Chapter 4
Ansaris II
Ansaris System, Cardassian Union
A rain of disruptor fire slashed through the clear blue sky to explode against the surface in a hellish barrage that was as much felt as it was heard.
Gul Dasin sprinted towards one of the few remaining bunkers, running a zig-zag pattern as he’d been trained years before, despite his knowing that if an energy blast from the devastating orbital bombardment struck anywhere in his vicinity, all the fancy footwork in the galaxy would not make one whit of difference.
He dove through the open doorway, his armored cuirass absorbing the brunt of his chest’s impact with the cement floor. As he scrambled to his feet, someone thrust a phaser rifle into his hands as a voice called out, “Gul, who is it? We’ve lost all contact with the orbital defense grid, and we can’t even identify who’s attacking.”
Dasin fought to catch his breath, cursing the recent weeks he’d spent aboard Teravi since the end of the war neglecting his exercise regimen. “Type-3 disruptor cannons,” he croaked. “And the ships are equipped with cloaking devices. It’s either the Klingons or the Romulans.”
His first officer aboard the
Teravi had managed to broadcast a single, brief alert that cloaked mines had just detonated in close proximity to the ship, crippling her. Before Dasin could ask about the identity of the attackers, the signal had been cut off. Although he didn’t want to acknowledge the likelihood of it, in his heart of hearts Dasin knew his beloved warship had been destroyed.
One of the terrified conscripts gaped at him. “But why? Why would they attack us?”
“It would seem that we may have given others in the quadrant reason to harbor hard feelings against us,” Dasin noted dryly, resisting the urge to roll his eyes at the ridiculous inquiry. He tried again to contact Teravi via his communicator, but the communications frequencies were all jammed.
A battle-hardened glinn that Dasin had identified as a combat veteran straight away was calmly checking the charge on his disruptor rifle as he said, “It must be the Romulans, then. If this were the Klingons, they’d have transported down to engage us in close-quarters combat by now. Say what you will about the barbarians, they’re not afraid to fight their enemies face to face.”
As Dasin was about to reply, another salvo of disruptor pulses screamed from the sky to hammer the civilian colony nearby. Great gouts of earth and debris mushroomed skyward as the ground shook violently.
“No!” cried one of the conscripts as he witnessed his home city laid waste. The young man sprinted for the exit to the bunker, only to be met on the threshold by the butt of the glinn’s rifle connecting solidly with his head. The young man collapsed to the floor, blood coursing from a wicked cut to his eye-ridge as he moaned and struggled to cling to consciousness.
Dasin nodded curtly at the glinn, approving of the man’s action. The conscript would accomplish nothing by running out into the nightmarish firestorm except sacrificing his life needlessly.
As he ordered two other men to retrieve the fallen soldier, a runner sprinted into the chamber, skidding to a stop in front of Dasin. “Gul,” the woman nodded respectfully, “Legate Morott requires your presence in the C-in-C.”
Dasin turned and followed as the woman raced back through the narrow and dimly lit bunker corridors. He struggled not to sound out of breath as he called ahead to her, “Does Central Command know what’s happened here?”
“We’re launching a warp-capable distress beacon to call for help right now, Gul,” she answered as she ducked through a pressure door.
* * *
USS Columbia, en route to Sanctuary
Captains Regan and Sandhurst were headed at last to the transporter room after their long conversation with Admiral Tattok at Starfleet Command and the director of the Department of Temporal Investigations. It was an unpleasant ninety minutes for the both of them, though Lindze Regan admitted to herself that it was likely more discomfiting for Sandhurst than herself. He’d been grilled extensively by the DTI director, as if the woman was trying to make sure that he wasn’t a spy of some kind. When the conference had finally ended, Regan had looked at her fellow captain with a crooked smile.
“Well, that went… well.”
Sandhurst scoffed mildly. “If you say so---though I did warn you that Temporal Investigations would play hardball. ‘Under advisement’ indeed.”
She nodded, and even she was beginning to suspect that DTI would make up some excuse for keeping
Gibraltar in this universe. They didn’t care if their own universe needed them, didn’t care how unfair it would be to the people who had families and loved ones they’d left behind. All they would care about is the fact that they had another hundred or so bodies to fill the ranks.
