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Sept Challenge-No Glory

Mistral

Vice Admiral
Admiral
Sgt. Dick Reilly pushed past the yellow “police line” tape that sealed the entranceway of the tenement off from gawkers. Patrolman Leif Garrotson was standing next to the door. The hour was late and no one was really around.

“Hey Sarge, I didn’t know they woke you up for this.” He smiled at the dour and obviously sleepy detective in the beige trench.

“Yeah, well, they said it was a bit…unusual. So they dragged me out of bed.” Reilly tried to smile as if he had cracked a joke but his boozy eyes made a lie of his humor.

Garrotson played along, keeping his tone light. “Unusual? Kinda like my wife’s pork chops. We got a burn mark on the floor-and not much else. You’ll see when you get up there.”

Reilly grunted. “Oh, great, an arson killer. Loving it already.” Garrotson put a hand on his shoulder, forcing him to pause before he entered the brownstone.

No, Sarge, this one is really weird.” Reilly caught the look in the patrolman’s eyes and wondered what he’d been woken up for. “You’ll see,” the cop added, letting Reilly go.

Reilly staggered up the stairs to the first floor landing. There were a couple more patrolmen outside the door of the apartment in question. Reilly waved a hand vaguely in their direction and entered the apartment. What he saw sobered him up instantly. The outline of a man was burned into the carpet, arms flung out in a sprawled position. The surrounding carpet wasn’t even scorched. There were a few fragments of ash within the burn but Reilly didn’t have to be a coroner to know there wasn’t anything to use for identification purposes. He glanced around the apartment. It didn’t impress him. The furniture was shabby, the kind you see at yard sales. There weren’t any pictures or decorations on the walls, which struck him as odd. Turning back to the door, he noticed a couple of odd gashes in the frame. “What the fuck is that?” he murmured to himself. The two cuts in the wood looked like knife marks. They were about fourteen inches apart. He got close enough to bump his nose on the wall so he could examine them through his still-bleary eyes. “That’s odd,” he said aloud. He often talked to himself these days. Since his wife had left it was the only conversation that occurred in his apartment and the habit had followed him whenever he was alone. The two cuts were distinctly different. “Who the hell would take the time to stab the doorframe with two separate knives?” He turned back to the …well, not body, but ash pile. “Stab the doorframe with two separate knives and burn some guy to cigarette ash. What the hell happened here?” At the thought of a cigarette he pulled a Marlboro out of his jacket pocket and lit it, a bemused expression on his face.

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

The USS Seleya was in port at Deep Space Nine for maintenance and most of the non-essential crew was on shore leave. Joe Torres and Shandahat were strolling along the Promenade, having just finished lunch.

“I don’t know how you can eat that stuff,” Joe commented to his fellow Security officer. “When most people smell Klingon food they run the other way.”

His Andorian companion just grinned at him, showing off teeth filed to a point. “Like I told you, tibia claw is delicious. You eat that stuff-what do you call it-shrimp. How is tibia claw any different? It’s just Klingon seafood.” Joe gave him a look like he’d volunteered to go for a space walk without an environment suit.

“You know that the tibia has poison sacs in each of it’s twelve claws, right? And that all Klingon restaurants in Federation space are required to keep dedicated transporter units linked to the nearest medical facilities in case a customer dies from a poorly prepared meal?” Joe sounded exasperated.

Shandahat’s grin just got wider. “That’s what makes it a fun meal!” Joe shook his head in disgust and opened his mouth to add a rejoinder but they were both distracted by suddenly upraised voices near bye.

“You irresponsible idiot! How could you allow that?” The Human standing in front of the Bajoran temple was red-faced and angry, pillorying a temple vedek. The vedek was gazing back at him mildly. Torres and Shandahat exchanged a glance and sauntered over towards the confrontation, their Security instincts kicking in. “Don’t you realize the consequences, the potential for disaster?” The Human was practically frothing at the mouth.

Torres cleared his throat.” Is there a problem here?” he asked. The Human whirled on him.

“Why don’t you mind your own-“he started to snarl. Then he abruptly shut up as he took in their Starfleet uniforms. Pulling a small device out of his jacket pocket, he waved it at the two of them. “Lt.’s Shandahat and Torres, Security, USS Seleya. You were involved in that multiverse thing a while back, weren’t you?” He slipped the device back into his jacket and straightened his lapels.

