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"Semper Paratus: Tales of the USS Bluefin"

Yes, it is time to move on to the plot line and we will with the next installment. There are still two more lead characters to introduce - the chief engineer and the doctor, but I'll work them in more slowly. You will at least hear from those two in the next installment.

Thanks for reading - I appreciate the input!
 
Akinola and Strauss entered the bridge to find a buzz of activity. Lt. Bralus, the Bolian watch officer was looking over the shoulder of a crewman at the sensor station. An ensign was making attempts to contact the Kilimanjaro with no apparent success. The navigator and helmsman were both focused on their boards. Strauss sized up the situation and immediately went to the un-manned weapons station where she began to check the status of shields, phasers and torpedoes. Akinola nodded to himself in silent approval as he watched her before taking a seat in the command chair.

Akinola turned his attention to the Bolian. "Mr. Bralus, report!"

Bralus turned and straightened. "Sir, we began receiving signals from a disaster beacon three minutes ago. The transponder code matches that of the USS Kilimanjaro . We have attempted to hail them on all frequencies but with no response. We're still too far out for long-range scanners to tell us anything."

"Very well," replied Akinola. "Helm - current heading and speed?"

"Heading is 103 mark 30, on an intercept course with the known coordinates of the beacon. Our current speed is warp 9."

"Thank you, Mr. Ryan." Akinola tapped his com badge. "Bridge to Engineering."

"Engineering, this is Gralt. Go ahead," replied the Tellarite chief engineer.

"Mr. Gralt, I need some more speed. Can you give us warp 9.2?" asked Akinola.

Gralt must have heard the urgency in Akinola's voice and responded without his characteristic sarcasm. "Aye, sir. We'll do our best, but we won't be able to maintain that speed for long before we overheat the mains!"

"Just hold them together Gralt. I'm counting on you and your team."

"We're on it Captain."

"Thank you commander. Bridge out." Akinola turned to Commander Strauss. "Commander Strauss, we're obviously going into this blind, so when we come out of warp I want shields up and weapons hot. I find it unlikely that an Everest class ship just suddenly blew up. We will operate under the premise that they were attacked by hostile forces and be ready to respond in kind."

Though her heart was beating a bit faster, Strauss was calm and focused. This was not the first time she had faced the prospect of battle. "Concur, captain. Shields are up at 100% strength. Weapons are ready with Mk. 80 torpedoes loaded. Phaser crews report ready and on stand-by"

Akinola actually smiled at her. "Way to be on the ball, XO."
He tapped the intership button on the command chair. "All hands, this is the captain. We have picked up a disaster signal from the Kilimanjaro . Most of you have friends on that ship. Certainly, Captain Vress is a close friend of mine. At this point, we have no details on the actual status of the Kilimanjaro . We're going in, prepared for the worst but hoping for the best. Just carry out your assignments to your utmost ability. I expect no less. At this time, we are on yellow alert. Our ETA is 45 minutes at which time we will go to red alert. Godspeed! Akinola, out."

A moment later, Captain Akinola received a call from sickbay. "Joseph? It's Calvin. Are we expecting casualties?"

"Unknown doctor, but best to be ready."

"Understood. I have triage teams and medics standing by. Baxter out."

Akinola looked at the stars speed past on the viewscreen and glanced at the chronometer between the helmsman and navigator. He willed it to move faster, but time proved to be as obstinate as ever. He spoke to himself, "Vress, what have you gotten into?"

*********************************

Less than 45 minutes later, the Bluefin dropped out of warp into normal space in sector 323. The ship was now at red alert and the bridge was bathed in the glow of red battle lighting. Lt. Commander T'Res now manned the sensor station and scanned the surrounding region of space. Akinola awaited, impatiently.

"T'Res, anything?" Akinola queried.

T'Res did not look up from the sensor hood. "I am not reading any ships in this sector. However . . . there is a debris field approximately 2 million kilometers off of our port bow. I'm reading tritanium, aluminum, deuterium . . . overall mass of debris is consistent with a Federation starship of the Everest class."

The bridge was silent for a moment as the awful news sunk in. Strauss swallowed hard, a lump having formed in her throat. She had hoped to never repeat this scenario after the war ended.

Akinola leaned forward with his arms on his thighs and his hands clasped. He sighed heavily, then spoke. "Any signs of lifeboats or organic matter?"

"I am showing organic matter in the debris field but no life forms . . . wait!" T'Ser rose suddenly and turned to Akinola, her face animated. "I've got faint signals from two life pods, bearing 26 mark 30, distance 1.5 million klicks."

Akinola responded instantly. "Helm, follow that course, full impulse. He tapped his com badge. "Transporter room 1, prepare to take on survivors. Sickbay, medical team to Transporter room 1." He stood. "Commander Strauss, you have the con, T'Ser, keep scanning for survivors and be sure to find that disaster beacon. We need to get that thing on board ASAP. Keep your eyes open for any hostiles." He paused before steppng into the turbo-lift. "This is very wrong!"
 
You really know how to keep people hanging on.

Another cliffhanger worthy of a season finale.

Keep it coming.

That said, you might want to do a little extra proofreading before posting, I did catch a few small mistakes in the second section.