“That you did, Captain, though for your sake and that of your crew, I hope they make the right decision and do what they can to send you home,” she replied.
Gibraltar’s captain then expressed his desire to return to his ship so that he could see to the condition of the vessel and his crew. Regan nodded again and accompanied him to the transporter room.
“If I may say so, Captain Sandhurst, I look forward to getting to know you while you’re here in our little corner of the omniverse,” Regan said as he stepped onto the transporter dais.
Turning, Sandhurst nodded. “Comparing the differences in our respective realities should prove entertaining,” he said with a faint smile. “Even if we do go home, we’re going to be here for a while, giving us plenty of time for a more pleasant conversation.”
“I’ll hold you to that, Captain,” she replied, stepping back toward the operator’s console and glancing over her shoulder. “Whenever the captain is ready, Walter.”
The aged transporter chief nodded without comment and entered a few commands, and Regan turned back to her guest.
“Energize,” Sandhurst called out, and seconds later he disappeared.
As the last vestiges of transporter energy were dissipating, Regan heard her first officer’s voice over the intercom.
“Silmar to Captain Regan.”
With a sigh, she turned and walked out of the transporter room, heading for the nearest turbolift. “Go ahead, Commander.”
“Captain, we’ve just picked up a signal on long-range sensors, transmitting on a Cardassian emergency frequency.”
“A distress call?” she mused aloud as she pushed the call button for the lit. “What’s it saying?”
“The colony on Ansaris II is requesting assistance from any vessel within range. They’re reporting an attack from cloaked ships using type-three disruptors, ma’am.”
She knew of only three species off the top of her head that used that kind of weaponry: Romulan, Breen, and Klingon. Two of those were operating sporadically in Cardassian space already, but all three were known to use cloaking devices. And all three would have reason to attack the Cardassians---the Romulans and Klingons simply because it was in their nature to conquer (though doing so would violate the Allies’ treaty with the Cardassian government), and the Breen perhaps for some payback. After all, during the final engagement of the war, the Cardassian fleet had turned from the battle and the Breen had suffered heavy losses.
A stray thought passed through her mind as the lift car arrived and the door opened for her.
“Isn’t the Ansaris system inside the security zone we left a couple hours ago?” she asked.
“Affirmative, Captain.”
Regan ordered the lift to take her to the bridge, then said, “Commander, get Starfleet Command on the comm again. I won’t make the mistake of going back into that security zone without authorization from the Cardassian government.”
“Understood, Captain. Silmar out.”
Regan’s thoughts churned as she rode the lift up, pondering the unusual circumstances of the attack occurring so soon after their own departure from Security Zone Four. Silmar approached as she stepped out on the bridge a few minutes later, saying, “Captain, Admiral Tattok is online for you.”
“Thank you, Commander,” she said with a nod. “Have it patched to my ready room.”
Silmar nodded and signaled to Lt. Steb as she turned into her office. Sitting at the desk she switched her monitor on, and found not only the small Roylan admiral on the screen, but Captain Natale as well.
“I have advised Captain Natale of the situation,” Tattok began. “We must tread carefully, Captains.”
“Indeed, sir,” Regan replied. “If you order us to respond, I’m fairly certain
Gibraltar can make it to Sanctuary under her own power.”
“The only other ship within range of Zone Four is the
Triumph, Admiral,” Natale reported. “Certainly a Defiant-class and a Nebula are sufficient to respond, as we don’t have the entire fleet in the system as yet.”
“Both powerful ships... What is the status of the
Gibraltar, Captain Regan?” Tattok queried.
Regan frowned. “Begging your pardon, Admiral, but you’re not suggesting the
Gibraltar respond to the distress call as well, are you?”
Tattok nodded on his half of the screen. “I'm considering it.”
“It was my understanding that they were heavily damaged before they even crossed the dimensional barrier,” Natale put in, her words telling Regan that Tattok had advised her of the entire situation. “Then they also engaged the
Teravi---is the ship even in a condition to fight?”