The two men looked at him in surprise. “How the hell do you know that? And how do you know who we are?” Shandahat’s voice carried an unspoken hint of menace. The man waved a hand patronizingly at the vedek, effectively dismissing him. With a faint bow the vedek disappeared into the temple.

“Your com badges have an embedded frequency that links to your service records,” the man answered crisply. “We don’t have much time and you’re cleared for high level security. You need to come with me.” Torres looked at Shand and then back at the man.

“Sure, no problem. We’d love to help you with your hallucinations.” The sarcasm in Torres’s voice was so blatant Shandahat winced visibly. The man looked at them with poorly concealed contempt.

“Your records mentioned that you both have a problem with poorly-timed attempts at humor. Now is not the time.” He reached back into his jacket and pulled out a Federation government ID unit. In the one hundred and fifty years since their introduction no one had successfully counterfeited one, and Torres and Shandahat both knew it. He activated the basic information tab and Torres blanched while Shandahat turned a pale blue. “You’ll come with me now. Your leaves are revoked and any activities you engage in under my orders are covered by the Archer Protocols.” In an off-hand aside he added, “My name is Saunders.”

Torres looked at his buddy and then back at Saunders. “Um, we never saw you and we’re leaving now.” He started to turn and Saunders grabbed his arm.

“Sorry, not going to happen. I only have a few minutes, maybe an hour, before the temporal change wave hits. That fool Bajoran gave the wrong person access to the Orb of Time and all Hell’s going to break loose unless you two do exactly as I say. You two are all I’ve got and you are going to help. Otherwise you guys are going to spend a long time in whatever version of Sundancer survives the temporal flux. If you’re lucky. I said I was invoking the Archer Protocols. You know that gives me authority due to ‘immanent and impending temporal changes’, so stop your grousing.” Torres looked at Shandahat, who nodded at him, and quit trying to get away. Saunders carefully let go of his arm.

“Look, um, Saunders, everyone who has anything to do with you Temporal Investigation guys ends up with some kind of black mark or reprimand on his record. I’m just not interested in having my career ruined.”

“Yeah,” piped up Shandahat,”He’s already got me-he doesn’t need any more trouble than that.” Saunders gave them both a sour look.

“Time is not on our side.” Saunders acted as if he hadn’t heard either of them. “My ship’s on Docking Ring Three. Let’s go.” He strode off at a good clip. Shand tipped his antennae at Joe and held out one arm.

“After you,” he said. Torres eyed him speculatively for a moment and then shrugged. They trailed off after the TI agent. Various shoppers of an assortment of races walked passed them, blissfully unaware of the air of impending doom that enveloped the two security officers.

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

Reilly flipped his cigarette out of the open window of the apartment and glanced down at the layer of undisturbed dust that coated the sill. Whoever had committed the crime, they hadn’t come up the fire escape or left that way. He looked about the room for any other hint of who’d been killed or who’d done the killing. CSI hadn’t found anything to identify the victim and the killer or killers hadn’t left anything behind. Reilly hated efficient criminals. They made his job that much tougher. His hangover chose that moment to come screaming back and he swayed lightly. Groaning, he sank to the floor. “I should just lie down for a moment,” he thought. He eased himself from a sitting position until his head rested on the carpet. “Ah, that’s the ticke-“ He froze, peering under the radiator attached to the wall near the door. “What the Hell is this?” He snaked his hand under the radiator and pulled out…something. It was about five inches long, a thin cylinder that elongated right on the end, almost like a suction cup. The other end had a cut look. He looked into it and noticed a liquid coating the cut end. It was tacky to the touch, almost like congealed blood. He rubbed his eyes with his free hand, trying to clear his vision. He wasn’t sure if it was the residual effect of the alcohol in his system but in his view the liquid looked blue.

*************************
 
and the rest...


As they walked Saunders briefed them. “That fool vedek let a member of Glory Road mess with the Orb of Time.” Shand and Joe halted abruptly.

“Glory Road?” Joe asked. The Klingon terrorist group had been around for over eighty years. Composed of members who refused to accept the Empire’s rapprochement with the Federation, they’d bombed Starfleet facilities, sabotaged the Klingon Defense Force station over Qu’onos and attempted to stir up a revolt amongst various Klingon colony worlds. Starfleet Security took them very seriously indeed.

