautiful. Now—let’s get to work.”
“Pffft…Alexei, you just don’t have a soul.” Talana riposted as she activated her tricorder. “That’s interesting…” the science officer murmured, “I’m picking up faint energy readings—the same ones that we picked up in orbit.” Pointing towards what appeared to be a pedestal in the center of the ruined building, she called out, “It’s coming from over there.” Approaching the pedestal, Talana noticed even more of the bas-relief sculpted pictographs. Only this time, they weren’t merely lining the base. They covered the entirety of the pedestal, their still gilt edges glinting as the dull rays of the rising sun touched them.
“Is it an altar of some sort?” Terrence asked as he joined the Andorian science officer.
“While I don’t think we can rule that out…” Talana answered back thoughtfully, “Something tells me that that’s not what it is. It’s something more…” she remarked, her voice dropping to a whisper as she drew closer, “…much more.”
“What is it then?” Commander Kuznetsov asked as he joined his science officer and navigator. “A stand for an idol?”
“Fascinating…” The lovely Andorian whispered, Alexei’s words not even registering on her consciousness as she found herself drawn almost involuntarily to the figures on the pedestal. Her voice taking on a more wistful tone, she remarked, “I wish I knew what those symbols mean…I can’t help but think that they’re saying something important...more than just ‘Look at us! See how great we were’…”
“Perhaps...” Alexei suggested with a grunt, “…you don’t have to translate all of the symbols. Maybe…if we concentrate on deciphering the more obvious pictographs they will give us the information we need?”
“Or at least point the way for us?” Lawford interjected.
“Makes sense to me.” Charles agreed in his New England twang as the wind whistled about the columns. “The people who built this place obviously intended for these columns and the symbols on them to last far beyond their own lifetimes and even the lifetime of their race. Seems logical that they’d make at least some of the symbols easy to decode for whoever came after them.”
“Good point.” Talana agreed as she examined the symbols more closely. After an hour of intense study, the blue-skinned science officer, her antennae twitching in a display of growing frustration, cursed in a loud voice, “Dammit! I feel like I’m this close to cracking it, but I’m missing a piece.” As the others gathered around her, she explained, “You see…this disk here—I’m convinced that that is Eleuthra. The pillar—I’m willing to bet that that is this pedestal here. See how Eleuthra is positioned just over the pedestal…”
“Like it’s resting on it.” Lawford noted.
“Like now.” Charles exclaimed, “See how the rising sun appears to be resting on the pillar? That has to be it.”
“Maybe…” Talana disagreed, shaking her head. “But I think there’s more. Look at this pictograph over here…” she directed, pointing at the symbol immediately beneath the pedestal, that of a circle in the middle of a rectangle, rays radiating outwards, each ray connecting with one of four smaller circles lining each edge of the rectangle.
Standing next to the pedestal, Alexei scanned the entire area with his eyes, turning in place until he had completed a complete circle. His lips turning up into a smirk, he declared triumphantly in his thick Russian accent, “I’ve found it!” Pointing first to the column from which had just come from, the Bear then pointed to three other similar columns, each located so as to form the corners of a quadrilateral. “Those columns are the outer circles.”
“And the pedestal is the inner one.” Dr. Vincent interrupted, “But the sun’s in the right position—nothing’s happening.”
“You’re forgetting, Charles…” Talana smirked, “The column we left had a rotating base. I’ll bet that the columns are just like that one. Also, take another look at the markings. See how there’s no shadow being cast?”
“So, we need to align the bases of the other columns with the pedestal.” Kuznetsov concluded.
“Exactly. But we need to wait until noon. Until then, we can each take our positions at the different columns and carry out some scans and such.” Talana grinned, her antennae twitching in anticipation as she reveled in the cold. Pointing at the column to the southeast she declared, “I’ll get this one.”
“Right.” Alexei confirmed, “Doctor, you take the one to the northeast. Lieutenant, you’ve got the southwest, and I’ll get the last one. Let’s get going—we have work to do.”