Great stuff and I'm looking forward to more.
 
Thanks for the comments and the head's up on the typos. Amazing how those things pop up after you post. ;)
I'll go back and make some corrections.

I see you're reading some Terry Pratchett - wouldn't it be a hoot for the TOS Enterprise to discover DiscWorld? Now there's an idea for a fun yarn! :D
 
Great stuff. I very much liked Strauss and Akinola’s first meeting, and how the captain managed to fool her into admitting she wasn’t terribly pleased with her assignment.

And responding to a starship disaster is bad enough, but having to come to the rescue of your dear friend’s vessel, especially after the two of you just survived something as catastrophic as the Dominion War… that has to be gut wrenching for Akinola. He’s doing a good job of keeping his cool, all things considered.

Oh, and awesome picture, thank you. :thumbsup: My brain works better with a picture to attribute to the Bluefin. And hey, 70 years isn’t that old for a starship. 90, though, now that’s pushing it. :lol:
 
Gibraltar said:
Great stuff. I very much liked Strauss and Akinola’s first meeting, and how the captain managed to fool her into admitting she wasn’t terribly pleased with her assignment.

And responding to a starship disaster is bad enough, but having to come to the rescue of your dear friend’s vessel, especially after the two of you just survived something as catastrophic as the Dominion War… that has to be gut wrenching for Akinola. He’s doing a good job of keeping his cool, all things considered.

Oh, and awesome picture, thank you. :thumbsup: My brain works better with a picture to attribute to the Bluefin. And hey, 70 years isn’t that old for a starship. 90, though, now that’s pushing it. :lol:
Thanks! And by the way, I've enjoyed your stories about the USS Gibraltar. I'm a little slow sometimes, but when you made the remark about a 90 year old ship, I made the connection with your screen name. Yeah, 70 doesn't seem too old for a ship - even if it does lack food replicators and a holo-deck! :D
 
TheLoneRedshirt said:
I see you're reading some Terry Pratchett - wouldn't it be a hoot for the TOS Enterprise to discover DiscWorld? Now there's an idea for a fun yarn! :D
I did think about it recently, but i don't think that it would work, reality is thin enough on the Discworld. Feel free to give it a go.
 
Captain Akinola moved quickly to the transporter room. Upon entering, he was gratified to see Dr. Calvin Baxter, the ship's Chief Medical Officer, and three medics already present. Senior Chief Solly Brin was at the transporter controls.

"Do you have a lock, Chief?" asked Akinola.

Brin frowned, "On the closest pod, I've got a good read on three life forms, but I'm having trouble getting a lock on them. There's some kind of residual radiation surrounding the pods that's interfering."

"What kind of radiation."

Brin shook his head. "Can't tell just yet. Hang on - I've got a lock! Energizing." The Orion manipulated the transporter controls and the alcove began to hum with building energy. At first, nothing seemed to happen but then three forms began to slowly coalesce out of shimmering particles into the prone figures of three people in Starfleet uniforms. Dr. Baxter and the medics immediately went to the transporter dias, scanners at the ready.

Akinola spoke first. "Doc, are they . . .?"

Dr. Baxter did not turn but continued to scan the unconscious crewmen from the Kilimanjaro . "Alive - yes, but not out of the woods." He continued to run his scanner then compared his with one of the medics, frowning. "That's devilishly odd!" he said, more to himself than the captain. He administered a hypospray to the three victims, then looked up at the medics. "Let's get these men down to sickbay. Start each of them on a drip of Triazapan and piggy back a unit of Ringer's. I'll be down after I speak to the captain."

The medics gently placed the unconscious men on anti-grav gurneys and quickly moved them out of the transporter room. Dr. Baxter came over to Akinola, his brow furrowed, obviously disturbed. He ran his hand through his mane of white hair, then absently began to stroke his beard. Akinola knew the doctor well enough to leave him alone until the doctor was ready to speak. Finally, Baxter fixed Akinola with a sharp gaze.

"First, the good news. These men should live. Their physical injuries do not appear to be life threatening," said Baxter.

The captain relaxed just a bit. "But? . . ."

"But," replied Baxter. "They are suffering from some sort of high energy burst - their symptoms are similar to being electrocuted by high voltage electicity. Only it's not electorcution. There is still a residual energy trace that I cannot identify with my medical tricorder. I'll see what the bio-beds in sickbay come up with."

Akinola frowned. "This energy trace, is it a danger to the crew or the ship?"

Baxter shook his head. "No, I don't think so. It's diminished quite a bit and the readings were going down as I scanned them. Another hour or two and we probably would not have picked it up at all."

"Doctor, as soon as any one of them wakes up, I need to talk with them," said Akinola.

Baxter raised both eyebrows. "Joseph, I said that they would probably survive. But as to regaining consciousness, well, that's another matter! The energy charge they took likely affected their brains. I've got to proceed slowly or we could risk losing them."

Akinola placed a hand gently on his friend's shoulder. "Calvin, I understand. But if there is any way at all to wake one of them, even for a short time, please try. I must find out what happened to Captain Vress and his crew . . . and why!"