Saunders glanced back at them and gestured for them to continue following him. “Yes, Glory Road. We know that the Orb can be used to travel through time. According to my instruments a Glory Road operative has used it to go back to the beginning of the 21st Century and foul up Earth history. The change wave is,” he consulted the device from his pocket, “About 37 minutes from impacting our time frame. If it hits before I can send you back we won’t be able to avoid the re-ordering of history.”

“Um, excuse me, but did you say ‘send you back’? Like, in time? And wouldn’t people on Earth notice a Klingon agent walking around?” Shand was just getting started. “For that matter, how do you know he went back in time, or that the Orb can do that? And how am I supposed to help? I’m not sure if you noticed, but I guarantee you 21st Century Humans are going to take note of my blue skin and antennae. From what I’ve read about that time someone like me would probably be torn to shreds in the streets.” Joe hadn’t said a thing while Shand went on his rant, waiting for him to wind down. When he finally did Joe made his move.

“Shand, your mouth is showing. This is TI, damnit! If anyone can handle this he can,” he said, gesturing towards Saunders. Saunders gave them a tight little smile as he pulled the docking port open and waved them into his ship.

“22 minutes,” is all he said. The ship was a Class 6 civilian runabout, a product of Bentley-Rolls and impressive even in it’s stripped-down condition, which this one certainly wasn’t. Shand’s mouth hung open at the opulence while Joe acted as if he saw this kind of every day. The ship was expansive, far larger than a Starfleet Class 3. The main cabin was crammed with monitors and read-outs. The door to the bedroom was ajar, letting both men see the end of a large bed with clothing piled on it haphazardly. Saunders opened a cabinet on the wall and took out a hypospray. Before Shand could react he’d pressed it to his neck. A faint hiss could be heard and then Joe began to laugh.

“What the Hell was that for,” Shand snarled. “And what are you laughing at?” Torres fell back in a chair, holding his belly as he guffawed. “What?” Shand demanded. He glanced down at Torres and got a glimpse of his own arms. “By the Frozen Hells of Iskander! What have you done to me?” Torres couldn’t reply. Tears were streaming from his eyes he was laughing so hard.

“Clearing up one of your objections,” Saunders answered matter-of-factly. Shand’s skin tone had turned a pale peach. “We’ve studied the Orb in the lab and it resulted in these little devices.” He held up two wrist bands with faint, glowing lights. “They should take you where you need to go.”

Torres calmed down and took the two bands from Saunders’s hands. He eyed them speculatively. “I thought the Bajorans told us we couldn’t study their Orbs in the lab.”

Saunders smiled at him. “They won’t let us study them yet.” He walked to a cabinet, really more of an armoire, and began pulling clothing out of it. He tossed Shand a woolen cap. “Better put that on, “he said. He assembled a complete outfit and tossed it on top of Torres. ”We don’t have much time-get dressed.” After rummaging around a bit more he threw some clothes to the still dazed Andorian. “The devices I use have made it clear that the Glory Road agent has altered his appearance to human and gone to Washington, DC in the year 2009. Until the change wave hits I’m reading two tracks that history may take. In one, the President of the United States puts forth a major space exploration effort. In the due course of things this massive effort evolves into UESPA, which in turn becomes Starfleet. In the other track I’m monitoring, the same President is assassinated by the Klingon agent. The Earth space exploration effort is far weaker and when WWIII breaks out the extra-orbital stations and the Lunar Colony aren’t independent enough to survive. UESPA never comes into being and Starfleet isn’t created. The Klingons will rule Earth by the 23rd Century, maybe a bit after that. No co-operation, no Khitomer Accords, no peace.” As the two Security officers changed their clothes Saunders continued, “I can get you into Washington about 24 hours before the assassination. You’ll have to scan for Klingons-he won’t look the part.” He tossed a tricorder to Shand, who had already gotten dressed, while Joe struggled with the fastener on his pants. “Ah, it’s a zipper. You grab the little tab and pull up.” Joe sheepishly complied.

“How close can you get us to him?” Shand asked. He pulled the woolen beanie over his antennae. They made the cap stand up a bit, as if he had a very full head of hair.

Saunders examined him for a moment before responding. “You’ll do. I can get you within a few miles but after that you’re on your own. You’ll be in the city of Washington, in North America.”