As the sun neared the zenith, Talana flipped open her communicator. “All right, everyone, it’s time. Let’s see what happens.” Closing her communicator, the Andorian science officer knelt down at the base of the column that she had been assigned. Grasping the base with her hands, she rotated it until the ray symbol pointed towards the central pedestal. Standing up, she waved towards Alexei, who waved back at her and then at Lawford and Vincent who waved as well. Opening her communicator again, she advised her fellow explorers as she stepped out of the pathway between her column and the central structure. “People…it might be a good idea to move out of the way—just in case.”
Moving out of the way just in time, Terrence noticed the base of his column beginning to glow a warm yellow. Then, just as the sun reached its apex, a yellow beam shot out, striking the pedestal in the middle just as similar beams emitted from the other columns impacted, bathing the pedestal in a warm glow. Hearing a gentle humming sound, the navigator tried to speak into his communicator only to hear static in return. Vainly attempting to adjust the gain as the static grew louder, Lawford, in disgust, finally closed his communicator as the humming grew even louder, matching the increasing glow being emitted by the beams until, finally, a bright red yellow beam shot out from the pedestal towards the star. The beams now took on an orange color as now the columns were glowing as well until even more beams lanced out from them, these beams connecting the columns with each other until they formed a wall of orange energy surrounding the ruins. Slowly, the wall took on a more solid form of swirling plasma as the glow around the pedestal began to fade until it had disappeared entirely, leaving a silver disc on top of the waist-high structure.
Reaching the central pedestal almost simultaneously, the four Starfleet officers eyed the disc with rapt curiosity. Taking her tricorder, Talana attempted to scan the device, only to shake her head. “Whatever it is…” the lovely Andorian declared, “…it’s blocking my tricorder scans. But if I were to hazard a guess…” she remarked as she pointed down at the circular shaped recesses located in the middle of each of the plasma ‘walls’, “…I’d say it’s a key of some sort.”
“Recommendations?” Alexei asked in his usual gruff tone.
“Well…” Talana replied, “…I don’t think we have much of a choice. If we want to find out what’s going on here, we’re going to have to use the disc. In any event…” she quipped, her lips turned up in a crooked grin, “…I don’t think we’re going to be able to get out of here without using it.”
“So…” Charles snorted, “…we’re damned if we do and damned if we don’t.”
“That’s about the size of it.” Talana riposted as she picked up the disc.
“We are wasting time.” Commander Kuznetsov rumbled as he nodded his head at Talana. “Go ahead, Lieutenant Commander, use the disc.”
SIGNS AMONGST THE RUINS
“Aye, Sir.” Aliz Bathory, the Lexington’s pixyish Hungarian helmsman acknowledged as she smoothly slipped the Constitution class into orbit. “Standard orbit achieved.”
“Class L planet…” Lieutenant Commander Talana Zha’Thara reported, her face covered by the scanning visor she was currently hunched over, “…with water mostly confined to the polar regions. Approximate age—eight billion years. Animal and plant life present. No sign of active sentient life. Scratch that…” the Andorian science officer interjected, her antennae twitching as the commodore leaned forward slightly in his seat, “I’m picking up faint power readings near the north polar region apparently coming from deep underground just below what appear to be ruins.”
“Interesting…” Wesley drawled, hiding his excitement. “Is protective gear required for a landing party, Ms. Zha’Thara?”
“Hmmm…I’d suggest parkas…it gets pretty cold when the sun goes down in that area—for humans and Vulcans that is,” Talana replied, her scanning visor conveniently hiding the smirk on her face, “And it probably wouldn’t be a bad idea for the landing party to receive tri-ox injections as the oxygen content is somewhat less than Earth normal.”
“All right…” Robert decided as he turned to the burly Russian who served as his first officer, “Commander…you’ll lead the landing party.”
“Da, Commodore.” Alexei Kuznetsov acknowledged in a deep voice, “Lieutenant Commander…” he instructed, addressing Talana, “…you will accompany as will you Mr. Lawford.” The Bear further directed, addressing the ship’s navigator, “You need more experience planet-side.” Speaking once again to the commodore, Alexei requested, “I’d like to have Dr. Vincent on the landing party as well.”
“All right. Sounds like you’ve picked a good team, Commander.” Wesley declared, “You beam down in one hour.”
