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Lower Deck Tales: Beyond Acheron
A Star Eagle Adventures Short Story
A Star Eagle Adventures Short Story
All Our Times Have Come.
Here But Now They're Gone.
Seasons Don't Fear The Reaper.
Nor Do The Wind, The Sun Or The Rain.
We Can Be Like They Are.
Come On Baby...Don't Fear The Reaper.
Baby Take My Hand...Don't Fear The Reaper.
We'll Be Able To Fly … Don’t Fear The Reaper.
Baby, I’m Your Man.
Here But Now They're Gone.
Seasons Don't Fear The Reaper.
Nor Do The Wind, The Sun Or The Rain.
We Can Be Like They Are.
Come On Baby...Don't Fear The Reaper.
Baby Take My Hand...Don't Fear The Reaper.
We'll Be Able To Fly … Don’t Fear The Reaper.
Baby, I’m Your Man.
Blue Öyster Cult – (Don’t Fear) The Reaper
Captain’s Log, Stardate 50032.5. Eagle has been dispatched to Ajilon VI, an uninhabited planet near the Klingon border on which the Federation and Starfleet have been performing important geological field studies which scientists believe will lead to a revolutionary new way to terraform particularly hostile planets. The geologists and terrafromers on Ajilon VI claim to be very close to a significant breakthrough. Unfortunately the Klingon war has forced Starfleet to reprioritize. With Ajilon so close to the border and with intelligence information showing a steady build up of Klingon activity in the area, we have been ordered to secure the laboratories on the surface and evacuate all science teams.
In the meantime the settlers on Ajilon Prime have refused to leave their homes and decided to take their chances even while the Klingons have shown interest in this system in the past. I can only hope that they won’t be bold enough to directly assault a populated Federation colony. Eagle will not be able to remain behind to offer assistance as we have been instructed to leave the system as soon as the evacuation of Ajilon VI has been completed.
* * *
Life was great for Savannah LeBeau.
Everything had just come together perfectly. Her lifelong dream to become a Starfleet officer had come true just a few months earlier and not only that, she had been given the posting of her choice when she had been allocated to the USS Eagle. A ship she had chosen not just because it happened to be a Nebula-class explorer with seemingly unlimited scientific resources but also because it was were Tam Grax had been stationed after he had graduated a year before she did.
They had both been determined not to let their relationship end like so many others at the Academy. So they had stayed in constant contact with each other after Grax had shipped out and as soon as Savannah had gotten her ensign pip, she had requested the same ship.
And the deities had smiled down at young love and given their tacit approval.
It hadn’t stopped there.
Like Tam, Savannah had majored in exo-geology at the Academy with a strong focus on terraforming. Her thesis paper had been on Doctor Joachim Stuber’s work on Ajilon VI, the very same place Eagle had entered orbit around two days earlier.
Savannah and Tam had been at the top of science officer Xylion’s list to assist the researchers on the ground with their work and ultimately to pack up shop in order to get the entire project out of the way of what could potentially become a battlefield any day now.
The Klingons were the last thing on Savannah’s mind however as she studied the consoles in one of Ajilon’s science labs. She felt like a kid in a candy store, having unrestricted access to almost a decade’s worth of geological data.
“By Rixx, Annah, can you imagine how high we’d have scored on those exams if we’d had access to this place.”
The young, caramel-skinned woman couldn’t quite get that Cheshire cat grin off her face even while her eyes never once diverted from the screen. “Forget the exams, with this, I would have scored a perfect mark on my thesis.”
Tam, the only other person in the lab, turned to face her. “If I remember right you got ninety-five points on that.”
“Ninety-eight,” she said, her eyes still glued to that screen. Then her smile dropped off her face as if somebody had viciously backslapped her. “Oh my god.”
“What is it?” he asked with concern.
She had stopped scrolling through the text, now intently focused on a single paragraph. “ The Mohorovičić discontinuity on Ajilon VI lies at around ninety-five kilometers beneath the MSL and well within the asthenosphere and not within the lithosphere as I put in my paper,” she said and slapped her forehead. “There’s my perfect score. I’m so stupid.”
Tam laughed.
She shot him a withering glare.
“Did I ever tell you that you look cute when you think you are stupid?” he said and moved in closer to reach out for her waist.
“No,” she said sharply and tried to free herself from his grasp to focus on the console instead. “And stop acting so immature, we don’t have time for this.”
Tam didn’t let up. “Sure we do,” he said. “We’ll transfer all this stuff back to Eagle and you’ll have a whole week to look over all the mistakes you’ve made in your paper.”
That garnered him another glare. “Mistakes?”
He shrugged his shoulders innocently. “Sorry. Mistake. Singular.”
She nodded with apparent satisfaction but still fought his attempts to draw her closer. “Tam, this isn’t the place and we still have work to do.”
“I think we deserve a break. In fact as your superior officer I’m ordering you to relax.”
“Oh do you now? You have one year seniority over me, that hardly makes you my superior officer,” she said and pressed her hand against his chest. “Besides, I have other things on my mind right now.”
He cocked his head slightly. “No you don’t,” he said with a lopsided grin.
He was right of course. He always was. She frowned. “I hate when you do that.”
She gave up resisting him and he pulled her in until their lips were mere inches apart. He smirked. “No you don’t,” he said just before their lips met for a passionate kiss.
All thoughts about the inappropriateness of the venue had slipped her mind even when his hand reached for the zipper of her uniform jumpsuit and pulling it down slowly.
She heard the footsteps first.
Like a startle deer she jumped away from Tam only to see that somebody had stepped into the open door way. Oh my god, oh my god, we’re so busted.