“Captain Sandhurst told me that his people are very efficient at repairing on the fly,” Regan replied, recalling their brief conversation on the way to the transporter room. “Things are a little more chaotic where they’re from, so they’ve had to become so. But that’s not the point.”
The admiral’s eyestalks turned to her. “What is your point, Captain?”
Columbia’s captain took a breath. “Sir, with all due respect, how can you justify asking them to take part in a conflict which doesn’t even involve them? This isn’t their fight or even their universe---why should they get involved?”
“I did not say I would ask,” the little man said then.
Regan felt her eyes widen, and noticed a similar change in expression on Sanctuary’s commander. “Sir, you cannot order them,” Natale said slowly. “Can you? If they’re not from our universe, does Starfleet even have any authority over the
Gibraltar crew?”
Tattok took a moment to look at each woman in turn. “They are Starfleet officers, Captains. They should do their duty in any universe they're in.” He sighed then. “Though I certainly do have the authority to give them orders, that is not my intention. I will, however, make a request of
Gibraltar’s captain.”
Lindze Regan sighed imperceptibly. She was grateful to the admiral for not forcing Sandhurst and his crew into anything, and grateful to Natale for her support. Though she’d spent nearly two hours with the man, she found that she could not say for certain what she thought his response would be when asked.
“Why don’t I have our communications officer contact
Gibraltar so that you can speak to Captain Sandhurst, sir?” she said then, and at Tattok’s nod, she tapped her commbadge and instructed Lt. Steb to make the connection.
After a few moments, Sandhurst appeared on screen, dressed in a yellow engineering utility jumpsuit with a sheen of sweat beading on his brow. He was seated in a computer interface alcove situated just off a narrow corridor. Sparks could be seen raining down from overhead in the companionway beyond the door. Sandhurst seemed mildly surprised to see multiple faces on his screen, most especially one belonging to yet another species with which he was completely unfamiliar. The diminutive admiral had been fascinating enough, and now this exotic orange-skinned woman had been added to the mix. Tattok’s presence, however, dominated his attention. “Admiral, sir,” Sandhurst offered by reflex.
Tattok nodded minutely. “Greetings once again, Captain. A most disturbing situation has come to our attention. The colony on Ansaris II has been attacked and the starships
Columbia and
Triumph are responding... but three ships would be better than two.”
It would have been impossible to miss the dark cloud that briefly swept across Sandhurst’s features at the admiral’s assessment. There was a moment’s pause, after which he offered a very subtle nod as the worry lines in his face seemed to deepen. “Of course, sir. My ship and I are at your disposal.”
“Donald,” Regan began quietly, having noticed Sandhurst’s brief scowl. “Are you sure? This isn’t your universe so it’s not your fight.”
“No one would blame you if you wanted come on ahead to Sanctuary to finish your repairs, Captain,” Natale added.
Tattok nodded again. “They are correct, captain---I'm not ordering you to assist. The decision is yours,” he said solemnly.
Sandhurst inclined his head, presumably toward Regan. “Thank you, Captains, Admiral. I understand that this isn’t necessarily ‘our’ fight. In my universe, more often than not Starfleet is behind the eight-ball. We never have enough ships or personnel to do all that’s asked of us, and I’ve witnessed more good people than I care to remember die because of those shortfalls.” He closed his eyes briefly, then opened them to take in the officers facing him. “Ultimately, Starfleet exemplifies an ideal, that of helping others in need, regardless of the costs to ourselves. I’m sure that ideal is as alive and well in this universe as it is in my own.”
“Well spoken, Captain Sandhurst,” Tattok said. “We have those ideals here and they are indeed alive and well. You are to be commended for your willingness to participate in this operation.”
“What is the status of your weapons and warp drive, Captain?” Regan asked. “Obviously we’ll have to disengage our tractor beam so you can fly under your own power---the question is do you have that power?”