*********************************************************************
Materializing on the planet’s surface, the first thing that struck the landing party was the chill. Tightening the neck of his parka as the wind whistled about them, Dr. Vincent grumbled, “Damn. It’s colder than a witch’s…”
“Ha!” Alexei laughed, “It’s perfect! Just like Irkutsk!”
“It does feel good.” Talana, wearing parka, boots, thick blue shirt and pants in lieu of the standard female mini-dress, grinned as she reveled in the chilly clime.
“It would to you.” Lawford jibed, “You Andorians are used to the cold.”
“Poor pinkskin…” The lovely Andorian teased, only to be abruptly cut off by the burly Russian in command.
“Enough.” The Bear rumbled, “We’re here to do a job, not stand around freezing our asses off. Lieutenant Commander…what are you reading.”
“Right.” A chagrined Talana replied as she took out her tricorder. Her eyes falling on the ruins nearby, she reported back, pointing at a series of tumbled down columns and what looked like they might once have been steps. “I’m picking up faint signals coming from those ruins over there.”
“The same that you picked up on the Lexington?” Kuznetsov asked.
Nodding her head, the lovely Andorian answered back, “Yes, Sir. The exact same.”
“Then, that’s where we go.” The burly Russian declared as the cold air condensed around his warm breath, “Let’s move!”
**********************************************************************
These ruins are OLD! The Andorian science officer thought excitedly to herself as her antennae twitched. Approaching a column, Talana gasped in awe as her eyes took in the intricately carved patterns around the thick circular base.
“Takes your breath away, doesn’t it?”
Smiling as she recognized Dr. Vincent’s New England twang, Talana answered back as she began to take readings with her tricorder, “It sure does, Charles.” Shaking her head in disbelief, the blue-skinned Andorian exclaimed in a voice filled with awe, “If these readings are correct, then what we’re looking at here is over three billion years old!”
“Three billion years?” Lawford gasped in awe. “Life was just beginning on Earth at about that time.”
“Kinda humbling, isn’t it, Kid?” Charles remarked, “To discover that as far as the universe is concerned, we’re nothing but momentary blips. These people lived, built, and died just as the first amino acids were coming together to form the first primitive one-celled animals back on Earth and now they’re gone.” Shaking his head, the doctor mused, “And one day billions of years from now maybe someone will be poking around a bunch of ruins on Earth going gaga over how old they are…”
“Perhaps.” Alexei replied, “Perhaps not. But what I want to know…” the Russian commander asked, shaking his head in disbelief, “Is how? How are these ruins still even standing after all this time? Erosion should have worn them away a long time ago.”
“Tell that to them.” Talana quipped, her sly humor beginning to return. Her smile fading away, she explained, “This column is not made of any substance known to us. Whatever the material is, it’s durable enough to withstand the effects of over five billion years of wind and…” she noted, pointing towards what looked like an ancient dried lake bed, “…water erosion.”
“What I want to know…” Lieutenant Lawford interjected as he pointed at the bas relief etchings at the base of the column, “…is what they used to carve those figures?”
“I’d say it would have to be a very powerful cutting beam.” Alexei concluded with a shrug of his shoulders.
“Or something even harder than the material that made up the column.” Talana demurred as she knelt down next to the base of the column, “Harder and able to keep a sharp edge. Hopefully we’ll be able to find a smaller fragment of the same material that can be brought back to the ship and analyzed.” Closely examining the carved etchings on the bottom, Talana gasped in a soft voice, “Hmmm…that’s interesting…”
“What, Lieutenant Commander?” The Bear asked as he bent down to get a closer look.
“Some of these figures…like this one…” Talana replied, pointing at what appeared to be a representation of something reptilian, “…are also on the database that we got from the anomaly.”
“Do you think the people who built that station might have come from here?” Terrence inquired as he hugged himself in an effort to stay warm as the wind whipped around the landing party.
“Can’t say one way or the other.” The lovely Andorian answered back, “Not without collecting a lot more evidence.” As she moved her hands about the base, Talana felt the faintest of movements. “That’s interesting…” Rotating the base slightly, she frowned as nothing seemed to happen. “Maybe if I rotate it further…” she speculated as she rotated it ninety degrees.
