[Author’s Note: This is a short story I submitted a while back for a previous challenge. I am not entering it in this month’s challenge, but I decided to update it a bit and repost it for fun in light of the alternative universe theme.]
Introduction
This tale is a re-imagining of the first three chapters of Tales of the USS Bluefin - "Semper Paratus," the opening story in the Bluefin saga. This story takes place in a 24th century mirror universe where the Terran Empire still reigns supreme, though fighting a very difficult war against the Klingon-Cardassian Alliance. The ship is the Akula-class Border Gunboat ISS Bladefin - part of the Border Security division of Imperial Starfleet. As to the crew, well, you’ll meet a very different Commander Inga Strauss and Captain Joseph Akinola . . .
“Semper Letalis – Always Deadly” (Reprised)
Stardate 53498.7 (1 July 2376)
Starfortress 42
Office of Rear-Admiral (Upper Half) Thran Pham,
Sector Commander, Imperial Starfleet
Commander Inga Strauss sat in the anteroom of Admiral Thran Pham's office on the fourth level of Starfortress 42. Inwardly, she seethed at having been abruptly summoned to appear before the admiral, but her iron discipline kept her from betraying her anger outwardly. Her face remained unreadable and her seated posture relaxed as she focused on the various items in the waiting room. Besides a somber Vulcan Yeoman, who was perusing a stack of data PADDs, there was the standard sword and globe emblem of the Terran Empire, along with a portrait of the ISS Broadsword , the admiral's former command, as well as a few paintings of past emperors. A portrait of the current emperor smiled thinly down at her with an expression of ill-concealed contempt. The walls of the anteroom were grey, the carpet a deep burgundy, and the waiting room chairs not quite comfortable. She glanced down at the PADD in her lap, the obvious reason for her being here and the source of all that was wrong in her universe.
Strauss decided that standing might hasten the time of her appointment. She walked over to a large viewport from which she saw several Imperial Starfleet battleships and a crater-pocked moon around which the Starfortress orbited. She regarded her reflection in the viewport. A beautiful, petite human woman, barely 30 years of age stared back with hard blue eyes, her blonde hair closely cropped, with a brand new third gold pip on her uniform collar. For the hundredth time today, she wished she were back on the ISS Thunderbolt .
Her reverie was interrupted by the Vulcan Yeoman. "Commander? You are required to surrender your weapons before entering the admiral’s chamber."
With a stoic expression, she walked to the Yeoman's desk where she removed her sidearm, a glossy black phaser pistol and her officer's dagger. The green-blood ran his tri-corder over her, then raised an eyebrow. He held out his hand, patiently. With a coy smile, Strauss reached to her collar and pulled out a small, flexible blade and handed it to the Vulcan.
"You may retrieve your weapons when you leave," said the Vulcan.
Inga inclined her head as she moved toward the admiral's lair, smug in the knowledge that she still had two more weapons secreted on her person.
Strauss entered the admiral's chambers and stood rigidly at attention. "Commander Inga Strauss reporting," she said in brisk, clipped tones. The admiral, a large, bald Asian man in his late 50's, sat behind a massive desk and regarded Inga with a leering smile. He wore a Fu-Manchu beard that Strauss found ridiculous. "So formal, little one! The last time I saw you, you still called me 'Uncle Thran.' Come, join me by the viewport and you can regale me with your exploits."
Inga favored the admiral with an insincere smile. Admiral Pham had served with her late father, Captain Dieter Strauss, years earlier until Pham had assassinated the elder Strauss to gain promotion and command of the Broadsword. Ironically, Pham had sponsored Inga's entrance into the Imperial Fleet Academy after Dieter's death, most likely to keep close tabs on her.
"Thank you sir, but I don't think regulations allow me to refer to a flag officer as 'uncle'."
Admiral Phan took a seat by a small table adorned with the stuffed and mounted head of a dead Klingon general. He indicated for Inga to take the opposite chair. Pham poured an amber liquid from a small bottle and handed a crystal tumbler to Inga, still wearing his leering smile. She noticed that his gaze was on her chest rather than her face.
"Inga, in my chambers I make my own regulations. Now, tell me of how Thunderbolt and the task force destroyed Terek Noir." Inga gave a detailed but sterile account of their successful battle against the Cardassian station, never breaking eye-contact with the older man. She noticed that he seemed to quickly lose interest in her report. He finally waved her to silence.
"Commander Strauss, I know full well that you do not like your new orders. That is why I have summoned you."
Inga steeled herself, and then spoke. "Admiral Pham, I admit I am puzzled by these orders. I had thought that I would be allowed to remain on the Thunderbolt as first officer or perhaps be assigned to a conquest vessel. Now I learn that I'm being transferred to a border gunboat!"
Pham regarded her from behind hooded eyes for a moment, his expression unreadable. "Do you find your orders untenable?" he asked in an ominously quiet tone.