“Our warp drive will be restored within the hour. We’ll have phasers online in two and a half hours, and our torpedo systems were undamaged. We can be underway as soon as the engine repairs are complete. With the exception of relatively cosmetic hull damage,
Gibraltar will be battle ready by the time we reach the Ansaris system.” Though he tried to cover the pride in his voice, it was evident nonetheless. “We’ve got rather good at conducting field repairs.”
Despite her misgivings, Regan smiled. “So you said. If possible, try to get your phasers online a little sooner. We’ll head back to Zone Four immediately---we’re about two hours out and it would be good to have you fully armed when we arrive. I’ll leave my engineers onboard your ship until the last possible moment to help you speed things along. Captain Natale, what’s the status of the
Triumph?”
Natale consulted something offscreen, then looked back. “Captain Wallace is flying faster than you are at present, but he’s also farther away---though still closer than anyone else is. I believe he’ll arrive at about the same time as
Columbia and
Gibraltar.”
“Good to know. Admiral, we’ll certainly do our best to keep you posted,” Regan said then.
“Appreciated, Captains. Good luck to you both,” Tattok replied, then severed his connection.
Natale looked at both Regan and Sandhurst with the same solemn expression. “Flying in blind, not knowing what you’re up against, is never an easy situation. Both of you take care,” she said.
Regan nodded and offered her a small smile, having already developed an affection for the younger woman, and an appreciation for her responsibilities as commander of the station and
de facto fleet liaison. “You know I will, Synnove.”
Sandhurst cocked his head thoughtfully, looking at Regan. “Well, I took the phasers offline to effect repairs to the power-transfer systems. I can have them up and running again in thirty minutes, but until those couplings are fixed or replaced we’ll only have about seventy-five percent power to our phaser banks.”
“Don’t short-change yourself, Captain. I’d rather have you at full power, but of course I’ll leave it to you how you handle your repairs. Just do the best you can,” Regan told him. “Captain Natale, I’m sure you’ll be hearing from us soon.”
“I better. Sanctuary out.”
With a sigh, Regan then looked at Sandhurst. “How well could your ship really perform if you go in with your phasers at seventy-five percent, Donald? Tell me honestly---goodness knows what we’re up against.”
“My ship’s edge is in its maneuverability, Captain. Our phasers are underpowered to begin with, but we can pack a punch with our photons.” He smirked conspiratorially. “Any chance you’ve got some quantum warheads you’d be willing to part with?”
“I’ll have to check, but if we can spare any, they’re yours. Alright, if you think you can manage with seventy-five percent power, then go for it. I don’t like you being at a disadvantage, but then your entire ship is a disadvantage given how old she is---not that I’m demeaning such a fine lady. You just don’t see ‘em around much anymore,” Regan told him.
“No offense taken. That seeming vulnerability is to our advantage, Captain. More than one of our opponents have been blindsided because they refused to take a century old Connie seriously.”
She had to grin at the pride he so evidently felt for his ship. Regan knew she’d feel the same about hers, or any ship named
Columbia. “And it’s an advantage we’ll certainly exploit,” she said, then sighed. “At least with a Connie you don’t have to worry about families. Flying a ship with children onboard into a combat situation never gets any easier. My kids just came back onboard for the first time since the war, and already...”
She shook herself slightly, feeling a mild flush creep up at her lapse in decorum. “As I said, we’ll be back in Security Zone Four in about two hours, perhaps a little less now. Signal when your engines are ready and we’ll deactivate the tractor beam and beam back our people.”
Sandhurst took notice of Regan’s momentary lapse. “Captain, if you’d like, my shuttles are at your disposal. We could offload your civilians onto our auxiliary craft and send them back to Sanctuary to get them out of harm’s way.”
“I’ve considered doing that with our own, as we have plenty of shuttles. I just don’t know if we can afford to spare the personnel to fly them---not many of our adult civilians possess the necessary know-how to pilot a shuttle. I’ll have to speak with my first officer while there’s still time, get his assessment. I do thank you, though, for your offer. If we have need of any of your shuttlecraft, I’ll let you know. Right now, I think, we both need to see to preparing our crews.”
“Agreed,” Sandhurst replied. “I’ll contact you as soon as we’re ready to go to warp.
Gibraltar, out.”
* * *