“And how much time will we have?” Joe asked.

“Maybe 24 Earth hours. Those wrist devices you’re holding aren’t as precise as we’d like, so you could be off the mark by as much as two or three hours.” Joe handed one to Shandahat. “The green button gets you there and the red one recalls you.” He frowned hard at them. “They’re mocked up to resemble wristwatches in use at the time. Don’t mess with the controls! They’ll work as regular timepieces in their idle mode. You screw with them and you could end up hob-knobbing with cavemen.” Shand looked at his speculatively.

“Don’t even think about it,” Joe said. Turning to Saunders, he asked, “So, what do you want us to do when we find him?”

Saunders gave them a toothy grin.

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

“Get off of the floor, lardass,” came a voice over Reilly’s head. Looking up, he saw the Assistant Coroner for the Washington Federal District glaring at him. She looked past him at the burn mark on the floor. “Jesus, I should have brought a vacuum, not a body bag.”

Reilly heaved himself to his feet. Holding out the strange object he’d found, he said, “Johnson, what do you make of this?” The coroner’s photographer eased past them and began taking shots of the crime scene.

The black woman looked at the blue cylinder for a moment. “I dunno,” she replied, “It’s organic, that’s for sure. Maybe part of some plant?” She dismissed the thought from her mind and bent to examine the remains.

Reilly looked at the thing in his hand for a second. “Yeah, but it’s blue!” he blurted out.

Johnson didn’t even look back at him from where she’d crouched. “So what? You toss a little food coloring in the water you can turn a plant any color you want.” She hunched over and poked at the ash with a pen. Reilly pulled a rumpled evidence bag out of his pocket and dropped the weird…thing into it. “This is interesting!” Reilly dropped the bag in the pocket of his trench and looked at where she was pointing. She’d pushed a bit of the ash aside and revealed the wood floor that lay under the carpeting.

“Watcha got, Johnson?” Reilly’s brows furrowed.

She glanced back up at him, exasperated. “What, the booze finally make you blind? The damn floor under the body isn’t burned!”

“No freakin’ way,” Reilly breathed softly. “That just aint possible!”

“Tell me about it,” Johnson snapped back, irritated. Reilly rubbed his aching brow and sighed.

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

Shandahat stared at the 3 card monte game the elderly man was running on the street corner. “So these are your ancestors? Sorry, Joe, I’m not impressed.”

Joe snorted and sat down on a bus stop bench. “Look, can we stay focused? We’ve been scanning people for the last three hours and haven’t found a hint of the guy we’re looking for.” A ground vehicle roared past, music throbbing from its depths. Joe winced as it went by. “Seriously, my ancestors are from Buenos Aries. And I’m fairly certain that wasn’t the music they listened to. For that matter, I’m a bit dark in color but these people are a heck of a lot darker.” He nodded at the man running the con game at the corner. “I’m actually surprised. From what I learned in school, the United States was pretty much a Caucasian country in this era. That is, kinda light-skinned. Like you,” he added slyly.

Shandahat opened his mouth to retort but was cut off by a “Beep!” from the tricorder in the pocket of his loose slacks. He pulled it out and took a hard look at the read-out. “Over there,” he said, pointing. Joe swiveled his head to see a burly man in a black t-shirt and blue jeans heading into a near bye apartment building. Stuffing the tricorder back in his pocket, Shand jumped up and began striding after him. Joe hurried to catch up.

Entering the building, they were both assaulted by the stench of unwashed bodies and the faint smell of urine. Shand looked at Joe for a moment. “Love your cultural heritage,” he said in a sardonic tone.

“Damnit, Shand, it’s not my culture! I told you, I’m not from the same continent, little less the same country!” Torres seemed honestly offended. He should have known better.

“So, how long does it take a starship to go from your home to here?” Shand asked innocently.

Joe fell right into it. “Well, about four seconds,” he admitted.

“From my perspective, no difference at all.” The smug look Shand gave him just pissed Joe off more and he tromped up the worn stairs in silence.

When they got to the second floor, Joe tapped on the first door they came to. A tiny black lady with very white hair answered. “Can I help you?” she asked suspiciously. Torres noticed the security chain on the door holding it to the frame.