“Still nothing.” Alexei noted dryly as his eyes quickly scanned the surrounding area. “Maybe it was purely decorative?”
“Or it might have served as part of a calendar or dating system?” Lawford offered, “Like what the Mayans on Earth used to do…”
“Possibly…” Talana allowed, “Or it might be just a piece of something bigger,” she averred as she took one more set of readings with her tricorder, “I’d recommend that we move on.”
“Where next?” Terrence asked with a grin, “Hopefully some place with heating.”
“How about over there?” Talana replied, pointing towards another set of ruins about fifty yards to the east. “That structure over there…the one that looks like it might have been a temple or something similar. If we’re lucky, we might find a records cache more or less intact.”
“I cannot see how anything recorded on any known media could survive such a long period of time.” Alexei remarked dubiously.
“The ruins survived…” Talana pointed out, “So did those etchings. Perhaps they found a way to record data that can survive billions of years. Besides…” she shrugged her shoulders, “…what else can we do?”
“We can go back to the ship and hit the coffee mess…” Charles groused, flashing an ironic grin.
“Since we’re here anyway…” Alexei decided, ignoring the doctor’s flippant comment, “We might as well check out. Let’s go.”
The wind seemed to whistle a mournful, funereal tune as the landing party approached the temple ruins. The group ascended the cracked, ancient steps wordlessly, until, upon reaching the summit, they encountered a sight that brought a smile of appreciation to the face of the Andorian science officer. As she saw the dull orange K-class sun Eleuthra hanging in the sky, seemingly supported by one of the columns, she remarked in a quiet voice, “Isn’t it beautiful?”
“Da…” Kuznetsov replied in a gruff tone, “It’s beautiful. Now—let’s get to work.”
“Pffft…Alexei, you just don’t have a soul.” Talana riposted as she activated her tricorder. “That’s interesting…” the science officer murmured, “I’m picking up faint energy readings—the same ones that we picked up in orbit.” Pointing towards what appeared to be a pedestal in the center of the ruined building, she called out, “It’s coming from over there.” Approaching the pedestal, Talana noticed even more of the bas-relief sculpted pictographs. Only this time, they weren’t merely lining the base. They covered the entirety of the pedestal, their still gilt edges glinting as the dull rays of the rising sun touched them.
“Is it an altar of some sort?” Terrence asked as he joined the Andorian science officer.
“While I don’t think we can rule that out…” Talana answered back thoughtfully, “Something tells me that that’s not what it is. It’s something more…” she remarked, her voice dropping to a whisper as she drew closer, “…much more.”
“What is it then?” Commander Kuznetsov asked as he joined his science officer and navigator. “A stand for an idol?”
“Fascinating…” The lovely Andorian whispered, Alexei’s words not even registering on her consciousness as she found herself drawn almost involuntarily to the figures on the pedestal. Her voice taking on a more wistful tone, she remarked, “I wish I knew what those symbols mean…I can’t help but think that they’re saying something important...more than just ‘Look at us! See how great we were’…”
“Perhaps...” Alexei suggested with a grunt, “…you don’t have to translate all of the symbols. Maybe…if we concentrate on deciphering the more obvious pictographs they will give us the information we need?”
“Or at least point the way for us?” Lawford interjected.
“Makes sense to me.” Charles agreed in his New England twang as the wind whistled about the columns. “The people who built this place obviously intended for these columns and the symbols on them to last far beyond their own lifetimes and even the lifetime of their race. Seems logical that they’d make at least some of the symbols easy to decode for whoever came after them.”
“Good point.” Talana agreed as she examined the symbols more closely. After an hour of intense study, the blue-skinned science officer, her antennae twitching in a display of growing frustration, cursed in a loud voice, “Dammit! I feel like I’m this close to cracking it, but I’m missing a piece.” As the others gathered around her, she explained, “You see…this disk here—I’m convinced that that is Eleuthra. The pillar—I’m willing to bet that that is this pedestal here. See how Eleuthra is positioned just over the pedestal…”
“Like it’s resting on it.” Lawford noted.