She straightened in her seat. "No sir! I live to serve the Empire! But I know I was doing a good job on the Thunderbolt after I replaced Commander Wilson as first officer. I could understand having a more senior commander replace me and I return to being second officer. But to be assigned to a mere gunboat? . . ."
"The preferred designation is interdictor frigate,” he corrected brusquely. “Commander, you should know that I am the one who recommended your transfer." Phan noted the flash of anger in Strauss' eyes and smiled. "You know very well that your position as first officer on the Thunderbolt was provisional. Because of the war with the Klingon-Cardassian Alliance, we've promoted a lot of people much earlier than we ever would in normal times. It were not for our heavy losses, you would still be a lieutenant, perhaps a lieutenant commander. Now we are placing our more senior officers that are coming off damaged or destroyed ships onto front-line vessels. To be honest, you nearly lost your provisional rank of commander - not because of your performance but because of your youth. I have interceded on your behalf and prevented that. This assignment as executive officer of the ISS Bladefin will allow you to keep your rank as commander and give you some much needed experience as an executive officer."
Inga knew that Pham was not doing this out of the goodness of his heart. He certainly had ulterior motives. "Admiral, forgive me, but I know you are a cunning man - you must have more reasons than helping my career along."
Admiral Pham nodded. "Very astute of you, Commander. You are correct, there is more, that's why I pushed for this. Captain Akinola, the C.O. of the Bladefin, is one of the most experienced and ruthless commanding officers in all of Starfleet, much less in Border Security. He has managed to become something of a thorn in my side. You would provide me a valuable service by providing me occasional reports on his . . . unauthorized activities."
"What activities are those?" she asked.
"You will know when they occur," he said, simply.
"Do you want me to kill him?" Strauss asked, bluntly.
Pham's body shook – resonating with his low, rumbling laugh. "Young one, if Akinola knew you had designs on his life, you would die very quickly. Akinola is a dangerous man. He is way out of your league. Now, do not take offense, I am merely stating the facts."
He coughed harshly as his laughter subsided, then continued, "I know it may not seem a desirable billet for you, but the Border Security provides an invaluable service through search and destroy missions, maintaining our subspace spy stations, and enforcing the laws of our great Empire. I understand the Bladefin is quite a capable little ship with a proud history. And I am confident that you will add to their distinguished exploits."
Strauss nodded curtly. "I won't let you down, admiral."
His mouth curled into a smile that didn't reach his eyes. "See that you don't, Commander. That would be most . . . unfortunate."
* * *
Introduction
This tale is a re-imagining of the first three chapters of Tales of the USS Bluefin - "Semper Paratus," the opening story in the Bluefin saga. This story takes place in a 24th century mirror universe where the Terran Empire still reigns supreme, though fighting a very difficult war against the Klingon-Cardassian Alliance. The ship is the Akula-class Border Gunboat ISS Bladefin - part of the Border Security division of Imperial Starfleet. As to the crew, well, you’ll meet a very different Commander Inga Strauss and Captain Joseph Akinola . . .
“Semper Letalis – Always Deadly” (Reprised)
Stardate 53498.7 (1 July 2376)
Starfortress 42
Office of Rear-Admiral (Upper Half) Thran Pham,
Sector Commander, Imperial Starfleet
Commander Inga Strauss sat in the anteroom of Admiral Thran Pham's office on the fourth level of Starfortress 42. Inwardly, she seethed at having been abruptly summoned to appear before the admiral, but her iron discipline kept her from betraying her anger outwardly. Her face remained unreadable and her seated posture relaxed as she focused on the various items in the waiting room. Besides a somber Vulcan Yeoman, who was perusing a stack of data PADDs, there was the standard sword and globe emblem of the Terran Empire, along with a portrait of the ISS Broadsword , the admiral's former command, as well as a few paintings of past emperors. A portrait of the current emperor smiled thinly down at her with an expression of ill-concealed contempt. The walls of the anteroom were grey, the carpet a deep burgundy, and the waiting room chairs not quite comfortable. She glanced down at the PADD in her lap, the obvious reason for her being here and the source of all that was wrong in her universe.
Strauss decided that standing might hasten the time of her appointment. She walked over to a large viewport from which she saw several Imperial Starfleet battleships and a crater-pocked moon around which the Starfortress orbited. She regarded her reflection in the viewport. A beautiful, petite human woman, barely 30 years of age stared back with hard blue eyes, her blonde hair closely cropped, with a brand new third gold pip on her uniform collar. For the hundredth time today, she wished she were back on the ISS Thunderbolt .
Her reverie was interrupted by the Vulcan Yeoman. "Commander? You are required to surrender your weapons before entering the admiral’s chamber."