Baxter peered at Akinola for a long moment. "Joseph, you may be too close to the situation. Be careful - don't let old friendships cloud your judgement." He paused, sighed, then continued. "No promises, but I'll do my best. If I feel that it's safe, and if I can, I'll try to wake them."

Akinola gave the doctor's shoulder an affectionate squeeze. "Thank you, Calvin. And . . . thanks for keeping me on track."

Baxter snorted. "Someone's got to. Now, Let me get to work."

************************

On the bridge, Lt. Commander T'Ser continued to scan the debris field.

"Have you located the disaster beacon?" asked Strauss.

"Not yet," replied T'Res. "It may have been damaged in the initial explosion and its power source drained. Also, there is some residual background energy readings that are interfering somewhat with our sensors."

Strauss frowned, "Source?"

"Unknown at this time. However, it is localized in the immediate area of the debris field. It would seem likely that it is related to the destruction of the Kilimanjaro ." T'Ser paused as she adjusted the sensors. "Hmmm. I am picking up readings that would indicate recent phaser fire, also a faint ion trail - possibly from a ship's impulse engines."

Strauss sat up straighter in the command chair. "Can you get a bearing from the ion trail?" she asked, masking the excitement she felt.

T'Ser frowned. "Not with any degree of certainty. However, it does appear to come from the direction of the asteroid belt that surrounds the Molari system." She stood and turned to face Strauss. "That's where the Kilimanjaro was headed on an asteroid-breaking assignment." T'Ser's board began to beep for attention. She turned and looked into the scanner hood again. A smile formed on her lips. "There you are!" she said, softly. Turning again to Strauss, she said, "We've located the disaster beacon."

Strauss responded immediately. "Helm, move us into tractor beam range from the coordinates that Commander T'Ser will give you." She then tapped her com badge. "Bridge to transporter room. We've located the disaster beam and are moving into range of the tractor beam. Is it possible to beam it aboard?"

Transporter room, this is Chief Brin. "I'll get it aboard with the cargo transporter. We can tap into its recorders from there. Have the tractor beam crew stabilize it for us first so we can get a good lock."

"Will do, chief. Let me know when it's aboard." said Strauss. She tapped her com badge again. "Strauss to Captain Akinola."

"Akinola, go ahead."

"Sir, we've found the disaster buoy and will beam it aboard with the cargo transporter shortly."

"Very good, commander." he paused. "I want you and T'Ser to meet me in the wardroom with Commander Gralt in 15 minutes."

"Yes sir. Oh, and sir, T'Ser has found evidence of another vessel and possible phaser fire. She's also found a faint ion trail leading in the direction of the Molari asteroid belt." said Strauss.

"Okay, have the navigator plot a course to the asteroid belt and let's head there at full impulse. Stand down from red alert, but keep us at yellow alert. I'll see you in 15. Akinola, out."

Strauss turned to the navigator. "Plot a pursuit course based on the best known heading of the ion trail. Helm, ahead full impulse." She then hit the control button, cancelling red alert and pressed the yellow alert contol. She then hit the inter-ship button. "All hands, stand down from red alert. Maintain yellow alert. Commander Gralt, please report to the wardroom." She stood and spoke to T'Ser. "T'Ser, you're with me. Let's go meet the captain."

*********************

Strauss followed T'Res to the wardroom (seeing how she did not know where it was located). They came to a room one deck below the bridge where the smell of coffee and food beckoned. Strauss' stomach began to rumble and she suddenly realized that she was famished. Her last meal being on the runabout many hours ago. As she entered, she was taken by the ambiance of the wardroom. It was panelled with oak veneer and was decorated with several paintings of ships, all bearing the name Bluefin . She noticed a sailing vessel, a submarine of the old U.S. Navy that she guessed was from the second World War, and a more modern looking ship of a tri-maran design. Underneath it was a plate which read "Fast Response Cutter 760, USCGC Bluefin , Circa 2012 C.E." Her reverie was cut short by the smiling face of a very large man wearing a white tunic and neck scarf. "Excuse me ma'am," he said with a grin. "I'm Petty Officer First Class Marino, the ship's cook. Everyone just calls me 'Cookie'. Can I get you something to eat?"

"That sounds great, Cookie. I'm Commander Strauss, the new XO, and I'm starved. What do you have?"

"Well, for short-notice meetings like this, I don't get to show off much, but I do have several kinds of sandwiches and salads prepared, plus fresh fruit from Rigel IV and some pastries I just made. There's coffee and water on the table, or I could fix you tea or something else to drink." Cookie gestured to a smaller table at the end of the room piled with the food he had mentioned.

"Coffee's fine. Thanks for pointing me to the food!"

"Yes ma'am. I hope you enjoy it. And whenever you're on duty and can't make it down here, just call me and I'll be happy to bring something to you on the bridge. We keep the crewman's galley open 24 hours and the wardroom is always available to officers."

"That's very kind of you, Cookie," said Strauss, sincerely.

"Shoot ma'am, I love doing it. Now let me get out of here and back to the kitchen."

Strauss went to the table, helped herself to a chicken salad sandwich and some of the Rigellian fruit. She also indulged in an apple danish.