Just calm down, Annah. But when Tam turned to see who had interrupted their impromptu display of passion he realized that she was absolutely right. We’re so busted.
It was none other than Lieutenant Nora Laas, chief of security USS Eagle. Former Bajoran independence fighter, former Marine and current all around hardass. The kind of woman who had perfected the art of killing subordinates with a single look. The very same look she was giving the two young ensigns now.
“Lieutenant, ma’am ... we were just finishing up with …”, Savannah stumbled over her own words and didn’t help the situation by frantically fumbling with the zipper of her halfway undone uniform.
“I can see what you were finishing up with in here.”
“Ma’am, if I could just –“
Nora shut up Tam without a single word. The look and one raised finger did the job just fine.
Of course Tam Grax could read exactly what the Bajoran was thinking.
Not one more word. You can consider yourselves lucky you’re not my officers or you’d be running one-hundred laps around the saucer section tonight.
“You have exactly five minutes to pack up everything you can and transfer back to the ship. We’re getting out now,” she said and began to turn away.
Savannah who had finally managed to get her uniform back in regulation style took a step forward. “But we won’t be able to get everything here ready in five minutes. There is just too much data, and what about the experiments and lab samples and –“
Nora Laas turned back to look at the ensign with an only slightly softer expression on her face. “Next time you might want to think about that before you decide to turn an away mission into a date. We’ve got reports of cloaked Klingon ships in the area so our orders are to pull out. You’ve got five minutes. One second longer and you can find out how a Klingon will put up with your attitude,” she said and was gone.
Savannah took a deep breath. “She’s going to tell Xylion. That’s it, I’m dead.”
“Relax, you’re not dead.”
She glared at him. “This is all your fault. Now Xylion will find out and we’ll never go on an away mission ever again as long as we are on this ship. You know what that means? We might as well be back at the Academy.”
But he just shook his head. “She isn’t going to tell anyone.”
“How do you know that?”
“Because Lieutenant Nora might be a tough-as-nails warrior who’ll take on half a Cardassian army without thinking twice but she isn’t a tattletale. Trust me, it isn’t her style. Now come on, you’ve heard her. We’ve only got five minutes and I don’t know about you but I’d rather not find out about Klingon work etiquette.”
She went back to her computer console to begin transferring the most essential data. “Can’t be much worse than hers,” she mumbled. “You do realize that we’ll never make lieutenant now, right?” she added without interrupting her work.
“We won’t if you don’t shut up and get this done.”
“And we just got them to sign off on us sharing quarters together,” she continued, clearly unable to stop thinking about the encounter. “You know that’s the first thing they going to take away. I shudder to think of having to move back in with Velane. You haven’t heard snoring until you’ve heard the Tellarite version.”
“They do have the nose.”
Savannah stopped and turned to shoot him a dark look.
“What?” he said with an innocent shrug. “It’s true.”
“That’s just –“
The force of the explosion threw them both to the ground even before the consoles all around them erupted with sparks and broken polymers. The lights went not a heartbeat later.
Annah!
Her training, not to mention her survival instinct had kicked in just in time. She had flattened herself to the ground and buried her head under her arms.
Tam Grex crawled over to her without delay, ignoring the dust and debris raining down on them from the dark ceiling. “Annah, are you alright?”
She looked up at his dirty face, her sparkling hazel eyes filled with shock. “What … what happened?”
“I don’t know,” he said, trying to look around the small lab. Without any major light sources in operation, he could hardly see further than a couple of meters. He focused back on her. “Are you sure you are alright?”
She nodded slowly. “I’m fine.”
The red glow of the emergency lights kicked in, giving their surroundings an ominous crimson glow.
Grex stood and tapped his combadge but his only response was a discouraging beep as it was unable to open a comlink.
Savannah followed suit and tried her own with the same results.
“I’m going to find Lieutenant Nora. I need you to head to the transporter room and report back to the ship.”
She shook her head. “No way, we’re both getting out of here.”
“We don’t know what happened, Annah. I need to find out.”
“Have you lost your mind?” she shot back, barely able to keep her composure. “It’s obviously the Klingons. What do you think you can do? You aren’t even armed.”
He reached for a small pouch at his waist and pulled free a small matchbox sized phaser. “I’ve got this.”
“Where did you get that from? They didn’t give me any weapons.”
“Well, you should have asked. Listen, now is not the time to argue. You have to get back to the transporter room, that’s the only place on this Rixx forsaken planet where Eagle can get a clean lock on you. Go there and try to have them beam you out, let them know what happened,” he said and had already made his way to the doorway.
She took two steps after him. “Tam, please, don’t”
“Pull yourself together, Ensign,” he said sternly.
She shook her head. “Don’t do this.”
He gave her a small, reassuring smile. It’s going to be alright, Imzadi.
And then he was gone.
Savannah remained in the small lab, frozen in place for what seemed like an eternity but which in reality was no longer then ten seconds. She was angry at Tam for leaving her and she was frightened of what the Klingons would do to him, and her, if they found them. Mostly however she was annoyed by her own reactions to this unexpected event. At the Academy she had always prevailed in stress simulations, always made the right decisions and never hesitated. But this was no simulation.
She closed her eyes and took a deep breath, trying to force her mind to believe that it was.
When she opened them again she quickly made it to the open door and looked out into the corridor that connected the lab to the rest of the research facility which was home to over fifty scientists and technicians and another twenty-five crewmembers visiting from Eagle.
It was empty in both directions.
She had an easy decision to make. Turn left and do as Tam had said and make it back to the transporter room or turn right and follow him.
She didn’t hesitate again.
She turned right.