“Like now.” Charles exclaimed, “See how the rising sun appears to be resting on the pillar? That has to be it.”
“Maybe…” Talana disagreed, shaking her head. “But I think there’s more. Look at this pictograph over here…” she directed, pointing at the symbol immediately beneath the pedestal, that of a circle in the middle of a rectangle, rays radiating outwards, each ray connecting with one of four smaller circles lining each edge of the rectangle.
Standing next to the pedestal, Alexei scanned the entire area with his eyes, turning in place until he had completed a complete circle. His lips turning up into a smirk, he declared triumphantly in his thick Russian accent, “I’ve found it!” Pointing first to the column from which had just come from, the Bear then pointed to three other similar columns, each located so as to form the corners of a quadrilateral. “Those columns are the outer circles.”
“And the pedestal is the inner one.” Dr. Vincent interrupted, “But the sun’s in the right position—nothing’s happening.”
“You’re forgetting, Charles…” Talana smirked, “The column we left had a rotating base. I’ll bet that the columns are just like that one. Also, take another look at the markings. See how there’s no shadow being cast?”
“So, we need to align the bases of the other columns with the pedestal.” Kuznetsov concluded.
“Exactly. But we need to wait until noon. Until then, we can each take our positions at the different columns and carry out some scans and such.” Talana grinned, her antennae twitching in anticipation as she reveled in the cold. Pointing at the column to the southeast she declared, “I’ll get this one.”
“Right.” Alexei confirmed, “Doctor, you take the one to the northeast. Lieutenant, you’ve got the southwest, and I’ll get the last one. Let’s get going—we have work to do.”
As the sun neared the zenith, Talana flipped open her communicator. “All right, everyone, it’s time. Let’s see what happens.” Closing her communicator, the Andorian science officer knelt down at the base of the column that she had been assigned. Grasping the base with her hands, she rotated it until the ray symbol pointed towards the central pedestal. Standing up, she waved towards Alexei, who waved back at her and then at Lawford and Vincent who waved as well. Opening her communicator again, she advised her fellow explorers as she stepped out of the pathway between her column and the central structure. “People…it might be a good idea to move out of the way—just in case.”
Moving out of the way just in time, Terrence noticed the base of his column beginning to glow a warm yellow. Then, just as the sun reached its apex, a yellow beam shot out, striking the pedestal in the middle just as similar beams emitted from the other columns impacted, bathing the pedestal in a warm glow. Hearing a gentle humming sound, the navigator tried to speak into his communicator only to hear static in return. Vainly attempting to adjust the gain as the static grew louder, Lawford, in disgust, finally closed his communicator as the humming grew even louder, matching the increasing glow being emitted by the beams until, finally, a bright red yellow beam shot out from the pedestal towards the star. The beams now took on an orange color as now the columns were glowing as well until even more beams lanced out from them, these beams connecting the columns with each other until they formed a wall of orange energy surrounding the ruins. Slowly, the wall took on a more solid form of swirling plasma as the glow around the pedestal began to fade until it had disappeared entirely, leaving a silver disc on top of the waist-high structure.
Reaching the central pedestal almost simultaneously, the four Starfleet officers eyed the disc with rapt curiosity. Taking her tricorder, Talana attempted to scan the device, only to shake her head. “Whatever it is…” the lovely Andorian declared, “…it’s blocking my tricorder scans. But if I were to hazard a guess…” she remarked as she pointed down at the circular shaped recesses located in the middle of each of the plasma ‘walls’, “…I’d say it’s a key of some sort.”
“Recommendations?” Alexei asked in his usual gruff tone.
“Well…” Talana replied, “…I don’t think we have much of a choice. If we want to find out what’s going on here, we’re going to have to use the disc. In any event…” she quipped, her lips turned up in a crooked grin, “…I don’t think we’re going to be able to get out of here without using it.”
“So…” Charles snorted, “…we’re damned if we do and damned if we don’t.”
“That’s about the size of it.” Talana riposted as she picked up the disc.
“We are wasting time.” Commander Kuznetsov rumbled as he nodded his head at Talana. “Go ahead, Lieutenant Commander, use the disc.”