She sat down at the table by T'Ser when Gralt, the Tellarite chief engineer came in. He was wearing engineering coveralls that were spotted with various stains and scorch marks - obviously he had been busy in engineering. He went to the food table and came back with a generous portion of fruit, plopping into a chair opposite Strauss. He regarded her with sad eyes for a moment. "So. You must be the new XO. I'm Gralt, chief engineer." He peered at her more closely. "You look awfully young to be a commander."

"So I've been told," she said with a trace of irony. "Nice to meet you, commander Gralt."

Gralt snorted and waved a dismissive hand. "You won't think so once you get to know me. Now where's the captain? He called this meeting. I've got work to do."

As if on cue, Captain Akinola strode into the wardroom. "I see you're being your usual charming self, Gralt," he said.

Gralt shrugged. "What can I say? It's a gift." He began to eat rather noisily.

Akinola rolled his eyes, put two sandwiches on a plate, and sat at the head of the table. "I've just been talking to Admiral Bateson, he's Commander of Border Services, Ms. Strauss. It looks like we're on our own out here on this, at least for now. The other cutters are all busy or too far out of range and Starfleet isn't willing to send any other assets. He did say he would send the Matterhorn our way, but she's at least four days out. At this point, I'm not sure what good another ship would do until we find out more about what happened." He turned to Gralt. "Have we gotten anything off of the disaster beacon?"

Gralt replied, "Do you think I got this dirty playing cards? The thing was a mess - a lot of blast damage. I'm amazed we even picked up the signal, the power cells were corrupted and couldn't have lasted long."

"So, did you learn anything useful? " Akinola asked with great patience.

"I'm coming to that. Unfortunately, many of the data files were damaged, which is surprising considering how well shielded these beacons are supposed to be. That's the bad news. The good news is that we did learn some very interesting things. Computer! - Display slide Gralt 1A."

The viewscreen at the opposite end of the wardroom came to life, revealing a complex diagram with several sin waves. One of the waves flashed bright red. T'Ser whistled and Gralt grunted in agreement. Strauss was confused as was the captain.

Akinola spoke first. "Okay, not all of us have Ph.D.s in here. Tell us what we're seeing."

Gralt fielded the question. "The sin wave you see flashing represents a focused energy wave that hit the Kilimanjaro minutes before it exploded. I've never seen anything that strong short of a category 10 stellar flare. Even if they had their shields up, which is doubtful, they probably would not have survived."

Gralt allowed that to sink in before continuing. "The energy surge created a cascade effect that ultimately overwhelmed their warp core safties. Basically, they died of a warp core breach."

Strauss frowned and asked the next question. "Commander Gralt, I can see the energy surge and the explosion, but what are the smaller waves in between?"

Gralt gave her a meaningful look. "Those waves are consistent with phaser fire, but not from the Kilimanjaro . The frequencies match phasers often used by ships of the Orion Syndicate."

Strauss was puzzled. "But . . . that doesn't make sense! Why would an Orion Raider fire phasers at a ship that was already in the process of blowing up?"

Captain Akinola folded his arms and leaned back in his chair. "They wouldn't, commander. But someone wants us to think that a Raider was responsible. Think about it - if we had not picked up the disaster beacon's signal, it would have been days before we would have come across the debris field. These strong energy traces would have disapated, but we'd still have evidence of phaser fire on the debris. We probably would have assumed that an Orion Raider had attacked based on that evidence."

T'Ser had been listening carefully, a frown of concentration on her face. She looked up and spoke. "I do recall an occassion where a Starfleet vessel was attacked by an energy pulse of this magnitude. It was over 100 years ago, I do not recall the exact stardate, but it involved the USS Enterprise under the command of James Kirk. There was a skirmish along the Romulan neutral zone. A Romulan Bird of Prey came on our side and attacked an outpost with a similar weapon. It nearly overcame the Enterprise but due to its limited range and tremendous power consumption it failed to produce victory for the Romulans. Intelligence reports from that era suggest that the Romulans moth-balled the program."

Akinola nodded his head. "I remember reading about that too. And another thing to consider. The Romulans have cloaking devices."

Strauss interrupted. "Wait a minute! Are you suggesting this was done by the Romulans? We're on the opposite side of the quadrant from the Neutral Zone!"

T'Ser replied. "Not necessarily the Romulans themselves, but the same technology might be at work."

Akinola's com badge chirped. "Sickbay to Akinola."

"Akinola here."

"You better get down here, Joseph," said Baxter. "One of our patients just woke up."
 
A lot of starship oriented fan-fic series start out in a very similar manner with long, drawn-out segments in which we learn about the new ship and crew.

I like what you have done here. Bluefin is a ship that already has a crew, a history and plenty of back story to be revealed over time.

It also allows you to quite quickly engage the first mystery your characters encounter. I'm looking forward to find out what happend to the poor Kilimanjaro.
 
Akinola excused himself from the wardroom as did Gralt. T'Res and Strauss lingered over their food, deep in thought. Then a question came to Strauss.

"T'Res, I have a question that may seem silly, but it's been bugging me."

"Are you wondering if I'm a vegetarian? The answer is no."