With a stoic expression, she walked to the Yeoman's desk where she removed her sidearm, a glossy black phaser pistol and her officer's dagger. The green-blood ran his tri-corder over her, then raised an eyebrow. He held out his hand, patiently. With a coy smile, Strauss reached to her collar and pulled out a small, flexible blade and handed it to the Vulcan.
"You may retrieve your weapons when you leave," said the Vulcan.
Inga inclined her head as she moved toward the admiral's lair, smug in the knowledge that she still had two more weapons secreted on her person.
Strauss entered the admiral's chambers and stood rigidly at attention. "Commander Inga Strauss reporting," she said in brisk, clipped tones. The admiral, a large, bald Asian man in his late 50's, sat behind a massive desk and regarded Inga with a leering smile. He wore a Fu-Manchu beard that Strauss found ridiculous. "So formal, little one! The last time I saw you, you still called me 'Uncle Thran.' Come, join me by the viewport and you can regale me with your exploits."
Inga favored the admiral with an insincere smile. Admiral Pham had served with her late father, Captain Dieter Strauss, years earlier until Pham had assassinated the elder Strauss to gain promotion and command of the Broadsword. Ironically, Pham had sponsored Inga's entrance into the Imperial Fleet Academy after Dieter's death, most likely to keep close tabs on her.
"Thank you sir, but I don't think regulations allow me to refer to a flag officer as 'uncle'."
Admiral Phan took a seat by a small table adorned with the stuffed and mounted head of a dead Klingon general. He indicated for Inga to take the opposite chair. Pham poured an amber liquid from a small bottle and handed a crystal tumbler to Inga, still wearing his leering smile. She noticed that his gaze was on her chest rather than her face.
"Inga, in my chambers I make my own regulations. Now, tell me of how Thunderbolt and the task force destroyed Terek Noir." Inga gave a detailed but sterile account of their successful battle against the Cardassian station, never breaking eye-contact with the older man. She noticed that he seemed to quickly lose interest in her report. He finally waved her to silence.
"Commander Strauss, I know full well that you do not like your new orders. That is why I have summoned you."
Inga steeled herself, and then spoke. "Admiral Pham, I admit I am puzzled by these orders. I had thought that I would be allowed to remain on the Thunderbolt as first officer or perhaps be assigned to a conquest vessel. Now I learn that I'm being transferred to a border gunboat!"
Pham regarded her from behind hooded eyes for a moment, his expression unreadable. "Do you find your orders untenable?" he asked in an ominously quiet tone.
She straightened in her seat. "No sir! I live to serve the Empire! But I know I was doing a good job on the Thunderbolt after I replaced Commander Wilson as first officer. I could understand having a more senior commander replace me and I return to being second officer. But to be assigned to a mere gunboat? . . ."
"The preferred designation is interdictor frigate,” he corrected brusquely. “Commander, you should know that I am the one who recommended your transfer." Phan noted the flash of anger in Strauss' eyes and smiled. "You know very well that your position as first officer on the Thunderbolt was provisional. Because of the war with the Klingon-Cardassian Alliance, we've promoted a lot of people much earlier than we ever would in normal times. It were not for our heavy losses, you would still be a lieutenant, perhaps a lieutenant commander. Now we are placing our more senior officers that are coming off damaged or destroyed ships onto front-line vessels. To be honest, you nearly lost your provisional rank of commander - not because of your performance but because of your youth. I have interceded on your behalf and prevented that. This assignment as executive officer of the ISS Bladefin will allow you to keep your rank as commander and give you some much needed experience as an executive officer."
Inga knew that Pham was not doing this out of the goodness of his heart. He certainly had ulterior motives. "Admiral, forgive me, but I know you are a cunning man - you must have more reasons than helping my career along."
Admiral Pham nodded. "Very astute of you, Commander. You are correct, there is more, that's why I pushed for this. Captain Akinola, the C.O. of the Bladefin, is one of the most experienced and ruthless commanding officers in all of Starfleet, much less in Border Security. He has managed to become something of a thorn in my side. You would provide me a valuable service by providing me occasional reports on his . . . unauthorized activities."
"What activities are those?" she asked.
"You will know when they occur," he said, simply.
"Do you want me to kill him?" Strauss asked, bluntly.
Pham's body shook – resonating with his low, rumbling laugh. "Young one, if Akinola knew you had designs on his life, you would die very quickly. Akinola is a dangerous man. He is way out of your league. Now, do not take offense, I am merely stating the facts."
He coughed harshly as his laughter subsided, then continued, "I know it may not seem a desirable billet for you, but the Border Security provides an invaluable service through search and destroy missions, maintaining our subspace spy stations, and enforcing the laws of our great Empire. I understand the Bladefin is quite a capable little ship with a proud history. And I am confident that you will add to their distinguished exploits."
Strauss nodded curtly. "I won't let you down, admiral."
His mouth curled into a smile that didn't reach his eyes. "See that you don't, Commander. That would be most . . . unfortunate."
* * *