He gave her his best smile, the one he used to use when he wanted more ice cream as a child. “A friend of mine walked in here that I haven’t seen in years. Maybe you could help me find him? He’s about this big,” he held up a hand to the Klingon’s height,” and kind of muscular?” He let his voice trail off sweetly.

The old woman looked at him sourly. “This is a hit, isn’t it? Well, good riddance, I say.” Torres and Shandahat exchanged uneasy glances. “He’s in 2-K. And if you don’t kill him,” she added, “Make him stop playing that god awful music! It sounds like he’s torturing cats in there!” She slammed the door. Shand shrugged and said,

“Well, off to 2-K.” He started down the hall.

Torres grabbed his arm. “Shand, you don’t have a problem with this?” Shandahat brushed his hand off.

“Let’s go,” was all he said. They headed off down the hallway, their thoughts troubled.

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

Johnson finished her preliminary. “I’ll be back in a minute, as soon as I find something to take the…body back in.” She waved to her assistant and headed out, closing the door behind her. Reilly noticed a small, black and silver object shaped like a cell phone on the floor behind the door. He picked it up. Try as he might, he couldn’t get it to flip open. He spun the wheel embedded in the side idly and heard a rising whine.

“What the fu-“ He never completed the thought or the expletive.

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

Shand looked at Joe. Torres pulled out his Type-One phaser and nodded. Shand knocked on the door. It opened a crack.

The man on the other side glared at them and then asked, “What?”

Joe smiled at him. “Hi, we’re from the local starship cleaning service!” Shand jammed the door open with his shoulder as Joe covered the Klingon. The man reached behind the door and came flailing towards them with a bat’leth. He swiped at them so fast Shand didn’t have time to get out of the way. Joe managed to knock him out of the direct line of the Klingon’s attack but he still heard his partner scream in pain. Joe lashed out with his left foot and slammed the door into the Klingon’s chest as he tried to pull his weapon free from where it had hit the frame. Shand had toppled to the floor and when Joe kicked their opponent in the chest he’d flown backwards over Shand’s huddled figure, the bat’leth winging across the room. Unbeknownst to the two Starfleet officers, Shand’s phaser popped out of his pocket and skittered under the door. Roaring, the Klingon tried to spring to his feet and Joe fired. His weapon had been set on ‘Kill’ and the Glory Road operative was burned down where he stood. Joe ran to get the bat’leth and then turned to Shand, who was holding his head. His woolen cap was soaking with blood.

“Shand, you ok?” the worry in Joe’s voice was obvious.

“I’ve got no sense of balance, the bastard cut off one of my antennae,” Shand rasped. “Get us out of here! I’m gonna puke!”

“Then puke, buddy, don’t mind me.”

Shand stared at him a second, disoriented. “What about DNA?” 21st Century technology was good enough to identify the differences between Andorian and Human biology.

Joe blanched and hit the red button on Shand’s watch. As the recall took hold he hit his own button, the bat’leth held close to his chest. He felt sick to his stomach.

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

Johnson was showered with debris from the explosion in the crime scene apartment. “Jesus, Reilly, what did you do?” she thought. It was a question she’d never learn the answer to.
 
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Yay! A time travel episode that didn't make my brain hurt... Good job, glad you made it.
 
First of, really impressed by the way you made the story fit both the TrekBBS mystery challenge and the Ad Astra temporal mechanics challenge. Very inventive and providing a lot of fun. Once Reilly picked up the blue sucker looking thing, I figured things wouldn't end up too good - especially for Shand! I wonder does this explain all those mysterious self-combustion cases?

Of course, when Joe Torres and Shand are involved the story tends to be a rocker, lots of fun and lots of trouble. Some people are just magnets for this kind of thing. Some actively go looking for it. But this was a real fun read and a literal blast at the end. Good stuff Mistral.
 
Like Miranda Fave, I felt things probably didn't go completely smoothly when the detective picked up an antenna. I can also see why at first you were worried about my entry on Ad Astra, but they're nothing alike. Awesome job!
 
That was fun! A nice mystery/time travel story rolled into one. Great character work and I like the idea of a Klingon movement that resents the cooperation with the Federation - makes perfect sense.
 
Thanks, everybody! Glad y'all liked it. It will also be an entry in the Temporal Mechanics challenge on Ad Astra so don't be shy about voting over there-for mine or another's.
 
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