Strauss shook her head. "No, that wasn't my question, although I had wondered about that. My question is about Dr. Baxter and the captain. I notice that the doctor always refers to the captain by his first name, even over communications channels. Now, I know I'm new to the Border Service, but that seems to be a breach of protocol."

T'Res smiled and put down her coffee mug. "Obviously, you have not heard of Calvin Baxter, M.D., F.F.C.S.?"

"Well, no. I honestly don't keep up with Starfleet Medical. That's pretty much outside my area of interest."

"Then you do not know of Vice- Admiral Calvin Baxter, former Commanding Officer of Starfleet Medical in Atlanta."

Strauss simply stared at T'Ser for several moments. Finally, she spoke. "Are you telling me that our CMO is an admiral ?"

"No. He was an admiral. He retired several years ago. He was tired of "pushing paper," as he put it and went back into private practice. When the Dominion War broke out, he wanted to serve on a ship. Of course, the admiralty would not hear of it. His age, former rank, etc. etc. I don't know what strings he pulled, and he won't say, but he managed to get assigned to the Bluefin with the provisional rank of commander. We're lucky to have him. He's an outstanding physician and surgeon. But sometimes he forgets he's no longer an admiral. Captain Akinola has too much respect and affection for him to say anything. You notice that the captain calls the doctor 'Calvin'"

Strauss just shook her head. "This has been such a strange day."

******************************

Akinola entered sickbay and found Dr. Baxter perusing a PADD and drinking tea.

"Ah, Joseph. I'm glad to share good news for a change. It seems that all three of our patients should recover fully."

"That is good to hear, Calvin. Now, what about the one who's awake?" asked Akinola.

Baxter stood and stretched his long, slender frame. "That would be one Ensign Li. He apparently was in the auxilary control room with two crewmen when everything went to hell in a handbasket. The extra shielding there protected them enough to allow them to reach an escape pod. Li seems to have suffered the least from the energy surge and awoke a few minutes ago. The other two are in REM sleep and I'd like to keep them that way a while longer. You can talk to them later."

"Thanks, Calvin. Good work!"

Dr. Baxter took another sip of tea. "Well, one does try."

Baxter led Akinola out from his office through the main ward of sickbay to an intensive care cubicle. On a bio-bed was a young Asian man who looked to be in his early 20's. He was sitting up, drinking juice through a straw. When he saw Akinola, he straightened in bed, as if to come to attention. Akinola came to his side and put a hand on his shoulder.

"At ease, ensign. You've been through quite an ordeal. I'm Captain Akinola, CO of the Bluefin ."

The ensign offered a bleak smile. "Yes sir, I remember you from when our crew played yours in volleyball at Station Echo."

Akinola smiled. "As I recall, you handed our butts to us that day." He paused, and spoke gently. "Ensign, can you tell me what happened to the Kilimanjaro? "

Tears welled up in the young man's eyes. "I understand that only three of us made it?"

Akinola nodded. "We're still searching, but we only found your pod and another pod that was empty. Now - what happened, son?"

Ensign Li cleared his throat and gathered himself. "Sir, I was on duty in auxiliary control along with Crewman Strevik and Crewman D'Longa. I remember that at 0930 that D'Longa went and got coffee for us. He returned shortly. As you know, our station provides duplicate read-outs from the bridge. Captain Vress always liked to have someone there, you know, just to be redundant - safe." He said the last somewhat bitterly. He took a long breath and continued. "Anyway, we were drinking coffee, running routine diagnostics, when the board went crazy . . . it showed a huge power surge. The ship began to shake . . . then . . ." He stopped for a moment, closing his eyes to regain his composure. "It's kind of a blur, captain. The warp breach alarm began to sound. God, I hope I never hear that sound again." He paused. "I told the men to get in the escape pod. There's one right outside auxiliary control. Radiation alarms were going off, then the lights went out, but I could still hear the breach alarm. We got in the pod, dogged the hatch and jetisoned. Then, well, I don't know. That's all I can remember until I woke up here."

Akinola nodded and patted the ensign's arm. "That's good ensign, that helps us. Just one more question for now and I'll let you rest. Did your instruments show any other ships in the area?"

Li frowned in concentration for a moment. "Sir, the instruments were haywire, every alarm going off. But . . ." He frowned again, a deep furrow across his brow, beads of sweat appeared on his forhead. His pulse rate began to increase.

Baxter stepped forward and said, "I think that's enough for now."

Akinola ignored him. "Ensign, what were you about to say?"

Li, obviously near exhaustion, finally blurted out, "The proximity alarm! It went off first! It's like a ship just popped up out of nowhere! I almost forgot . . . I almost forgot! . . ."

Baxter stepped forward and applied a hypospray to the ensign's neck. Almost as soon as it stopped hissing, the young man relaxed and went back to sleep. Baxter turned to Akinola. "So, there was another ship."

"Sure looks that way, doesn't it?"

"So what do we do now?" asked Baxter.

"We hunt it down - and we kill it!" said Akinola, coldly.
 
Ha! The doctor’s an admiral! That’s great. I love his laid back attitude, and that of the Tellarite chief engineer. Oh, and having a chef like the one aboard Acher’s Enterprise is a nice touch, as well.

But, man, they gotta get that old girl into a drydock and install some replicators… I mean, sometimes you don’t want to have to go all the way to the galley for some tea, Earl Grey, hot. ;)
 
Gibraltar said:
Ha! The doctor’s an admiral! That’s great. I love his laid back attitude, and that of the Tellarite chief engineer. Oh, and having a chef like the one aboard Acher’s Enterprise is a nice touch, as well.

But, man, they gotta get that old girl into a drydock and install some replicators… I mean, sometimes you don’t want to have to go all the way to the galley for some tea, Earl Grey, hot. ;)

Funny, but a shipyard worker once asked Captain Akinola if he wanted replicators installed the last time they were in spacedock at Star Station Echo. Forum rules prohibit me from publishing his response. :devil:

Actually, there are beverage servitors around the ship and in the quarters of senior officers. These are similar to replicators but only provide coffee, tea, hot cocoa, juice and other soft drinks. I got the idea from some old TOS paperbacks from the '70's. Seemed like reasonable late 23rd/early 24th century tech. Never did like the "protein re-sequencers" on ENT. Seemed like a techno-babble version of a replicator.

I'm beginning to get a better feel for Dr. Baxter. I was slower to introduce him as I was not settled on his personality. I've based him loosely on a favorite former professor of mine.
 
You've definitely set up a strong plot here. Someone using Romulan tech with a cloaking device trying to frame the Orions...nice. I've got an idea who it might be--I'm curious to see whether it's who/what I think it is.

This story is coming along very well indeed.
 
DavidFalkayn said:
You've definitely set up a strong plot here. Someone using Romulan tech with a cloaking device trying to frame the Orions...nice. I've got an idea who it might be--I'm curious to see whether it's who/what I think it is.

This story is coming along very well indeed.

Who, indeed! :evil:
 
The adversary sat on the quiet bridge of his cloaked ship, hiding in the Molari Asteroid Belt. The sight of the border cutter on his view screen enraged him, but he held his emotions in check. He spoke in an ominous tone to the figure that stood on the opposite side of the bridge.

"You said that the federation ship would be totally destroyed!" the adversary said with a threatening edge to his voice.

"And it was," the other said calmly. "The plasma cannon worked flawlessly."

"Flawlessly!" The adversary's quiet voice suddenly rose in volume. "Then explain how they got off a signal and a border cutter is coming in our direction!"

The other was unperturbed. "Most likely, an automatic disaster beacon of some kind. Surely you realize that such devices are common to Federation vessels. As to the cutter, it is of no consequence."

"No consequence! They are heading right toward us!"

"And what will they find? A diminishing ion trail and tens of thousands of asteroids. Our cloaking device will shield us. You must control yourself," said the other.

The adversary whirled in his seat, a disruptor in his hand, aimed at the other. "Have a care . . .," he said in a quieter, but more ominous tone. ". . . how you speak to me, spy! I have lost much! My honor and my name. It would disturb me none to lose you."

The other smiled in the dim shadows. "And I care nothing for your name or honor. But remember this - I am but one of many. You may kill me if you wish. But your own life and any you care for will be forfeit." He paused, "Now enough of this! We must prepare, lest these Federation pawns get lucky."

The adversary lowered the disruptor pistol. "Very well, spy. But mark my words - I will make a new name for myself and for my house! And if it means both of our deaths, well . . ." he grinned a hideous, toothy grin, "then it will be a good day to die!

**************************

Captain Akinola returned to the wardroom as Strauss and T'Ser finished their meal. He spoke to the two officers.

"Good news! It looks like our three survivors are going to be just fine. T'Ser, be sure to log them in on the crew manifest. They'll be with us until we finish this."

"Captain?" asked Strauss, "Just how are we going to 'finish this'?"

"We are going hunting, commander, and I do not intend to quit until we catch the murders responsible for over 70 deaths on the Kilmanjaro ," he said firmly.

"How do we find a ship hiding in an asteroid belt that likely has a cloaking device?"

Akinola smiled. "Commander, I have a few tricks of my own up my sleeve. Let's just say they have already made two mistakes. I only need them to make one more." The smile faded and he changed the subject. "Right now, commander, I want you and T'Ser to get some rest. We're about four hours out from the Molari Belt at this speed, so take advantage of that time." He held up a hand as Strauss began to protest. "Stow it commander! That's an order. Now, T'Ser, get Lt. Bane on the sensors - he's got a sixth sense for these type of searches. I'm heading down to engineering to discuss an idea with Gralt."

*********************

Five minutes later, Captain Akinola entered the cramped and noisy main engineering room in the secondary hull. Gralt was directing some crewmen who were making adjustments to the coolant flow to the warp core.

"No, no, NO! By the daughter of the fourth deity, how many times do I have to tell you! The pump impellers have to be at a complete stop - zero rpm - before you reverse that valve! It could blow off and take your ugly head with it! Then I'd be short a crewman until I could get a replacement. Now, do it right!" The Tellarite moved away, shaking his head and muttering to himself about the crewman's deficient genes when he saw the captain.

"Oh, it's you. I hope this is important - I'm busy trying to prevent these Yarluq brained deck apes from blowing up my ship!" said Gralt.

"You know Gralt, I think it's your charm that makes you such an effective leader," said the Captain.

"Blow it out your torpedo tube, sir! Now, what's up?"

Akinola became serious. "When we catch up to this ship, you can bet they'll fire that energy weapon at us too. Can our shields handle it?"

Gralt rubbed his snout and frowned. "Yeah, I've been thinking about that and I have an idea. Come over here."

Gralt led the captain to his office, a cluttered space made of transparent aluminium where he could survey his domain. His desk was covered with PADDs, assorted tools, and half-empty cups of herb tea and root juice. He rummaged around and picked up a scarred PADD and handed it to the captain.

Akinola perused it for a moment, then raised an eyebrow. "Will this work?" he asked.

Gralt nodded. "It should. But we will probably blow some power converters in the process. And, it will probably only protect us once. If they get a chance to fire a second time, well . . . you saw what happened to the Kilimanjaro.

Akinola took a deep breath and nodded. "We'll have to make sure they don't have the opportunity for a second shot." He gestured wiht the PADD. "Leave it to you to come up with a complex answer to a simple problem." He handed the PADD back to Gralt. "Make it happen."

"Aye sir, and spare me the sarcasm. You're no good at it."

Akinola slapped Gralt on the back. "I'll leave the sarcasm and the problem of the shields to the master!"

Gralt rolled his eyes, "Fine. Now get out of my engine room before the crew starts slacking off."

**********************

Commander Strauss lay on her bunk, but sleep would not come. She was too keyed up and her mind raced with possibilities. She could not fathom why anyone would want to frame the Orions for this. Of course, there was no love lost anyway between the Federation and the Orion Syndicate, so a frame would be simple. Who could gain from this? What was the point? The whole situation seemed strange and random.

She wondered about Captain Akinola. He certainly seemed well in control and in command, but how did the loss of his close friend affect him. What counsel should she give as a new first officer?

Fatigue finally overtook her, and she drifted off to a fitful sleep. Her dreams were filled with exploding ships and death.
 
Wow, lots of ominous implications in a single, short segment. I like where this is going, and I can’t wait to discover the identities of their would-be foes.
 
Ive only had a chance to read the first installment so far which is actually what delayed the beginning of mine. I liked the detailed mental imaging I got from your decriptions of the setting so I rewrote my pilot episode to include more of that lol.

The character interaction between Strauss and Pham in the first installment flowed perfectly and found it easy to picture the scene as if it were being played on TV (For some reason Pham embodied the image of Admiral Janeway) Dont ask because I have no clue lol.

As soon as im finished writing my next part ill finish reading your other installments.
 
Computer said:
Ive only had a chance to read the first installment so far which is actually what delayed the beginning of mine. I liked the detailed mental imaging I got from your decriptions of the setting so I rewrote my pilot episode to include more of that lol.

The character interaction between Strauss and Pham in the first installment flowed perfectly and found it easy to picture the scene as if it were being played on TV (For some reason Pham embodied the image of Admiral Janeway) Dont ask because I have no clue lol.

As soon as im finished writing my next part ill finish reading your other installments.

Funny you should say that. I originally planned to have Admiral Janeway in the opening scene with Strauss. I changed to Admiral Pham to put someone in who could have had more of a long-term, mentor relationship with Strauss (since Janeway was tied up for seven years in the Delta Quadrant.)
 
Captain Akinola sat in his darkened ready room, sipping coffee. He stared out the small viewport at the stars and the distant, shimmering maelstrom of the Badlands. He focused his mind on the past 24 hours. Something was naggling the back of his mind . . . something that Vress said during their last, their final conversation. Akinola closed his eyes and concentrated. In his mind he heard Vress speaking, "I regret that duty calls. We're due to clear some asteroids in sector 323. The governor of one of the system colonies has been complaining about navigational hazzards."

Akinola's eyes flew open. He tapped his com badge. "Akinola to bridge."

"Bridge, Lt. Bane here."

"Nigel, contact Border Service Command. Find out which colony governor in the Molari system recently requested an asteroid breaker to open shipping lanes."

"Aye, sir."

"Let me know ASAP, Akinola out." He paused a moment, then spoke again. "Computer, search for reports of navigational hazards in the Molari system over the past four months, particularly related to the asteroid belt."

After a momentary pause, the computer responded. "There are no reports of navigational hazards in the Molari system during that time period. All current navigational marker buoys are functioning within acceptable parameters."

Akinola sat back and frowned. His com badge beeped and he tapped it. "Akinola, go."

"Lt. Bane, sir. Command reports that Governor George Tarleck of the Sedona Mining Colony on Molari III submitted the request."

"Tarleck? I've heard of him somehow."

"Yes sir, most likely from the hyper-net news services. He's been implicated in some pretty shady deals. I understand that he's been cozy with the Orion Syndicate in the past."

"Thank you, lieutenant. Akinola out." He steepled his fingers and turned once more to stare out the viewport. "Mr. Tarleck, I will be having words with you," he said softly.

***********************

Commander Strauss entered the bridge to find Captain Akinola standing by a very handsome, sandy-haired lieutenant at the sensor station. She walked over to them. Akinola looked up.

"Hello, commander. I trust you rested well. Allow me to introduce you to Lt. Nigel Bane. He's our resident sensor wizard - he can find things that most people would overlook. Nigel, tell the XO what you were telling me."

"As I was telling the Cap'n," he said with a pronounced Australian accent, "A cloaking device works great most of the time - assuming no one know's you're there. But if you suspect some bloke's lurking about in a cloaked ship, you can generally find 'em - given time. In our case, the bloody bast . . . pardon, ma'am, the perpetrator, made a cardinal mistake by hiding in an asteroid field."

Strauss smiled, in spite of herself, "Why is that, lieutenant?"

"Well, as you likely know, there are trillions of small particles floating through any asteroid field - the microscopic debris caused when the asteroids collide, which happens all the time. Ships, of course, can navigate through the dust because of our deflectors. But, we leave a visible "wake" - visible to our sensors, anyhow. Now - in the case of a cloaked ship that's relatively stationary, it's a tad tricky. So, what I have to do is look for a "hole" - a place in space where the dust particles can't go - and, there she is, pretty as a picture!" Bane gestured dramatically to a screen on his console. A sector star map was displayed and, flashing prominently, was an indicator of a ship less than a million km from their location.

Akinola squeezed Bane's shoulder. "Nice work, Nigel." He turned to the ensign at the navigation station. "Mr. Argo, plot a spiral course through the asteroid field, bringing us up behind the target. Mr. Loork, ahead slow. I want it to appear that we're still in search mode. We're going to get a big asteroid between us and come up behind him. At the last moment, we'll come around the asteroid with a volley of phasers."

Akinola returned to the center seat. He tapped his com badge. "Akinola to Gralt."

"Gralt here, go ahead."

"Commander, we've located our target and we're going to move in. Are you ready with our defenses."

"Ready and standing by. But remember - we can probably take one shot from that energy weapon. And I don't know what damage we'll suffer. It would be nice if they don't get the chance to use it!" said Gralt.

"You read my mind, Gralt. Akinola, out." He turned his attention back to Lt. Bane. "Mr. Bane, please open a channel to the Constabulary on Molari III and contact Chief Inspector Timothy McGrath. I'll take it in my ready room. Commander Strauss? Come with me, please."

The two officers entered the captain's ready room where Akinola shared his discovery about Governor Tarleck's bogus request.

Strauss frowned at the news. "But why would Tarleck do that? Do you think he's connected to the destruction of the Kilimanjaro ?"

Akinola replied, "Inga, I've been in this service for 41 years. If I've learned anything, there are seldom coincidences. Yes, I do think he's involved somehow."

"But how can we possibly prove that?"

Akinola's com badge beeped, interupting them. "Akinola."

"It's Lt. Bane, sir, I have Chief Inspector McGrath for you."

"Thank you, Nigel. Transfer the connection to my terminal, please and scramble the signal." He turned the screen where Strauss could also see it. Momentarily, a florrid-faced man with a large moustache and sad eyes appeared.

"Captain Akinola, it's good to hear from you! How may I be of service?"

"Timothy, nice to see you. I'm afraid I have some urgent business to address. Were you aware of the destruction of the USS Kilimanjaro not far from the Molari system?"

McGrath's eyebrows shot up in surprise. "No, captain. That's the first I've heard of it - what of Captain Vress and his crew?"

"Vress is dead as is most of the crew. We only managed to pick up three survivors," said Akinola.

"My God! Joseph, I am sorry! Vress was a good friend. This is terrible! What happened - was there an accident?" asked McGrath.

Akinola shook his head. "This was no accident, Timothy. They were ambushed by a cloaked ship using some kind of energy weapon. Someone set them up for this. We think we've located the ship responsible, but I think that one of the system governors, George Tarleck, is involved."

A look of disgust crossed McGrath's face. "Tarleck!" he spat. "He's been a thorn in this system's side for years. He's thick with the syndicate but manages to stay out of prison. I wouldn't put something like this past him - but why?"

"George, that's why I'm calling you. You spent a lot of years in Starfleet intelligence before taking your current job. I need to ask a big favor of you, and it will likely require some of your old skills. For Vress and his crew."

For a moment, McGrath did not say anything, his face pensive. He seemed to reach a decision and spoke. "Tell me what you need me to do."

**************************

"See! Even now they are changing heading," said the other.

The adversary grunted. "They are in a search pattern. If we remain here, they may well discover us - even cloaked. The Federation has learned much about war, spy! Do not underestimate them." He turned to the crew pit. "Navigator, plot an intercept course to the Federation vessel. Helm, be ready to give us full power on my command." He turned back to the other. "My patience for waiting grows thin!"

The other stared back, dispassionately. "Even a warrior knows when to bide his time - Klingon!"

The Klingon commander nodded, a dangerous smile on his face. "Yes, Romulan. But I also know when it is time to act! You Tal Shiar spies are content to hide in the dark and let others carry the blade. This time, we hold the blade together - for the dark purposes of your Praetor, and for the rebirth of House K'Tinga! We shall shame both the Federation and the corrupt Klingon High Command! Qapla' !
 
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